Self-Compassion Break

Self-compassion is the act of treating yourself as you would any other loved one: treating yourself with kindness vs. Self-Judgment. 

Self compassion is a modality that is being researched for treatments for mental health conditions, preventing burnout, improving motivation, body image, resilience, and in clinical settings for the helping professions.

The leading expert on self-compassion, Kristen Neff, PhD, defines self-compassion in three ways:

  • Mindfulness
  • Invoking a sense of common humanity
  • Self-acceptance vs. self-judgement

This 3 minute self compassion break can be done in a moment of difficulty, such as in the presence of strong emotions, physical sensations, self-criticizing thoughts, or in the face of failure. It can be done on a daily basis or when difficulty is present. 

Step 1:

Adopt a posture that invokes a sense of self compassion. The posture to adopt is traditionally placing hands on the heart, but can also be hands placed on the neck, or a mudra. Touch releases oxytocin, our “love hormone” which releases feelings of calm, love and connection, even when it’s our own hands being placed on our own body. 

Step 2:

Either to yourself, or out loud, say these three sentences.

  1. This is a moment of suffering. This is mindfulness, acknowledging that suffering is present and turning towards, as opposed to turning away from difficulty. 
  2. Suffering is a part of life. Other alternatives to this are: other people feel this way. This is invoking the sense of common humanity, reminding yourself that you are not alone and other people on earth have felt or are currently feeling this way.
  3. May I give myself the compassion I need. This is setting an intention to be kinder to oneself. Other alternatives are: may I be kind to myself, or may I try to accept myself as I am.

For more on Self-Compassion, to access more of Kirsten Neff’s research, and for free resources, visit selfcompassion.org

The 3-Minute Responsive Breathing Space

This is one of my favourite exercises from Mindfulness Based Cognitive Therapy, or MBCT, and just one exercise in an 8-week course directed at those who suffer from depression and anxiety.

This exercise helps us practice staying with difficult thoughts, emotions, and body sensations, teaching us to turn towards difficulty, rather than turning away.

It is better to do this exercise when difficulty is already present.

Try to use a 10 lb weight, not a 100 lb weight. However, in many situations, we don’t get to choose. If the practice is particularly intense, you can perhaps focus on the breath, or open your eyes and let go of the practice.

Note: this video is to support a mindfulness practice and to use in conjunction with help from a licensed mental health professional.

A Letter to Myself at 32

A Letter to Myself at 32

I often encourage my patients to write a letter to themselves on their birthdays for the following year using a website called FutureMe.org, where you can post-date emails to yourself to any date in the future. This exercise is great to do on any day, really. Tomorrow is my birthday. I’ll be 32. Here is my letter. 

This is it.

This is your life.

As Cheryl Strayed wrote, “The f— is your life. Answer it.”

There are some things that you thought were temporary, mere stepping stones on your way to someplace better, that you now realize are familiar friends, ever present in their essence, but varying in their specific details.

For instance:

1) You will ride buses.

You will never escape the bus. For a while taking the bus was seen as a temporary stop on your way to something else (a car?). You took the bus as a pre-teen, excited to finally be allowed to venture to parts of town alone. As a student, you took the bus to the mall, laughing at the ridiculousness of Kingston, Ontario, once you’d left the protective bubble of the student community, completely inappropriately, yet affectionately (and ignorantly) called The Ghetto.

You will visit other ghettos, also by bus, that are far more deserving of their names. However these ghettos will instead have hopeful names such as El Paraiso, or La Preserverancia. Those who live there will persevere. So will you.

Buses will take you over the mountains of Guatemala, to visit student clients in Bogota, Columbia. To desirable areas of Cartagena. You’ll ride them through India. They will carry you through Asia, bringing you to trains and airports.

You’ll ride buses as a doctor. You’ll ride the bus to your clinic every day.

Sometimes, on long busy days in Toronto, it’ll seem like you’ll spend all day trapped in a bus.

The bus is not a temporary reality of your life. The bus is one of the “f—s” of your life. You’ll learn to answer it. You’ll learn to stop dissociating from the experience of “getting somewhere” and realize you are always somewhere. Life is happening right here, and sometimes “right here” is on the seat of a bus. Eventually you start to open up, to live there. You start to live in the understanding that the getting somewhere is just as important as (maybe more than) arriving.

We breathe to fill our empty lungs. Almost immediately after they’re full, the desire to empty them overwhelms. Similarly, you board a bus to get somewhere, while you’re on the bus, you start to understand.

You’re already here.

Maybe you’ll graduate some day, to a car.

But sooner or later, you’ll board a bus.

And ride it again.

2). You’ll experience negative emotion, no matter who you are or what your life circumstance.

Rejection, worthlessness, sadness, and heart break, are constant friends. Sometimes they’ll go on vacation. They’ll always visit again.

You will never reach the shores of certainty. You will never be “done”. You may take consolation in momentary pauses, where you note your confidence has found a rock to rest its head against. But you’ll grow bored of your rock (it is just a rock, lifeless, after all). You’ll then dive back into the deep waters of doubt, risk despair, and swim again.

Happiness isn’t a final destination. Instead, it’s a roadside Starbucks: a place to refuel, and maybe passing through is an encouragement you’re headed in the right direction.

3). The people in your life are like wisps of smoke.

They will come and go. Some of them will simply whiff towards you, visiting momentarily. Their names you’ll hardly remember. You’ll share ice cream and one deep, healing conversation about love that you’ll remember for years to come. You’ll reflect on this person’s words whenever you consider loving someone again.

You’ll remember the ice cream, the warm sea breeze, the thirst that came afterwards, the laughter. But it will be hard to remember his name… David? Daniel? You won’t keep in touch, but you’ll have been touched.

There will be others who come to seek your help. You might help them. You might not. They might come back regardless, or never return. Many times it will have nothing to do with the quality of your help. Or you.

Sometimes the smoke from the flame will thicken as you breathe oxygen into it. People will come closer, you’ll draw them in, inhale them.

Sometimes you’ll cough and blow others away.

You’ll wonder if that was a wise choice. You’ll think that it probably was.

Does a flame lament the ever-changing smoke it emits? Does the surrounding air try to grasp it? Do either personalize the dynamic undulations of smoke, that arise from the candle, dance in the fading light and dissipate?

Flames don’t own their smoke. They don’t seem to believe that the smoke blows away from them repelled by some inherent deficiency in them. Flames seem to accept the fact that smoke rises and disappears, doing as it’s always done.

4). Not everything is about you.

There will be times when failure lands in your lap. You’ll wonder if it’s because there is some nascent problem with you, that only others can see. These failures will tempt you to go searching for it.

You’ll find these faults. These deficiencies. In yourself, in others, in life itself.

You’ll wonder if it explains your failures. You’ll wonder why the failures had to happen to you.

You think that people can smell something on you, that your nose is no longer able to detect, like overwhelming perfume that your senses have grown used to, but that assaults the senses of others around you.

Failure and rejection, cause your heart to ache. Your heart aches, as all hearts do. The hearts of the virtuous, famous, heroic, and rich ache just as hard. The hearts of those who have committed evil deeds also split apart. (The only hearts that don’t may be the truly broken, the irredeemable. And those people are rare.)

You will experience joys. Your heart will mend and break, a thousands times.

And it has nothing to do with you.

5). Success is not a final destination.

There are no destinations. You will ride buses, you will feel happy, you will feel joy. You will try. You will succeed.

And you won’t.

You’ll pick up the pieces of your broken heart. You will mend them. You will flag down the next bus.

You will board it.

You will grasp—you can’t help it. Grasping will only push the wisps of smoke away, causing it to disappear in your hands. This will frustate you, but you’ll keep doing it.

Over and over.

And failing.

You’ll grasp some more and come up empty, thinking that it is because something is wrong with me. There is lots wrong with you.

There is lots right with you.

Most things have nothing to do with you. (That might be just as painful to accept

But healing as well.)

No one said healing didn’t hurt. Sometimes it f—ing hurts! But, as Cheryl Strayed wrote, “the f— is your life”.

And answering it is your life’s process.

I Am Not My Thoughts: A Lesson in Meta-Awareness

I Am Not My Thoughts: A Lesson in Meta-Awareness

Mindfulness philosophy tells us that our thoughts and emotions are simply phenomena that arise in our bodies and minds: they are not us.

Those of us who suffer from depression and anxiety tend to enter cycles of over-thinking. The mind wanders and engages in self-focused rumination that feeds negative emotions, worsening mood.

While ruminating, we think about the causes and consequences of our depression; we reflect on mistakes we’ve made in the past, we dwell on our perceived personal faults, and we speculate about how we’ll fare negatively in the future.

This kind of rumination becomes a scratch-itch cycle that causes us to feel worse.

However, learning to engage the contents of self-focussed mind-wandering as a non-judgmental observer may be the key to stopping this cycle.

Those who are able to step back and become aware of awareness or think about thoughts, as opposed to getting lost in them, tend to have better control over their thought processes as a whole, and thus their emotions. Mindfulness involves taking a non-judgmental, curious stance about the contents of the mind, as an impartial witness.

Studies show that mindfulness, or taking this non-judgmental, curious stance, can change brain areas associated with rumination, and emotional regulation.

This fall I took a course to obtain a facilitator certificate for Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT), an evidence-based 8-week program that aims to treat depression and anxiety through imparting mindfulness skills. Because of the growing evidence base on the benefits of mindfulness for stress and mental health, the facilitator program attracts many medical professionals.

One of the course participants, a psychiatrist, didn’t like me. I noticed her frowning in my direction every time I spoke. She deliberately avoided and ignored me, talking to everyone else in the course but me.

As the only naturopathic doctor in the group, the other participants showed some curiosity towards my field. When I answered their questions, the psychiatrist’s face seemed to twist into a subtle expression of disgust and disapproval.

She thought I was a quack, a hack; I didn’t have enough training. She assumed I wasn’t qualified enough to provide care to those who suffer from mental health concerns. I could feel her judging energy from across the room every time I lifted my hand to answer a question, or make a comment. Her deploring gaze scrutinized my every move.

I was a naturopathic doctor and she, a psychiatrist. We had emerged from different worlds, philosophies, and backgrounds—we were from incompatible ends of the mental health professional spectrum. Of course she didn’t approve of me: it was only to be expected.

We were spending all day meditating, and this is the story my mind had decided to write.

At the end of day 3 of the course, with days of evidence selectively compiled to support my story about this disapproving psychiatrist’s opinion of me, I left class to head for the bus stop. Waiting for the same bus was no one other than my nemesis.

Great, I thought. I smiled at her, stiffly.

She smiled at me.

“Talia, right?” She asked.

I nodded: yes, Talia.

“You’re the naturopath, right?” She inquired, brows kneaded together in a frown.

I nodded again, bracing myself. Are we really going to do this here? 

But then, time-space cracked and split open, revealing an alternate universe to the one in my own head. Her face melted into a warm grin, “Oh, I love naturopaths!” She exclaimed warmly.

She went on to describe her wonderful encounters with the members of my profession who had attended to the various personal health concerns she’d faced.

“I’m so interested in holistic health for managing mental health concerns,” She said, before leaning in a bit, conspiratorially, and adding in hushed tones, “You know, psychiatry doesn’t work.”

I stood there, dumbfounded.

Her particular opinions about psychiatry aside: not only was the entire story I’d written and held onto for the past few days wrong, it was way wrong. I had fabricated an entire story in my head, corroborated by what I had been convinced was real evidence. The realization of how avidly I’d bought into this story, as if it were simple fact, was earth-shattering.

My story, had just been that: a story, conjured up by thoughts. These thoughts bore no relationship to reality at all, no matter how convincingly they had presented themselves.

It rare to have the opportunity to experience our mental constructs and biases topple so dramatically. The mind has a tendency to rationalize away any evidence contrary to our beliefs—”Well, I only passed because I got lucky”, or “The test was easy”, or “She said she liked my hair—liar”.

Very few of us entertain the idea that our thoughts and emotions don’t represent our ultimate reality.

According to Mindfulness Theory it helps to think of our minds as movie screens and our thoughts, emotions, and body sensations as contents of the movie. We can watch the action, identify with the characters, and follow the plot with invested interest. The movie can inspire thoughts and emotions within us, both positive and negative. The movie can grip us; we might lose ourselves in the drama, forgetting that we are mere witnesses to it.

It can help to remember that we are not the movie. Sometimes it’s helpful to remember that we’re not even acting in the movie.

No matter how deeply the film may move us, we can always take the stance of movie-going witness. We can take various perspectives in relation to the drama on screen. We can immerse ourselves in the drama, losing our sense of self completely. We can remember that we are audience members, enjoying a film. We can ignore the movie altogether and laugh to a friend sitting beside us. We can be aware of the contents of the movie theatre, the people sitting around and behind us, or the sticky floor under our feet. We can even leave the theatre, which we will certainly do once the credits roll—it’s just a movie after all, a distraction from the reality of our lives.

In the way that we approach the contents on a movie screen, we can take various stances towards the contents of our minds.

Meta-awareness is the act of remembering that we are movie watchers—the act of becoming aware of awareness itself. When we practice meta-awareness, we take a non-judgmental view of our thoughts and emotions, watching them arise in our bodies and minds like the drama in a movie arises onscreen.

We can easily identify with the tens of thousands of thoughts that appear on the movie screens of our lives. We may be convinced that we’re unloveable, that we’re failures, or that life is hopeless, simply because these particular thoughts have appeared in our mind’s screen. We can also identify with positive thoughts, such as the idea that we’re excellent swimmers, or good fathers.

Our thoughts may reflect reality—we may have the thought that if we step into a pool of water our feel will get wet—but simply having a thought does not create reality itself.

While taking the bus that day, I realized that I had unwittingly cast my psychiatric colleague as the guest-star of People Who Are Judging Me, an episode in Unloveable: The Series, which is a piece of entertaining fiction that my mind has written, directed, produced, and cast me as the lead in. I often forget that I’m simply an audience member watching the movie of my mind’s creation—this movie is not necessarily the truth about my life.

Research has identified a network in the brain called the Default Mode Network (DMN), that connects the lower brain areas, like the amygdala and hippocampus, with higher brain centres in the prefrontal cortex. The DMN is active when our minds are wandering and is particularly active when those with depression are ruminating and engaging in narrative self-referencing: or attributing one’s self as the cause of (negative) events in one’s life—for example, interpreting an expression on someone’s face to be a look of disgust and assuming it’s because they disapprove of your profession.

Meditation, particularly practicing meta-awareness, can produce shifts in the DMN that decrease rumination. Practicing meta-awareness allows us to rescue our identities from the tyranny of thought. We watch and detach from thought, watching them rise and fall in the mind without clinging to them. By becoming aware of our thoughts and emotions and taking a curious attitude towards them, we can break the cycle of rumination, thereby supporting our mental health. Observing thoughts, rather than becoming lost in their drama, allows us to feel and behave independently of them.

For example, simply having the thought, “I’ll always be alone,” doesn’t have to produce a negative emotion, if I recognize it as just a thought.

We might reframe the thought “She hates me” to be: “I just had a thought that this person hates me. It’s just a thought that I have no way of knowing for certain is true. I will smile warmly at her anyways. I might be completely wrong.”

Or, we can do nothing, waiting until the thought “She hates me” passes through the screen of our minds.

We can turn off this particular movie, and put on a new one. After all, we can’t stop the flow of thoughts: there will always be others to take their place.

Lesson learned: I am not my thoughts.

And: some psychiatrists are way more hippy than I am.

My Amygdala and Prefrontal Cortex Discuss a Centipede Trapped in the Bathtub

Prefrontal Cortex: …Right, so the deadline for the article is Monday. I can work on it tomorrow morning, but then I also need to schedule time for grocery shopping—what am I going to make for the week to eat? There’s a giant load of laundry in the bin too, which I should get to, maybe I can squeeze that in while I’m writing. Laundry is such an involved process sometimes… I also have that doctor’s appointment on Thursday, then I there’s that package I have to pick up at the post office, and I have to mail out my passport for—oh, right, we needed the bathroom—

Amygdala: Good God, NO!!!! OH IT’s THE END OF TIMES! THERE’S A THING there! A crawly, thing, so many legs, evil legs. We’re going to die!!!!!

PFC: It’s a centipede. Trapped in the bathtub.

A: What’s a centipede?! It looks like an alien. Those legs will crawl up our legs, into our mouths, eyes, under our skin—

PFC: Centipede’s don’t do crawl under your skin. I believe that’s…uh, scabies? Centipedes are relatively harmless. Besides, this one is extra harmless; it’s trapped in the tub. Look, see how he’s struggling to get out? He can’t. Poor guy… It reminds me of a time when I felt helpless…

A: It needs to die, we need to kill it, we can’t go on like this!!!

PFC: What, with a centipede in the tub?

A: It’s LEGS. They’re hideous, it crawls, it’s fast. Oh, God, I hate it. We need to call someone.

PFC: We can’t call someone. We’re a strong, independent 30-something woman. We’ve handled massive spiders as big as our heads in the Amazon, giant Caribbean cockroaches in our granola—

A: LOOK AT IT. It keeps moving… Oh god, I hate it.

PFC: It keeps moving because it’s trying to get out of the tub.

A: AND CRAWL ON OUR FACE. LOOK AT IT’S BILLIONS OF DISGUSTING LEGS!

PFC: Why discriminate against something that has many legs? Hindu gods have an extra set of arms and they’re divine. Remember all the times we wished we had another set of arms so we could hold grocery bags while looking for our keys and texting?

A: THAT’S DIFFERENT THIS… MONSTER—

PFC: —centipede.

A: CENTIPEDE… can’t text. It has nefarious plans for us once it gets out of its white, porcelain prison. WHAT ARE WE GOING TO DO?

PFC: Well, we could just leave it there… he doesn’t seem happy in the tub, though…

A: WE’LL NEVER BE ABLE TO BATHE AGAIN! WHAT IF IT CRAWLS OUT?

PFC: It can’t crawl out. Ok, you’re right, we can’t leave it there. The noble thing to do would be to scoop him out and put him in the garden.

A: NOOONONNONONNONONO GOD NO WE’RE NOT TOUCHING IT!

PFC: Why? It’s small, harmless. It’s trapped. We could use a water glass and a card, or book…

A: NO, NOT THE BOOKS, WE DON’T PLAY CARDS WE’RE NOT TOUCHING IT.

PFC: We could… kill. it.

A: OK OK OK!!! HOW?! How?

PFC: Well, we could squish it? Flush him down the drain? I feel like that goes against our moral principles. And, I’d also have to conclude that, quite frankly, it would be an act of cowardice, the ethically inept thing to do—

A: —which option requires the least amount of touching it and squishiness?!

PFC: Flushing. But it will also result in a slow, agonizing death for the poor creature, who we have decided to persecute for simply being in our tub, and for possessing many legs. I’m not sure of the extent to which a centipede feels pain and suffers, though. I mean, does it suffer like we do? Suffering, after all, is often in the stories we tell ourselves about our expectations and identities, our beliefs about what should be and what we deserve, rather than what is. I don’t know if centipedes have identities or expectations but, if we flush him, he’ll struggle, which means he is resisting what is, which is suffering. Causing suffering to another being is wrong. We can also clearly observe that he prefers to stay alive—

A: SHUT UP AND DO IT! FLUSH HIM!

PFC: It would be wrong. We’d feel bad about it. I would, you would. Let’s put him in the garden, please?

A: NO NO NO FLUSH PLEASE.

PFC: Let’s just leave him, pretend he’s not there and come back later.

A: What if he gets out? Crawls on our face while we’re sleeping?

PFC: I don’t think that’s likely. I think he’s trapped in there.

A: He’s going to die eventually let’s kill him, get rid of him!

PFC: Eventually, like you mean at the end of his lifespan? That’s true. I’m not sure how long centipedes live… It’s also cold outside, I don’t think putting him in the garden would do any good. He obviously came in to escape the cold. We’re seeing more centipedes inside now as the weather changes.

A: OH STOP REASONING and just do it!

PFC: …. ok.

….

PFC: Amygdala, it’s done. It was horrible, we’re horrible brain areas. Are you happy? You don’t have to worry about it anymore. I also made sure I let plenty of water flush down the drain so he can’t crawl back up, even though highly unlikely, I knew you might have something to say about that… Amygdala?

A: …

PFC: Amygdala? You’ve… gone quiet.

A: So how are you going to get your article written, laundry done, groceries bought AND cook something for the week? You also made plans with your friend this weekend and you need to shower in the centipede-infested bathroom, and CLEAN the bathroom, it’s filthy. You’ll never get it done… Fear, dread, overwhelm! IT’S THE END OF TIMES!

And so on.

 

Estrogen Balance and Mental Health: Depression, Anxiety and Stress

Estrogen Balance and Mental Health: Depression, Anxiety and Stress

Estrogen levels in the brain and body affect our brain’s levels of dopamine and norepinephrine, two neurotransmitters that are implicated in mood disorders like depression, psychosis and anxiety.

Our brain has several built-in recycling processes to keep us level-headed. When neurotransmitters (brain chemicals that have mood-regulating effects) are finished with their tasks, enzymes recycle them, breaking them down into their chemical parts to be reused again at a later date. This process controls the level of chemical nervous system stimulation in our brains and keeps our moods regulated.

You’re at home, late a night, working on an important assignment, driven by the excitement of the topic at hand. Your brain is flooded with dopamine, a brain chemical that is connected to positive mood and motivation, pleasure and reward; dopamine pathways are activated when we’re engaged in a task that is pleasurable and rewarding, when our lives are flooded with meaning and we’re working towards a goal. Dopamine, however can also be connected to psychosis, conditions like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and also be linked to impulsive behaviour, aggression and irritability, when over-expressed.

Typing happily, you near the end of your assignment. Suddenly, your computer screen goes dark. Your heart begins to race, your skin prickles and you’re overtaken by anxiety, panic and fear. Your body is releasing norepinephrine, a chemical connected to stress, anxiety and the “Fight or Flight” response, but that also allows us to feel alert and energized. Your heart pounds as your reboot your computer. You are hyperaware of the sounds and smells around you. Your skin prickles and your breathing is loud and rapid.

You exhale with relief as your computer screen lights up again, revealing that your assignment is unharmed. Stress drains out of your body, and your norepinephrine levels fall. You begin to tire; it’s time for bed. You add some finishing touches to your work, hit “save” and turn in for the night. The stress and motivation you felt only hours before dwindle, as the neurotransmitters responsible for these responses are swept out of your synaptic clefts and recycled.

When our brains have had enough stimulation of dopamine (mood, reward, pleasure, but also aggression, irritability, impulsivity and psychosis) and norepinephrine (stress and anxiety, “Fight or Flight”, but also alertness and energy), both get recycled through COMT, which pulls them out of circulation, breaks them down into their chemical parts, and reassembles them for later use.

We all have variability in how fast our COMT enzyme works, based on the expression of the COMT genes in our DNA. Some of us have slower COMT genes, meaning that our brain levels of dopamine and norepinephrine tend to be higher than other people’s, as our ability to clean up and recycle these hormones is slowed. This might result in an individual (depending on other genetic and lifestyle factors) who is at a higher risk of mental health conditions like psychosis or bipolar disorder, or someone who is more irritable, prone to aggression, or stress intolerant.

Others have more COMT gene expression, resulting in a faster enzyme that clears dopamine and norepinephrine more quickly, resulting in lower brain levels of these neurotransmitters. If other factors are present, these individuals may be more at risk for mental health conditions such as depression, low mood, lack of motivation, or susceptible to addictions.

Beyond genetics, there are several environmental and biological factors that may affect the speed of the COMT enzyme. One of these factors is estrogen. Estrogen slows the COMT enzyme down by as much as 30%. This means that when estrogen levels are high (seen in many women around ovulation or premenstrually, or in women with generally high estrogen levels, termed “Estrogen Dominance”, COMT performs more slowly and dopamine and norepinephrine levels remain elevated.

Depending on the extent of the problem, women with high estrogen often experience anxiety and irritability and a low tolerance for stress. On the more severe end of the spectrum, some women experience conditions such as PMDD (Premenstrual Dysphoria Disorder) or PMS-induced psychosis, resulting from abnormally high brain levels of dopamine and norepinephrine due to high estrogen. These conditions probably result from a combination of high estrogen, slowed COMT and other genetic and lifestyle factors. Xenoestrogens from environmental toxins, or birth control pills may also slow COMT and further exacerbate some of the symptoms of estrogen dominance.

Conversely, women with lowered levels of estrogen, such as those with amenorrhea (missed menstrual cycles) from various causes—PCOS is one, so is the birth control pill, especially progestin-only pills, or hormonal IUDs—or women who are peri-menopausal or menopausal, will have a faster COMT enzyme. This means that dopamine and norepinephrine will be cleared from the brain more quickly. Low levels of these neurotransmitters may result in depression: low mood, low energy and lack of motivation. On the extreme end, low levels of dopamine in the brain may result in conditions like Parkinson’s. Currently, research is being done on estrogen-replacement therapy as a treatment for Parkinson’s because of its ability to increase brain dopamine levels through slowing COMT.

When it comes to birth control pills, which are combination of synthetic estrogen and synthetic progesterone (“progestins”), or just straight progestin, either in pill-form or in a hormonal IUD, effects can be unpredictable. There is evidence that oral contraceptive use, especially progestin-only contraception, can exacerbate anxiety and depression, especially in teens. The pill acts by suppressing ovulation and suppressing natural hormone production, which may result in low levels of naturally-occurring progesterone and estrogen, which can slow COMT. However, the synthetic estrogens from the pill may interact with COMT, speeding it up in some women. Therefore the effects of specific forms of birth control on individual women is hard to predict; if functional medicine and genetic research tells us anything, it’s that there is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to striking the right hormonal balance.

Estrogen also has effects on another enzyme, called MAO-A, that recycles serotonin, the “Happy Hormone”, often implicated in depression and anxiety. Like COMT, estrogen slows down MAO, reducing the speed at which the body breaks down serotonin, resulting in higher brain serotonin levels. Drops in estrogen around and before a woman’s period, or low estrogen levels, may result in feelings of depression. Many women report feeling depressed and craving carbs and sugar around their periods. This is often related to a drop in serotonin as estrogen levels fall right before menses. Drops in serotonin levels due to drops in estrogen levels after childbirth may explain postpartum depression, according to some researchers.

The link between estrogen and its effects on COMT and MAO hint at the complexities of the body and brain’s hormonal milieu and its implications for hormonal regulation and mental health. Mental wellness is a complex state involving a variety of factors: hormones, enzymes and neurochemical pathways that are affected by our environment, our genetics and our hormonal predispositions. This is why I believe in taking a functional approach to mental health, seeing our mental health symptoms for what they are: symptoms, and making efforts to uncover underlying causes rooted in lifestyle, genetics and our environment. I believe the way to address symptoms is to trace them back to their source.

For many women, treating depression, anxiety and stress-intolerance may involve balancing estrogen levels and healing the menstrual cycle. For others it may involve supporting genetic susceptibilities with lifestyle changes, finding a birth control method that balances (or coming off entirely), and reducing exposure to xenoestrogens, supporting estrogen detoxification pathways, and addressing women’s health conditions such as irregular menses, and conditions like PMS, fibroids, endometriosis and PCOS.

So “What the Health” Do I Eat Now?

So “What the Health” Do I Eat Now?

 A naturopathic doctor offers tips for navigating the often contradictory and confusing world of modern human nutrition.

As soon as we start to feel comfortable with our grasp of human nutrition—which foods are healthy, which ones are unhealthy, and how to eat a balanced diet for optimal health—a new study gets published that shatters our once-felt sense of confidence.

Confusingly contradictory health claims constantly appear in the news, like the American Heart Association’s vilification of coconut oil. The vegan diet-promoting documentary What the Health, currently trending on Netflix, turns convention on it head by assuaging our fears of refined sugar, instead blaming animal protein, eggs and dairy for the worldwide diabetes epidemic. Even I find myself doubting the 15 years I’ve spent studying and working in the field of human health every time paradoxical nutritional data is uncovered.

When I was in high school, I remember patting myself on the back for choosing fat-free options, hoping the leanness of my food would encourage leanness of my flesh. I gave up meat, understanding that I was making a healthier choice; I was told that meat, fat and cholesterol were all culprits of heart disease. I tried giving up eggs and dairy, trying on veganism in order to minimize my impact on the environment. I did an elimination diet while at naturopathic medical school, removing gluten. When my colleagues started reading about the Paleo Diet—grains were the enemy all along, while meat was good for us—I slowly began to embrace a “primal” diet. I started removing myself from the influence of decades’ worth of poorly conducted research and began welcoming saturated fat back into my life. Fat was fine; it was carbs that were the root of all disease. Atkins had gotten it right from the beginning. Eventually I cut out all carbs and sugar and tried a ketogenic diet, eating lots of fat, moderate amounts of meat, and some vegetables.

My journey brings me here, to my Facebook newsfeed, which has been infiltrated with articles condemning coconut oil and saturated fat for raising LDL cholesterol and contributing to cardiovascular disease. “But I thought it was healthy!” Friends, family and patients cry, tearing their hair out in confusion over the news. Some patients have watched Netflix’s What the Health, a documentary from the makers of Cowspiracy, which asserts that sugar’s link to type II diabetes may not bas as strong as previously thought.

The flip-flopping is frustrating for sure, especially for those of us who are committed to living healthy lives for as long as possible. But before we toss our tubs of coconut oil and liquid stevia drops in the garbage and start pulling out the white sugar and margarine again, we should consider how nutritional research is conducted. Let’s entertain different traditional, holistic viewpoints on food and nutrition in order to learn how to feed our bodies optimally.

The Problem with Nutritional Research

There are several problems with how we study nutrition. One of the challenges lies within science itself; scientific studies, by their very nature, attempt to isolate all of life’s complexity down to two variables in order to study them while nutrition, as it’s practised in the day to day lives of human beings, consists of an infinite number of important factors that are often not taken into account.

Most human diet studies are epidemiological. Researchers follow populations of people for years, tracking what they eat and noting how many diseases they get over time. They then synthesize the data to create story.  For instance, how much fibre did the people who had heart disease eat? Did those who avoided gluten have a higher risk of diabetes?

In order to assess dietary intake, most epidemiological studies use Food Frequency Questionnaires, or FFQs. Study participants are asked how often they eat certain foods (such as chicken) per week. They are asked to check a box, from “none” to “more than 6 times a week”. As a clinician interested in how my patients’ nutrition may be affecting their health, I assess diet in a few different ways. In the initial appointment, I ask my patients to recall everything they’ve consumed in the past 24 hours to get a rough overview of how they typically eat. Then, between the first and second appointments, I have my patients track their foods in a diet diary over the course of one to two weeks. The accuracy with which my patients report their food intake from the day before depends on their memories, perceptions, and diligence in recording, among other things, and this can compare drastically with their diet diaries that are recorded in real time. Not only do the mundane memories of daily meals evade us, we are often found guilty of deceiving ourselves based on how we feel we should be eating, rather than how we actually are. I find it hard to believe that participants are filling out FFQs accurately.

Also, the stories that epidemiological studies create from the data establish correlation, not causation. With many correlations (like one of my favourites: ice cream consumption and drowning—both occur in summer) there is often no direct relationship. If assessing the connection between fat intake and diabetes, a good study will take into account all meaningful variables, such as how often the participants exercised, or whether they had existing cardiovascular disease. However, considering all the possible factors that might effect the relationship is virtually impossible. For instance, what was the status of the gut flora of the participants? What was their antioxidant or mineral status; were they magnesium deficient? Were they consuming meat that was pasture-raised or corn-fed? How high was their daily toxic exposure? Did they experience chronic stress? How well were they sleeping? What were their levels of inflammation like? And so on.

The trouble with studying nutrition and disease is that, when it comes to health, context matters; context may be all that matters. For instance, while we know that barbecued meat can produce carcinogens that potentially lead to cancer, a study found that when the meats were seasoned with rosemary the carcinogenic load of the meat was neutralized. It’s nearly impossible to form a complete picture when we insist on studying isolated factors, leaving out many important details.

Animal studies, while allowing for tighter control (we don’t ask mice to report their diets, we just feed them), are also flawed. Firstly, mice and humans are completely different species with different nutrient requirements. However, animal study designs can also be problematic. Animals are given lard and white sugar to assess the effects of a high fat, high sugar diet on their health—their diets are exaggerated for the purpose of the study. Human beings, however, eat burgers, cake, and ice cream. We don’t eat single nutrients like fat and sugar, we eat food. If a mouse gets sick on a diet of lard and table sugar is it because of the foods it was eating, something he wasn’t eating, or some other unforeseen factor? There may be a huge difference between eating a high-fat diet with no vitamins and minerals, and eating a high-fat diet that contains complete nutrition.

A third method for studying human nutrition is through randomized control trials, or RCTs. In RCTs humans are randomized into a group that receives an intervention, like a dietary plan, or a control group that is told to follow some other diet or just eat normally. These trials control as many variables as possible, but the timeframe for these studies is often too short to garner meaningful information about health outcomes, which may take years to manifest. It is also difficult to get participants to stick to meal plans. Further, it’s hard to establish consensus for each diet being studied. For example, when assessing the nutritional merits of the Paleo diet, how many servings of vegetables should participants be told to consume? How many grams of fat? What types of fat?

It’s important that we can use studies to seek answers to our questions about the relationship between nutrition and health. However, due to its many limitations, nutritional research can only take us so far. This is why one study may indicate that high sugar diets contribute to diabetes risk, while another study finds no relationship.

A New Food Guide

If we can’t trust research studies to tell us what to eat, who do we trust? Surely we can’t rely on Canada’s Food Guide, with it’s outdated recommendations that simultaneously overemphasize grains and dairy, while continuing to uphold archaic views on fat. Primarily created in the 40’s to help Canadian families ration their food during the war, the Food Guide was not necessarily created to promote the optimal health of those who follow it.

Dr. Ray Cronise, a former NASA scientist, outlines a food pyramid in his paper to help organize food into nutrient content. I often borrow his pyramid to depict nutritional balance to my patients.

Ray’s pyramid is composed of four circles, three that form the base of the pyramid, forming the three main groups of macronutrients: protein, fat, and carbohydrates, and foods that are composed primarily of each. The circle at the top represents the foods that contain a higher number of micronutrients: vitamins and minerals, which are mainly non-starchy vegetables like leafy greens.

Protein-rich foods include meat and animal products, including fish, eggs and dairy. Fat-rich foods include nuts, seeds and oils like coconut oil, avocado and olives. Carbohydrate-rich foods include starchy vegetables like potatoes, grains, legumes and fruit. Ray concedes, however, that none of these foods are composed of a single macronutrient; animal products often contain a significant amount of fat; nuts and seeds also contain protein and carbohydrates; and legumes and grains contain some protein as well.

Ray points out that most diets, particularly the Standard American Diet, is bottom-heavy. North Americans generally over-consume macronutrient-rich foods that are higher in fats, carbs, proteins, and calories in general, and under-consume micronutrient-rich foods like fruits and vegetables. Because of this, North Americans consistently fail to meet the levels of vitamins, minerals and antioxidants essential for optimal bodily function.

It seems that even “healthy” diets tend to focus on the bottom of the pyramid, restricting certain groups of foods while making up the balance by over-emphasizing others. Paleo and low-carb dieters often fixate on the right side of the pyramid, including animal products, nuts and seeds, but avoiding grains and legumes, while vegan and vegetarian diets concentrate on the left side of the pyramid, eschewing all animal products and getting protein from grains, legumes and nuts instead.

One thing all healthy diets seem to emphasize, however, is fruit and vegetable consumption. When studying the merits of a vegan or paleo diet, it is the non-starchy, micronutrient-rich vegetables that may confer most of the health benefits, regardless of the carb, fat and protein content. Therefore, Ray recommends focusing on the top of his food pyramid, eating as many vegetables as possible, while eating a balance of foods from the base.

Since we rarely eat pyramids, I often depict this balance for my patients using a plate. I divide the plate into four quarters. One half of the plate is dedicated to colourful vegetables, with at least a full quarter dedicated to greens. The other two quarters of the plate are divided into starches: grains, legumes, tuberous vegetables, and proteins: meat, dairy, eggs, fish, or legumes. Oils and fats can be used to cook with or added to the meal in the form of avocados, nuts and seeds.

Listening to the Body as Guide

So, while Ray’s advice to eat as many green and colourful vegetable as we can while eating a balance of the foods at the bottom of the pyramid is sound, how can we establish what the right balance is for us? Many of us will have vastly different requirements for the macronutrients: carbs, fat and protein. My body has an energy demand that is different from that of my 6′ friend who lifts weights daily, or my 90-year old hypertensive, mainly sedentary Italian grandmother. As a naturopathic doctor, who believes in an individualized approach to health, I tend to reject top-down dietary recommendations that ignore the variabilities among people.

A friend of mine, having damaged his health through a string of restrictive dieting, argues that all food—even refined sugar and saturated fat—has a place in a healthy diet. He believes our bodies are designed to crave fat, protein and carbohydrates in ratios that promote optimal health. He writes in his book that we can eat whatever we want as long as we eat intuitively and avoid foods laden with “fake” flavours and processed oils, like corn oil, that confuse our internal cues and hunger signals. He also argues, like the filmmakers in the Netflix documentary, What the Health, that there is no evidence that refined sugar causes diabetes, and that diets based on avoidance of certain foods are detrimental for health.

While I’m not convinced that refined sugar deserves to be completely cleared of all charges, I agree that mindful and intuitive eating may be the key to maintaining balance. Healing with Whole Foods by Paul Pitchford places awareness and physical activity at the base of its Integrative Food Pyramid. The idea is that we need to first establish the foundations of movement and mindfulness before we begin to talk about food intake. As my friend says, perhaps the key is tuning in to our own internal physiological and emotional cues through mindfulness, paying attention to hunger and cravings, rather than measuring calories, carbs, protein, or fat grams.

Following our internal cues may be difficult, as the book The Dorito Affect outlines. The author points out how certain foods are engineered to override our hunger and satiation signals and monopolize our cravings, leading us to overeat. Therefore, if we’re going to follow our body’s signalling, mindfulness is a requirement, but so is following the advice of Michael Pollen, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, who famously tells us to “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly Plants.”

Pollen urges us to stick to foods that resemble something we might encounter in nature: eat foods our grandmothers would recognize; purchase foods that come from a plant, not foods that are made in one; and to stick to whole foods or packaged foods with five listed ingredients or less. Pollen also encourages us to cook and prepare as much of our own foods as possible. Do you have a craving for potato chips, ice cream, or dark chocolate? Feel free to indulge, as long as you make it yourself using the raw, natural ingredients. The theory is that, when the body is given clean, whole food, it regulates its hunger and satiety signals to communicate to you exactly what it needs.

Heal the Individual

When it comes to whole foods, I believe that there are no “good” or “bad” foods, generally speaking. Observational studies that examine how traditional societies ate suggest to us that saturated fat, animal protein, dietary cholesterol, and carbohydrates all have a place in a balanced diet. However, when it comes to diet, especially therapeutic diets, it’s my job to consider the individual and their health context: there are no good or bad foods, but some foods are better or worse for certain people, and some may even be better or worse for certain people at certain points along their health journeys.

When I am helping my patients calm inflammation, heal their digestive systems, clear their skin, or manage autoimmune disease, I often recommend identifying food sensitivities and eliminating those foods from the diet. Oftentimes these foods need to removed only temporarily, but sometimes foods may need to be removed indefinitely. Patients with insulin resistance, such as in the cases of obesity, PCOS, diabetes or metabolic syndrome, often do well on a low-carbohydrate diet to restore insulin sensitivity. Again, these anti-inflammatory, reduced-carbohydrate diets may only be required until hormonal balance is restored. Older adults concerned with promoting longevity, or patients undergoing cancer treatment, may do better restricting protein to lower their levels of growth factors, while athletes and stressed out adults may require higher amounts of protein to promote muscle building, or to synthesize mood-regulating neuro-chemicals. A woman who is stressed, depressed, exhausted and iron deficient may feel much better increasing her dietary intake of red meat to help regulate her nervous system. Another woman, with a family history of colon cancer, may do better avoiding it.

Endless factors need to be taken into account when we consider which dietary style is right for us. Our health goals, health status, nutrient status, digestive system health, immune system health, liver functioning, insulin sensitivity and hormone balance, levels of stress, toxic load and inflammation are just some of the things that I consider when making lifestyle recommendations for my patients. Lifestyle preferences, tradition, culture, religious backgrounds, cooking abilities, time constraints, and other factors, will also all play a role in our food choices and eating habits.

Our emotional connection to food and our ethics also matter. While veganism is certainly not a diet I recommend, if consuming animal products is out of line with one’s morals, then following a vegan diet may be the healthiest way for them to live in accordance his or her beliefs. Similarly, someone with a history of disordered eating may need to lift all food limitations, even junk food, in order to heal his or her relationship with food and hunger.

Investigations into the eating patterns of traditional societies tell us that human beings thrive on a variety of different diets. Optimizing diet for the individual goes beyond following the latest research or government and industry-funded health recommendations. It involves eating a variety of natural, whole foods, learning to pay attention to the body’s hunger signals, and even working with a health professional who uses diet to help promote health and manage disease on an individual level.

 

 

 

Root Causes of Anxiety, a Functional Medicine Approach

I talk about root causes of anxiety, the most common mental health condition, and what to do about it from a functional medicine perspective.

Hi, everybody, Dr. Talia Marcheggiani here. I’m a naturopathic doctor who practices in Bloor West Village, in Toronto and today I’m going to talk to you guys about the roots of anxiety.

Anxiety is the most common mental health condition. It affects about 18%of North Americans and it encompasses a wide range of different diagnoses including generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, OCD, phobias, PTSD and depression, and social anxiety. It’s a huge umbrella of different conditions. So the first thing I do when I meet my patients is try to understand how anxiety manifests for them. The word anxiety means very little to me. What I care about is how the symptoms are manifesting in my individual patient in front of me and how it affects their life. So, I’ll ask them what does it mean when you tell me that you have anxiety? Walk me through a situation when your anxiety gets triggered, tell me what it’s like to live inside your shoes, inside your head, what kind of things do you worry about? What goes on in your body? And, how do you know that you have anxiety? Did you decide that you had that diagnosis or did someone else give it to you and what do you feel or think about having that diagnosis? Do you agree with it? Do you disagree? Do you have any doubts? The symptoms of anxiety encompass the body because it affects our nervous system, every single bodily organ is affected, potentially, by anxiety and some people have some of the symptoms or all of them and sometimes very few, just the mental and emotional symptoms, and many of us don’t even identify with having chronic anxiety or anxiety disorders or anxiety symptoms.

First of all, we have the mental symptoms. People with anxiety will commonly experience worrisome thoughts, anticipatory anxiety, so, being worried about the immediate future or the distant future. They might feel irritable or excited, they may have depressed mood. A lot of the people I see with anxiety have this kind of “chilled out” demeanour because it’s very common for someone who’s got a high level of anxiety in their body to dissociate a little bit from those feelings and appear very calm. They kind of describe it as a duck on a pond. On the surface, you see this calm animal, just floating along, but when you look under the water you see the duck legs busily working away and so that’s how a lot of people will describe their mind. They say, on the surface I’m really calm, but once you look under the surface, you see that there’s a lot of mental activity and a lot of worry that’s happening.

There may be fears, such as specific fears, such as phobias, or just general fears, like in the case of generalized anxiety disorder, or fears may be triggered in certain situations like in the case of social anxiety. Insomnia is very common, an overactive and busy mind is very common, fatigue is another common symptom as well as difficulty concentrating, memory loss, brain fog. So all of these conditions that show that the person who’s experiencing anxiety and who is dealing with anxiety is distracted and focused on other things, rather than what’s right in front of them. So a lot of the time my patients will describe an inability to feel present and feel connected and enjoy the moment. Their mind is always on something else. Sometimes the anxiety is based around specific concerns and sometimes it’s just very general and it doesn’t really matter what’s going on in someone’s life, there’s this sense of impending doom that they’re dealing with on a daily basis. Anxiety and depression are very common, they’re comorbid mental health conditions, and it’s very difficult to tell the difference a lot of the time. There’s a hypothesis that they’re similar conditions, or the same condition, but one is a more extraverted, so that would be anxiety, version of depression, which is a more introverted and internalized manifestation of the same disease process. This is still a hypothesis, but it makes some sense and it resonates with a lot of people that I talk to.

Then we have the bodily symptoms of anxiety. A lot of people will experience muscle tension, aches and pains. This is typically in the shoulders where they carry their worries or they’ll find themselves tensing their muscles without being aware of it. They may experience twitching, and they experience pain from the tight muscles. There’s also sensory symptoms, such as ear ringing, hot and cold flushes, changes in vision, tingling, numbness, muscle cramps. It’s very common to have cardiovascular symptoms, such as a racing heart or heart palpitations and this often occurs in people who have panic attacks, which often sends them into the emergency room, because it can be difficulty breathing, racing heart, chest pains, sweating, all these kinds of autonomic symptoms that one might experience if they were having a cardiovascular event, can occur in someone with anxiety or panic disorder. It can be really frightening.

Then there’s gastrointestinal symptoms, so there’s definitely a connection between IBS and anxiety. And those of us who don’t necessarily suffer from anxiety but have experienced nervousness, which I’m sure we all have, will notice that our gut is definitely affected and we may have looser bowels, bloating, difficulty digesting, or we might not have an appetite or want to eat. And this all common in people who have chronic anxiety. Genitourinary symptoms, such as frequent urination, or frequent thirst, often leading people to think that they have diabetes. Also, there might be a delay in urination, so you feel like you have to go to the washroom, you go to the toilet and then there’s a moment where you can’t really go, and you’re trying to wrestle with yourself, which is really common. So urinary hesitancy, it’s called. And then we have the autonomic, so the symptoms that are related to the autonomic, or automatic, nervous system, such as a dry mouth, dilated pupils, sweating or flushing, and this also related to our GI symptoms.

So, these are just a few of the anxiety symptoms. And, as you can see, they affect pretty much every single system in the body. Our nervous system, which is what is affected in anxiety, consists of our brain, our spinal cord and all of our nerves. Nerves that go to and from different body organs and our nervous system is divided into the voluntary and the involuntary, or autonomic, nervous system and our autonomic nervous system is divided into the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. So our sympathetic nervous system is the “fight or flight” nervous system. This gets turned on when we sense an immediate danger and our body is primed to respond to that danger.

The parasympathetic nervous system is turned on when we’re sleeping and digesting, and when we’re a state of otherwise calm, when there is no danger around. You can think of these two systems as a seesaw. One gets turned on while the other gets turned off and our body should be able to toggle back and forth between these two arms of the autonomic nervous system easily and without getting stuck in either one and depending on the situation and what’s going on. So imagine that you’re walking through the forest, and you’re feeling calm, and you’re feeling at peace, and then you look down at what you think is a stick on the ground that starts to move, your autonomic nervous system is going to kick you into the sympathetic, fight or flight, response. In this response your body will be primed to either fight, flight, run away, or freeze. And these three responses are what will get us away from the danger or meet that impending danger and this is what our body will respond with in order to ensure our survival when there are dangerous situations that we’re faced with.

Once that danger’s gone, we’ve either fought, flown, or frozen and the danger has forgotten about us and left, we’ll return to the parasympathetic nervous system. We need the parasympathetic nervous system turned on when we’re eating and when we’re sleeping. If we have problems, so if we get stuck in that fight or flight response for too long, either because we perceive there to be danger, or our body simply can’t switch back into the parasympathetic state, we’re going to have problems with feeling relaxed, sleeping soundly, and digesting our food properly.

Those of us who are experiencing chronic stress, our nervous system is just taxed, and we’re in the sympathetic nervous response far longer than we should be, because we’re constantly facing deadlines, or we have a lot more responsibility and a lot less control, on our plate, we’re going to experience this feeling of chronic stress. This will exacerbate someone who’s already got a predisposition towards anxiety. There’s a hypothesis, or personality theorists hypothesize that some of us are just born with a higher level of neuroticism as part of our constitutional tendencies. So I see that a lot of anxiety will run in families, especially in female patients, many of them will have grown up with a mother who suffered from anxiety. So there’s definitely a nature component to the nature-nurture debate in terms of what causes anxiety. So, while we can’t really affect our nature, or our genetics, we can affect how those genes are expressed and we can look at the environmental factors that might trigger those genes to be expressed. So that’s what I’m here for. My goal as a naturopathic doctor is to take a full assessment, understand what someone’s symptoms of anxiety are, what the external factors, the environment of their life is like, and look for potential causes that might be exacerbating the anxiety, making it difficult for them to function and perform and live the life that they know they can live. Living a life that’s full of abundant health.

So, the first cause that I want to talk about is chronic stress. when we’re stressed out, like I described when we encounter that snake in the grass, our body will release hormones called norepinephrine and epinephrine. Those are our fight or flight hormones. Those are short-lived, and when those run out, our body starts to make cortisol. Cortisol is a more long-term stress hormone. However, when we’re stuck in that sympathetic state our body becomes, well a theory is that our body becomes unable to produce as much cortisol for long periods of time, that our adrenals get “fatigued”. Another theory is that our brain stops responding to cortisol and we develop a kind of cortisol resistance. And this we’ll see with a lot of brain fog, memory loss, difficulty concentrating, there’ll be a lot of weight gain, especially around the abdomen, and people will experience a lot of inflammatory symptoms, so that’s when we’ll see joint pain and muscle aches and, potentially, worsening of depression as cortisol can kind of motivate us and get us going, because, if you think about it, when we’re in a state of fight, flight or freeze, that’s an action-oriented state, once our body stops responding to that, we enter this kind of burnout and exhaustive phase.

What’s more, once our body stops responding to cortisol, in order to maintain that sympathetic tone, to stay in that fight or flight state, that for whatever reason our body is turned on to, we start to make those catecholamines, norepinephrine and epinephrine again and that contributes to those symptoms of anxiety. So essentially what anxiety is is a high cortisol, high norepinephrine state, where we have that racing heart, we have those tense muscles, we’re looking for danger and our body, for one reason or another, expects that there’s some kind of danger that it needs to defend itself against.

So, not all stress is bad stress. You think of a new mom, she’s full of love and all these feel-good hormones, but the lack of sleep, the added responsibility, all of the things that having a new baby might mean to her and her life, are going to contribute to more stress hormones going through her system. And so I’ll ask a lot of my patients if they’re stressed and, even though I’m kind of getting a sense of high stress from them in terms of their level of busyness, and their level of downtime and just the demands on them in their day-to-day life, a lot of them will say that they don’t feel stressed, that they love their job. So it’s not about whether you love your job, or whether or not you love the things that are, basically, getting piled onto your plate, it’s your body’s perception of those things. So, our body does well when it has enough down time, it has enough restful sleep, and it gets enough breaks. So that keeps that toggle from the sympathetic nervous system, to the parasympathetic nervous system, fluctuating in a healthy way, without getting in one or the other.

Another common cause of anxiety that I see, or definitely a factor that exacerbates anxiety symptoms, is blood sugar imbalance. So, when we wake up in the —a lot of us wake up in the morning and we have cereal, or we have those packaged oatmeals. So, in North America we eat high-carb, high-sugar breakfasts, or we skip breakfast, or we just eat a lot of carbs and sugar in general throughout the day. When you eat a food that’s high on the glycemic index, that contains a lot of easily digestible carbs or refined flours and sugar, we get this immediate spike in blood sugar, as those sugars are absorbed directly into our blood stream. When we get this high level of sugar, we might feel a lot of energy, we might feel really good, we get a lot of dopamine release, and it feels pretty awesome, we get a lot of immediate energy that our body can use. But then, because our body wants to maintain a certain level of blood sugar, what gets released next is a hormone called insulin. Insulin helps that glucose, that sugar, get inside of our cells, where we can use it for energy. If our blood sugar shoots up too high our body sends more insulin into the blood stream to lower that sugar. Sometimes it sends too much insulin and our blood sugar plummets, we get hypoglycaemia symptoms: dizziness, “hangry”, irritability, weakness, fatigue, you’d kill someone for a piece of toast kind of situation, and carb cravings, and we respond by eating more carbs and the cycle begins again. That can exacerbate anxiety because our energy levels are going to be rising really quickly and falling really quickly. Stress hormones are going to get triggered everytime we enter a hypoglycaemic state. And, because cortisol also releases sugar into the blood, so cortisol and insulin work together. Going through this eb and flow of blood sugar, basically riding the blood sugar rollercoaster, is going to exacerbate and mimic a lot of the anxiety symptoms that I described. So a lot of people I talk to, when they’re experiencing anxiety, oftentimes, during the day when they’re experiencing anxiety, it’s between meals, or it’s after a high carb, high sugar meal. And, so a big part of managing their anxiety, or at least creating a terrain where their mental health can function optimally, and their emotional wellness has a chance to function optimally, is to get their blood sugar nice and level. And this means adding protein and fat to every single meal, lowering those refined carbohydrates, beginning each day with a high-fat, and high-protein breakfast. Nutrient deficiency is another really big cause that I look for when it comes to anxiety. So, the happy hormone, serotonin, which is implicated in both depression and anxiety, that’s what the antidepressant and anti-anxiety drugs like cipralex or prozac act on, so those selective-serotonin re-uptake inhibitors. This is a hormone that gives us a feeling of satisfaction, it gives us a feeling of uplift, it’s often what tanks when we crave carbs, and so eating carbohydrates kind of perks our serotonin levels up. In order to make serotonin, we need an amino acid called tryptophan, which we get from protein, and we need the vitamins B6, magnesium, B12, and zinc, and iron. And those take tryptophan and turn it into another amino acid called 5HTP, which then gets turned into serotonin. And then, once we have enough serotonin, that gets turned into melatonin, which helps us sleep and regulates our circadian rhythms. So any break in either of those pathways is going to result is us having lower levels of serotonin and melatonin available to our nervous system for us to have proper mental and emotional regulation. When we’re stressed out, our demand for those nutrients goes up, because our adrenal glands are also sucking in a lot of those nutrients to make cortisol and the catecholamines. Protein is super important, not just for blood sugar regulation, but to give us the amino acids that we need to make the proper neurotransmitters. So, I mentioned serotonin, I also mentioned norepinephrine and epinephrine and other ones include dopamine, GABA, which is a nervous system calming neurotransmitter, glycine, another nervous system calming neurotransmitter, and a good source of glycine is collagen, or gelatin, which I’ve mentioned in other videos. See the “8 Foods for Mental Health”, and tyrosine, which makes dopamine and also makes the catecholamines. So we need tryptophan, which makes serotonin and melatonin, we need GABA, which makes GABA, and that calms our nervous system down, we need tyrosine, which makes dopamine, this is a feel-good hormone that helps us seek rewards and feel motivated, and energized, also tyrosine gets made into thyroid hormones, again, which helps us feel energized and keeps our energy levels stable and our metabolism revved up, and the catecholamines, norephinephrine and epinephrine, which we need for that fight or flight response and that we’re going to be burning through a lot more quickly when we’re in that fight or flight response. And then glycine, another nervous system-calming amino acid. And glycine also helps balance the nervous system. Typically we don’t suffer from protein deficiency in North America, but I see it more and more, especially low-quality sources of protein. So, chicken nuggets, yeah they have chicken in them, but they only have about 10 grams of protein and a ton of trans fats and a lot of processed carbohydrates. So, although we might be eating hamburgers and chicken fingers and omelettes on waffle, we’re not necessarily getting enough good sources of protein. So, ensuring protein from things like legumes, nuts and seeds, clean animal products, fish, like salmon, and white fish, are all really important and I often suggest people get 30 grams of protein per meal, so three times a day, but it depends on your weight, it depends on your energy demands and it depends on your lifestyle and how stressed out your are, because our demands for protein definitely go up during stress. It also depends on how level your blood sugar is and if you’re getting those hypoglycaemic symptoms, sometimes those people need to increase their protein, while decreasing some of the carbohydrates, especially those refined carbohydrates, and give their body more fibre-rich carbohydrates that the body has to work harder to extract and release into the bloodstream. Another really common cause, or contribution, or exacerbation to anxiety is iron deficiency. So I see this a lot in menstruating women. It’s not super common in young men to have iron deficiency, but women who are menstruating every month, especially women with heavy periods, and who are experiencing fatigue, definitely need to get their ferritin levels tested. So, ferritin, in our blood, will tell us what our iron stores are like. So, how much iron we have available to our tissues. Iron is useful for participating in lots of different chemical reactions in the body, as part of normal metabolism, but it’s also important for caring oxygen to our tissues and oxygen is what we need in a process called oxidative phosphorylation, which gives us energy. So, no oxygen, no energy. And what will happen is, if we lower levels of iron in our blood and lower levels of oxygen, our heart starts to beat faster in order to send more volumes of blood to our tissue. So, it figures, if, with each heartbeat, i’m not sending as much oxygen, if I just double up my heartbeats, I might send double the amount of oxygen and try to meet the demands of the tissues that I’m sending oxygen to. You can kind of figure out, then that quick heartbeat mimics those heart palpitation symptoms of anxiety and can trigger some anxiety symptoms. Iron’s also go this grounding affect. It gives us this nice, level energy. And there’s a very specific feeling to iron deficiency fatigue that a lot of women may have experienced. It’s not quite like a sleepiness, or a lethargy, it’s a very specific feeling of just depletion. So it’s important to get ferritin checked and then find a kind of iron that you can take every day to build your levels up, at least for a few months, and one that’s easily absorbed.

So, another reason why iron might be low is in the case of leaky gut, or malabsorption syndrome, so this can occur in somebody with inflammatory bowel disease, or celiac disease, where the intestinal cells are just not able to absorb as many nutrients, or somebody with IBS, so, just generally sluggish digestion, inefficient digestion, perhaps a lack of stomach acid, or a lack of those digestive enzymes that help us absorb our food. IBS and leaky gut are other common symptoms and causes of anxiety. So it’s kind of a chicken or an egg situation. Our gut bacteria produces serotonin, dopamine. We’ve got about 5 trillion in our gut, and that’s about 10x more cells than we have in our bodies. For the most part, when it comes to a cell-to-cell basis, we have 10x more gut bacteria than we have cells. So we’re more gut bacteria than us. Our gut bacteria, there’s good ones, there’s bad ones, we haven’t been able to isolate all of them, there’s very little, relatively, that we know about the microbiome, but a lot more research is coming out, especially in the area of mental health. We know that these gut bacteria can make their own neurotransmitters. They can even specifically ask for food, so a lot of people with sugar cravings have a dysbiosis going on where the gut bacteria need those refined carbohydrates and that sugar, in order for them to grow. And so they’re sending out ghrelin, or hunger-stimulating signals to try and get us to eat more sugary foods. Our gut bacteria also make most of the serotonin in the body and our gut cells also make most of the serotonin in the body. So if we have unhealthy gut cells, they’re not going to be able to regulate our nervous system. And if we have an imbalance in gut bacteria, again we won’t be able to regulate our nervous system, because we won’t be producing those neurotransmitters that we need to balance and to be able to toggle seamlessly between the parasympathetic and sympathetic nervous systems. The gut is also where a lot of our immunity lies. And our immune system is going to be the cause of low-levels of inflammation, especially if there’s a little bit of autoimmunity or food sensitivities, or allergies going on. Low levels of inflammation are going to affect our brain. So there is a hypothesis that depression is caused by low-grade inflammation in the brain. We don’t have pain receptors in our brains, so we ‘re not able to detect inflammation in the way you would with an inflamed knee. If you injured your knee or had arthritis in your knee, and you would notice that your knee was red, and swollen and it would hurt to touch and you wouldn’t be able to walk on it. We don’t get those symptoms in our brain because of the lack of pain receptors and so how brain inflammation might manifest is brain fog, difficulty concentrating, depression, anxiety, mental chatter, negative self-talk, negative thoughts, those symptoms that are really common, mental symptoms, in something like depression and anxiety.

There’s a lot more we need to research about this, but there’s something called LPS, lipopolysaccharide, that’s produced by some of the “bad” gut bacteria. When rats were injected with lipopolysaccharide, or when human volunteers were injected with lipopolysaccharide, we mimic the symptoms of depression. When those same patients and rats were given EPA, which is a very anti-inflammatory fatty acid that’s from fish, marine sources like salmon and sardines, the depression symptoms went away. There’s also some studies in depression with prednisone and corticosteroids, which lower inflammation really rapidly. They come with a host of side effects, so that they’re not that great of a remedy for depression, but they actually lowered depressive symptoms. There’s a lot of a connection, that we’re noticing, between inflammation and depression and anxiety and we’re just not sure to the extent that inflammation causes depression. I tend to think that, probably most cases of depression and anxiety have some kind of inflammation present, especially when we consider that just chronic, turned on, sympathetic nervous system and high levels of cortisol is going to contribute to a cortisol resistance in the brain and increase neuroinflammation, especially in the hypothalamus.

We also know, as I mentioned before that symptoms of anxiety and symptoms of IBS often go hand in hand. And so, a lot of the anxiety symptoms that people will get are looser bowels, bloating, loss of appetite, just difficulty digesting their food. And a lot of symptoms that people with IBS will get are anxiety. And one of the treatments for IBS are selective-serotonin re-uptake inhibitors, which, you guessed it, are also drugs that treat anxiety.

So another common cause that fits really well into my practice, my focus is on mental health and hormones, and these two areas overlap, probably more than they don’t overlap, it hormonal imbalance. So, especially in women, men have their own host of issues when it comes to hormonal imbalance, but women, because our hormones are cycling and going through different phases all month long, we’re more susceptible to problems with proper hormone regulation, especially in the face of female endocrine disorders such as PMS, PMDD, PCOS, all of the acronyms, endometriosis, fibrocystic breasts, and just dysmenorrhea, so painful and heavy menstruation, or irregular cycles. So all of these point to symptoms of hormonal imbalance. Estrogen and progesterone are the two female hormones and they do have effects, yes on the ovaries, and they control ovulation, they control building up of our uterine lining and shedding of the uterine lining, when those two hormones fall away, and that causes our period to occur, so they definitely control our fertility, but they also have affects on other tissues in the body. One of those tissues, one of those organs, is our brain, our nervous system, so estrogen can work a little bit like serotonin and, so what you might notice, right before your period when your estrogen levels drop, or women that are going through menopause and have a drop in estrogen levels, is you’ll get irritable, you’ll get depressed, and you’ll crave carbs like crazy. And a lot of women get something called premenstrual dysphoric disorder, where they have fluctuations in their estrogen levels. So, lowering of estrogen, or insufficient estrogen, may cause some of those more depressive anxiety symptoms, progesterone acts like a GABA agonist, which, I mentioned before, is a calming neurotransmitter. So, lower levels of progesterone, and I see this in a lot with women who have something called “estrogen dominance”, I have another video on this, and women with PCOS as well, and women who have high estrogen symptoms, or conditions such as endometriosis and fibroids, and fibrocystic breasts, and those kind of symptoms, or conditions where estrogen levels tend to be high, and progesterone levels tend to be low or deficient, they’ll often have anxiety with these symptoms. And lower levels of progesterone, especially premenstrually, often are related to low mood and anxiety, and cravings. So, looking at hormones, especially when the patient sitting across from me has a lot of menstrual issues, and irregular cycles and all of the other things I mentioned, I’ll definitely look into hormones and promote proper estrogen detoxification and building up of progesterone. A common cause of low progesterone is being in that fight or flight state. So, now I’m starting to reveal how this web interconnects, how everything is tangled together and how cortisol and blood sugar all relate to everything. So, cortisol, it uses the same precursor to make progesterone, and, when our body needs more cortisol, it will steal progesterone from the system to make cortisol. Because our body has to prioritize sometimes, and getting away from that snake in the grass, and saving our life is more important than making babies to our body in the short-term. So, we suffer in the long-term if that snake in the grass never goes away and we’re always kind of worried about juggling all the things in our lives. But a lot of women who are chronically stressed, or are in that sympathetic nervous state, will have lower levels of progesterone, so doing a lot of adrenal support is one of the ways that we help their bodies build up some progesterone.

And then, finally, I think I mentioned before, there’s a reason that we have anxiety, it’s not an irrational fear. A lot of the time when I sit across from patients, the things that they’re worried about are legit things to worry about. Maybe they’re out of work, or there’s financial worries, maybe there’s just so much on their plate that it’s difficult to find any time for themselves, or make ends meet, maybe they’re unhappy with their career, they’re relationship is in jeopardy. There’s all kinds of things that people deal with on a daily basis. And then, that being said, there’s also people who are just primed to be more neurotic than others, based on that spectrum of neuroticism in terms of personality and constitutional predisposition. And I think we know this, there’s some people who are just a little bit more anxious than others and that diversity in human personality probably helped us evolutionarily and so I think there was obviously an evolutionary advantage for someone who’s nervous system was a bit more responsive. Those people could get away from danger, they were expecting danger more often, and they probably ended up surviving and passing their genes on to their ancestors more readily than those who were way too laid back and didn’t think about danger and got themselves into risky situations.

So, those who are a little bit more neurotic may be predisposed to negative thinking, over-estimating the negative outcomes of certain events or maybe engaging in critical self-talk. Especially in the case of post-traumatic stress disorder, PTSD, there’s definitely a connection between early childhood trauma, or just trauma in adulthood, some of these experiences can teach us to turn our nervous system on, or to get triggered more easily as a way of surviving in the future. There’s different areas of psychotherapy that deal with these phenomena, and they term them different ways, but they can be called core beliefs, or certain mental schemas, so when our brain experiences very strong emotions, the amygdala wires those emotions down in implicit memories. They’re really tightly wired and those memories get triggered again whenever there’s a situation that reminds us of the situation that wired down those responses. It might be a certain smell, or a certain sound, or a certain song, something that activates those memories, that may not be conscious, because the amygdala is pre-verbal, will trigger those feelings of fear and prime our body to respond. And the problem is that we’re surrounded by potential stimuli all the time that can trigger that. And so, really understanding what triggers anxiety symptoms, where those triggers may have come from, and bringing those memories up to the cognitive, cerebral cortex and rational mind, so that we can help dissolve those memories, is a big part of psychotherapy and how we manage anxiety with psychotherapy. Especially if we think the cause of anxiety may be related back to some sort of childhood trauma or implicit memory that was consolidated.

Those are some root causes of anxiety that I would look for as a naturopathic doctor, among many others. What an intake will look like is a 90-minute conversation with the person in front of me where I get to know them, and understand the environment surrounding the phenomena of their symptoms, the symptoms themselves, and all of the other different factors that might be contributing to the anxiety that they’re displaying. So, I’ll ask about period health, I’ll ask about sleep, I’ll ask about their energy levels, I’ll ask about any other physical symptoms they might be experiencing, their digestion, what their stress levels are like. We’ll go through a review of systems, looking at every single organ system and trying to create a tabulation of how anxiety might be manifesting for them, and we may even explore what their core beliefs are, or implicit memories are in future visits. And we’ll talk about diet. And then I’ll make some recommendations as I begin to understand what those root causes of anxiety might be. So we’ll look at whether they may be experiencing nutrient deficiencies, leading to an imbalance in proper neuroendocrine production, if there might be some inflammation going on, if they may be experiencing some digestive issues, or some hormonal imbalances, or if there’s chronic stress going on in their life. And so what we’ll do is, once we find out the causes, we’ll engage in some psycho-education, so I really believe in empowering my patients to understand their bodies, to be able to notice when things are triggering them, to notice what exacerbates their anxiety, what makes it better, and to develop a self-care plan where we’re eating right, we’re thinking right, we’re exercising right and we’re getting enough rest, if possible.

So that’s the gist of it, that’s Root Causes of Anxiety, my name is Dr. Talia Marcheggiani, I work in Bloor West Village in Toronto.

Contrast Showers for Immunity, Inflammation, Mood, Pain and Weight Loss

I talk about contrast showers for boosting immunity, lowering inflammation, mood, pain and weight loss.

Hello everyone, my name is Dr. Talia Marcheggiani, I’m a naturopathic doctor and today I’m going to talk about hot and cold contrast showers. As naturopathic doctors, one of our modalities is hydrotherapy. Hydrotherapy comes from naturopathic medicine’s roots, using hot and cold water to make changes to circulation, hormonal functioning and immune functioning. I’m going to talk about some of the science behind hot and cold contrast showers.

This is something I recommend to my patients to increase their immune activation, decrease autoimmunity, improve mood and hormonal functioning, as well as increase circulation and there’s some evidence that it might help with weight loss as well.

So, firstly, things like exercise and hot and cold therapies induce a little bit of stress. There’s two kinds of stress: distress, which is sort of that chronic, cortisol-fuelled stress that a lot of people come in with, in a state of burnout that’s causing things like inflammation, and mental-emotional illness, and autoimmune issues, and dysbiosis, and then there’s something called eustress, which is more like exercise, cold therapy: short, small bursts of stress that actually up-regulate proteins and genes in our body to combat stress. These genes are involved in DNA repair, increase antioxidant synthesis, and the antioxidants that our body makes are far more powerful than the ones that you’re going to get from food or supplements.

So, by upregulating these genes, we can protect ourselves from cancer, neurodegenerative disease, and other chronic diseases. It’s really powerful stuff, this is called a “Hormetic” response, hormesis, where small stressors mount bigger responses by the body than is needed to deal with those stressors and overall we’re better off; there’s this net beneficial effect. This is one of the proposed mechanisms for some of the antioxidants or flavonoids in green leafy vegetables. It’s not that they provide us with antioxidants, it’s that they encourage our body to make antioxidants due to the small, toxic load that they present to us. And so there’s some evidence that getting short bursts, or longer bursts of cold, very cold, will increase a hormone called norepinephrine. Norepinephrine is involved in depression and mood. Norepinephrine is a catecholamine and it increases the sympathetic nervous system, which is that fight or flight nervous system. When boosted in small amounts, it can actually elevate mood and so a lot of anti-depressant medications also induce, or inhibit the reuptake of norepinephrine. So these are called SNRIs and they include things like Venlafaxine and Cymbalta. So there’s some evidence that norepinephrine increases 2-3 times after only 20 seconds of immersion in cold water. There’s a connection between norepinephrine lowering pain and inflammation and increasing metabolism and there’s some anecdotal evidence and one study, at least, was done to show that cold immersion therapy actually decreased symptoms of depression.

There’s also these things called hot and cold shock proteins, heat shock proteins and cold shock proteins. So, for example, one is called RBM3, which is a cold shock protein, and these proteins can actually help increase longevity and they can actually help decrease incidences of neurodegenerative diseases and neurodegeneration, so something like Alzeimer’s disease or Parkinson’s disease, which can help us with health longevity, so staying healthier into our later years.

We know that inflammation is one of the drivers of the aging process. Probably the primary driver of the aging process, and one of the main factors in chronic, debilitating disease, and, especially in my focus, mental health, there’s more and more researching coming out that inflammation, low levels of inflammation in the brain, is the main cause of mental health conditions, such as depression, and anxiety, bipolar disorder, OCD, ADHD. There’s these low levels of inflammation that contribute to the symptoms of low mood and by increasing norepinephrine, through small bursts of cold and increasing those cold shock proteins, we’re actually able to combat these mental health conditions. Norepinephrine decreases inflammation by decreasing a cytokine called TNF-a that is known to increase inflammation in the body and in the brain. TNF-a can cross the blood brain barrier and it can inhibit serotonin synthesis and it can actually also increase neuro-inflammation, causing symptoms of mental health disorders.

There’s some studies that cryotherapy, for rheumatoid arthritis actually decreased pain significantly. And there’s also some studies that being in cold water, that cold shock, can actually increase the immune system activation. It’s good to increase our immune system activation if our immune cells are behaving properly. If our immune cells are attacking ourselves, then we want to decrease the immune response. But having higher levels of lymphocytes, especially cytotoxic T lympthocytes that are involved in killing cancer cells, is a very positive thing and that’s been shown to increase in people that underwent cryotherapy, or really acute, short exposure to intense cold.

There’s also an ability to lose weight when exposed to cold, over the long term. There’s a man called Ray Cronise who lost over 80 lbs by just habitually exposing himself to mildly cold temperatures. And one of the mechanisms for this weight loss is through non-shivering thermogenesis, in which the cells in the mitochondria uncouple proteins that make energy and they dedicate all the stored energy in fat to making heat. Kind of like cutting your bike chain. So instead of biking, you’re not moving forward, but you’re generating energy and you’re generating heat. And so our body will do this when it’s slightly cold that it can increase heat. Our body is always striving to maintain constant temperature, between 1 or 2 degrees. This process is regulated by norepinephrine, which rises acutely as soon as we’re exposed to just a few seconds of cold. This can be 40-50 degree water. And then I already mentioned that short, cold exposure can increase the production of antioxidants. Our mitochondria are constantly creating reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species. This is just a product of normal cell metabolism. These become toxic, though and damage DNA if our body doesn’t also produce anti-oxidants to clear out those reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species. The cold induces a little bit of a stress that increases our metabolism that increases the reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in our mitochondria and therefore our body is incited to up-regulate the enzymes that create those powerful anti-oxidants that I talked about that are far more powerful than the ones that you can get from food: vegetables, fruits, vitamin C supplement. A couple of these enzymes are glutathione reductase and superoxide dismutase, which are very powerful to our cells.

There’s some evidence that hot and cold therapy can increase muscle mass, can increase muscular strength and aerobic endurance. So this is great for athletes post-workout to lower inflammation and improve muscle regensis. And then, it can also increase something called mitochondrial biogenesis, which is the production, or the replication of more mitochondria in the tissues, especially the muscle tissue. So our body will increase the mitochondria content, the mitochondrial mass, in muscle tissue under certain conditions. These conditions are mainly fasting, exercise, and hot and cold shock.

So, what I’ll recommend to my patients, somebody who’s suffering from low immunity, so they’re getting frequent colds and flus, or maybe autoimmunity, or maybe just general inflammation and pain, brain fog sluggishness adrenal fatigue, that kind of sluggish lethargy from depression. So it’s more the sluggish depression, I’ll recommend hot and cold showers.

So what you do is, in your shower, either during your shower, during your regular cleaning routine, or after your shower is done, and you’ve already washed your hair and everything, you’re going to turn the water on to a reasonably hot temperature, so not so hot that it’s scalding, and you’re going to leave that hot water on for 30 seconds to 1 minute. When that’s done, you’re going to turn the shower to as cold as you can tolerate. So with my patients I often coach them to start with a lukewarm temperature before going whole hog and doing cold. And this is just to coax the body into that stress response that we want, that short, quick stress response that’s going to do all those good things: up-regulate anti-oxidant production, increase norepinephrine, decrease inflammation, increase mitochondria synthesis, burn fat. So you’re going to try and make it as cold as possible, for 20 to 30 seconds, and then you’re going to cycle back and forth at least 5 to 10 times, always end on cold, and then, when you’re done, towel off and keep warm.

There’s some evidence that doing this before bed can actually increase REM sleep and help you sleep more soundly without waking up in the middle of the night. We all know that a good sound sleep is going to set the tone for the next day and your energy for the next day. And then there’s also some evidence that doing this in the morning can increase your energy and alertness throughout the day, so it’s almost like this same practice at different times of day impacts our circadian rhythms differently and can give us more of what we want: either more profound sleep or more daytime energy.

So, that was hot and cold showers, my name is Dr. Talia Marcheggiani and you can check out my website at taliand.com or contact me at connect@taliand.com . A lot of this research came from Dr. Rhonda Patrick at foundmyfitness.com .

 

What Supplements Does a Naturopathic Doctor Take?

I talk about the supplements I take on a daily basis and their indications.

Hey, Everybody, my name is Dr. Talia Marcheggiani and I’m recording to you guys from my kitchen in Toronto. And this video is about the supplements that I take as a naturopathic doctor and health experimenter. When it comes to making treatment plans for my patients I prefer to focus on the Therapeutic Order, so starting with the foundations of health, which usually means making adjustments to diet and lifestyle and if possible using food prescriptions and functional foods to help heal the body as opposed to relying on supplements. And this is just from clinical experience and from a cost-benefit perspective. So, of course it’s better to get these nutrients from food sources, because, when you eat a pile of kale, like a big plate of leafy greens, you’re getting all of the vitamins that we know about: the magnesium, the fat-soluble vitamins, like A, D, E, and K, some iron, and all of the flavonoids, and anti-oxidants that are present in that big pile of greens, but you’re also getting a lot of nutrients that we haven’t been able to isolate and that we don’t know is present in those foods. Some of those nutrients may act synergistically. And so it’s always better to get things from their whole-food source, I think. That’s the philosophy that I come at when it comes to health and healing. And I’m always looking for the obstacles to cure. Ideally I’m prescribing something like magnesium to replenish a magnesium depletion or to compensate for a diet that may be inadequate for magnesium, or to replenish magnesium deficiency. So I’m not a big fan of prescribing a ton of supplements, and I think my patients appreciate that, because of the cost and the annoyance of taking a lot of things. That being said, there is definitely a benefit to supplementing with vitamins and minerals and other sort of functional supplements to improve optimal health. We’re trying, obviously, to eat a diet that meets the recommended daily nutrition intake for all the vitamins and minerals that the body needs to function optimally, but there’s some evidence that increasing these levels and taking higher doses of these vitamins and minerals may actually help our body perform properly. So, if you take something like vitamin C, if someone is completely deficient in vitamin C that will manifest as a disease called scurvy, where you’ve got loose gums, or you’re experiencing problems in creating collagen. You’re getting sore on the skin, there’s skin issues, there’s gum issues. And then there’s an adequate amount of vitamin C, where you’re not seeing those symptoms, and then there’s having optimal vitamin C, where your body is able to not just meet its daily requirements for all of the chemical reactions that it needs for us to feel our best, and look our best, but now it’s got an abundance of vitamin C and now it’s able to really divert a lot of the vitamin C that it’s getting to increase energy, to boost immunity, to target cancer cells, to exert an anti-oxidant effect, to accommodate all of the free radicals we might be exposed to, living in our modern times.

So, that being said, I do my own self-experimentation with vitamins and minerals, and there’s a few things that I’ll take on the regular, that I’ll take all the time, and then there’s other things that I might play around with, just to see what it’s like to take the medicine. Depending on what it is, I think doctors should taste their own medicine every now and then to know what the effect is on their patients and what their patients’ experience would be, experimenting with these vitamins and minerals.

So, the first thing I take, and this is something that I started taking in school, is a B complex. And a B complex contains all of the B vitamins. Some people get confused, they’ll refer to their B12 supplement as a B complex or they’ll refer to a B complex as B12, or they’ll get confused about all of the different B vitamins. In this product there are all of the B vitamins, from B1 all the way to folate. These B vitamins are cofactors in thousands of chemical reactions in the body. We need vitamin B6, for example, to make serotonin out of tryptophan and 5HTP, those are all the amino acids that are present in the pathway to synthesize serotonin and without B6 we’re not able to make serotonin, no matter how many of those building blocks, tryptophan building blocks, may be present in the body. So, if we’re deficient in these cofactors, our body is just not able to function properly. And we burn through B vitamins a lot more quickly when we’re under stress and some people have higher requirements for them. And some people have an issue metabolizing certain forms of B vitamins. So, for example, there’s some people that have an issue taking folic acid, which is often thrown into a lot of our grains and cereals, that are fortified and lots of multivitamins and taking that folic acid and making it into its active form, about 40%of people have a genetic polymorphism that reduces their ability to methylate and to make active folate and, therefore, they need to supplement with the activated from of folate otherwise the folic acid that’s in all of their foods starts to build up in their tissues and there’s some evidence that that can cause problems.

I showed you which B vitamin I use. I use the AOR brand and one thing to look for in a B vitamin is, what is the form of folate in it? So, you want to look for one that has L-5-MTHF or that’s the methyl-tetrahydrafolate, that’s the active form of folate. And you also want to look at the B12, what’s the form of B12? So there’s 3 different forms of B12: cyanocobalamin, hydroxycobalamin and methylcobalamin. Cyanocobalamin is the synthetic form and, for the same reason that people have a problem activating folate, they may have a problem activating B12 and using it. And it’s the methylated form, methylcobalamin, that crosses the blood brain barrier, and that would have effects on depression and anxiety, and help with cognitive decline, and energy and all of those things. So, it’s important to look for a B vitamin that’s got those activated forms of the B complex. And you also want one that has adequate forms and that will be better absorbed. And so, taking a B complex is not something that you can overdose on readily because it’s water-soluble, so you may notice, as you start to take it, that your body starts to up-regulate the receptors to absorb them, for the initial weeks of taking it, you might have really yellow pee. And that’s normal, that shouldn’t cause any issues, but it’s one side effect that sometimes surprises people when your first morning urination is highlighter neon yellow.

The other thing that’s a staple in my supplement regime is magnesium. So, magnesium is, again a cofactor in tons of chemical reactions, and one of the really important functions that magnesium has is in DNA repair and also in mitochondrial function. So, mitochondria are the furnaces in our cells. Without magnesium, our DNA won’t have that ability to repair itself, which can cause us to allow DNA mutations or issues with DNA replication to go unnoticed and that can cause problems such as cancer down the line. It’s not that you’re deficient in magnesium one day and that manifests as symptoms, it’s something that will manifest over time, over decades of having just insufficient magnesium to achieve optimal health. So, you might be meeting your general needs where you’re not outwardly deficient in magnesium but, you’re not getting those levels to really have your body functioning at its best. Magnesium deficiency can manifest as symptoms, as physical, clinical symptoms in people and a big one is tense and tight muscles. Magnesium is a skeletal muscle relaxant and a smooth muscle stimulant. So what that means is that, if you’re the kind of person that has got really tense shoulders, lots of muscle knots, lots of aches and pains, that are muscular in nature, magnesium can help relax that skeletal muscle. And if you’re the type of person that suffers from menstrual cramps, or constipation, then magnesium is helpful for getting things moving and stimulating motility of the digestive tract and relaxing the uterus as well. Magnesium, there’s been some studies showing that magnesium can be beneficial for headaches, and that is probably due to its muscle-relaxant properties. Magnesium is also a great remedy for fatigue and, like B vitamins we burn through magnesium a lot more quickly when we’re stressed. 40% of people have a diet that it is inadequate to obtain their optimal levels of magnesium. This may be because we’re not eating enough leafy greens, which is a really great source of magnesium. It’s about 2 cups of spinach or chard a day to get the 300 mg of the magnesium, and also from soil depletion. So, when crops are not rotated, and the soil’s not replenished, the next round of crops are grown in a soil that’s depleted and therefore those plants aren’t absorbing the nutrients that were then going to enter our bodies after we eat those plants. And from this soil depletion, it’s hypothesized that that’s why our magnesium levels are so low. Also, a diet that’s high in processed sugar increases our magnesium needs, and a lifestyle that’s high in stress also increases our magnesium needs, as we need it to make stress hormones.

So, B complex and magnesium.

I often recommend to my patients to take magnesium before bed because of the skeletal muscle-relaxant properties, it helps to calm the body and the mind. There’s different forms of magnesium and the forms are prescribed based on what your therapeutic goals are. So, something like a magnesium citrate will be prescribed for somebody who’s tending more to the constipation, because it can help draw water into the bowels and have a bit of an osmotic laxative effect. So, it doesn’t sort of stimulate the bowels, like a laxative would, like sennakot, but it will draw water into the bowels to kind of flush the system out. That can be problematic over the long-term so do that under the supervision of a doctor or naturopathic doctor. And then, for people that are really sensitive to those laxative effects of magnesium, they may want to go with a magnesium that’s conjugated to an amino acid such as glycine. And so I often recommend magnesium glycinate, because a lot of us are also deficient in glycine. Another good source of glycine is collagen, or gelatin, and glycine has this sort of relaxant and modulating effect on the nervous system, and so it can be great for depression and anxiety, more so for anxiety because of its calming effect on the brain.

So, another supplement that I take is zinc. So, this is not the best form of zinc, I just picked this up because it was cheap and I could find it—I think I got this one at Bulk Barn, this is a zinc citrate. Even better absorbed form is zinc picolinate, so there’s a study that shows that that’s the best-absorbed form of zinc, which is appropriate for somebody that experiences nausea when they take zinc, which goes away in a few minutes, but it kind of sucks to have so, if that’s happening to you, then going with a more absorbable form of zinc, or taking zinc with food. A zinc deficiency manifests as dry skin, and depressed immune system, so you’re getting infections a lot more often than the average person. But inadequate levels of zinc can manifest as hair loss, leaky gut, depression and anxiety. Zinc helps us with neurogenesis, so it actually helps us make BDNF, brain-derived neurotropic factor, which is a chemical that our brain uses to make new neurons, and to promote resilience against stress. It sort of protects the brain against mental and emotional stress. And I also prescribe it for cystic acne and hormonal acne. And zinc is a really good remedy for PMS and heavy menstrual periods and vegetarians are often deficient in zinc.

4th is a fish oil. So a fish oil is combined with two kinds of omega 3 fatty acids: EPA and DHA.The one I use has got a 5:1 ratio for EPA. So, EPA is the anti-inflammatory omega 3, the anti-inflammatory fish oil. DHA is the fish oil that we use to build up our brain tissues. Most of our brain mass is made of fat and it’s mostly this kind of fat, DHA. So there’s some good studies that, because of its anti-inflammatory properties, EPA can help increase symptoms of depression. And this is probably because there’s some evidence that depression, like other mental health conditions, is an inflammatory condition in the brain. We don’t have pain receptors in our brain, so if our brain is experiencing even a small level of inflammation, it can kind of go undetected. It may just manifest as negative thoughts, mental chatter, low mood, lower or impaired neurogenesis. We’re not experiencing that acute, sharp memory that we’re used to, maybe we’ve got some brain fog, maybe we’re having trouble recollecting names and those kind of things. And there’s a little bit of evidence that it can be heart healthy as well. Our diet is really rich in omega 6 fatty acids. These are the more, inflammatory—this is sort of a general statement—they’re little bit more on the inflammatory side. I think our diet is about 10:1 omega 6:omega 3. And that’s mainly because we’re consuming animal products from animals that are not fed their natural diet, so for example cows should be eating grass, but we’re feeding them corn, which tends to make the fat in their meat more composed of the omega 6 fatty acids, and also because we’ve been told to avoid saturated fats and to eat a lot of industrial seed oils, like canola oil and corn oil, and vegetable oil, which is just corn oil, and soy oil. And so, these kind of oils are also rich in omega 6, those kind of pro-inflammatory fats. It’s been shown that our ancestors, our hunter-gatherer ancestors, had a diet that was more 1:1, for omega6:omega3. So, supplementing with omega 3 fish oils or eating fish a few times a week, those fatty fish I mentioned in other videos, decreases that ratio of omega 6 to omega 3. I also take NAC. And the reason I take NAC is I did a genetic test that showed that I have impaired phase II liver enzymes. So my body has a little bit of difficulty making glutathione, which helps detoxify all of the toxins and free radicals that pass through my body, all of the hormone metabolites. So, no matter how clean I live, if I’m using natural cleaning products, natural body care products, I’m still exposed to toxins, as we all are: there’s car exhaust outside, we’re consuming things that are wrapped in plastic, so no matter how perfect you try and be, you’re still going to be exposed to things. And so, to encourage my body to make more glutathione, I give it NAC, which is a precursor to making glutathione, the antioxidant. NAC helps with liver detoxification, so it also helps decrease symptoms of hormone metabolites, that estrogen dominance, that I also talk about in other videos, and it can also help with detoxifying the brain, so neurons. And that’s through its antioxidant effects and it kind of cleans out mitochondria. So you imagine if you’re running your car in your garage, the process of your car metabolizing, so spending its fuel, is creating some chemicals that are coming out of the exhaust pipe. And if your garage door is closed, all of those chemicals are filling the garage. And so, taking NAC is a little bit like opening a window, it’s just helping your body get rid of all of those toxic metabolites from performing its chemical duties. So I’ll take NAC and I’ll recommend NAC for mental health conditions, especially OCD and bipolar disorder. And sort of on that note, I also take something called estro-adapt. And it doesn’t have to be this product, there’s many other products that are similar to this, estroadapt has DIIM and calcium d-glucarate. Both of those are chemicals that help the body metabolize estrogen. So I’ve talked about estrogen dominance and other videos and the estrogen is not just one hormone, it’s a group of hormones and that there’s also these xenoestrogens, so these estrogens that are toxins in our environment that exert estrogenic effects. So, some of these include fragrances, and bisphosphenol A, BPA, that’s found in plastic, that has received a lot of media attention, what DIIM and calcium d-glucarate do is help us with normal estrogen processing. So, estrogen, when don’t need it any more, when it’s already done its thing, or those more toxic forms of estrogen, they’re conjugated in the liver, so the liver makes them inactive and then they’re dumped into the colon, where they’re removed from the body. And what happens if any of those steps are impaired, so if your liver is sort of overburdened processing other things, or you’re not able to process those hormones as well, is you’re going to have a higher level of metabolites in the body, or if you’re constipated, or if you’ve got a dysbiosis situation happening, and some pathogenic gut bacteria that aren’t able to keep estrogen conjugated, so they sort of put it back into it’s active form and the body reabsorbs it, which is not what you want. You want to get rid of those toxic estrogens.

So what I’ll recommend is doing a detox twice a year, Spring and Fall is a great time to do a detox and I’ll do another video on detoxification because our body can detoxify pretty effectively. It takes care of all of our detoxification needs, but sometimes it helps to give it a little bit of a boost, and so a product like this, with DIIM and I3C, or indole-3-carbinol, which is not in this product, or calcium d-glucarate, is really helpful for lowering those estrogen toxicity symptoms, which could be heavy menstrual periods, anxiety before your period, PMS, hormonal acne, irregular periods, weight gain, especially around the hips and a predisposition to female cancers, such as breast cancer. Another way you can get this from diet is from green leafy vegetables. So those are all the crucifates, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, brusselsprouts, chard, spinach, kale, all of those vegetables are really rich in I3C and DIIM and those help us clean estrogen from our body. Finally, I take an adaptogen. So, adaptogens, this is Withania complex, they’re herbs that literally just help the body adapt to stress. So my two favourites are withania, or ashwaghanda, and rhodiola. And I like taking them together, this complex doesn’t have rhodiola in it, but it does have ginseng, which is a little bit more stimulating. It’s got withania, it’s got ginseng, and it’s got licorice, and it has skullcap, which is a little bit more calming, nervous system calming. And, so what withania does, these just help us against the pro-aging and pro-inflammatory stress effects. So, they help sort of protect our tissues against stress, they protect our brain against stress, they can help calm the body down, they help the adrenal glands function more optimally, and rhodiola in particular, helps increase BDNF, just like zinc, so it increase brain-derived neurotropic factor, NAC also does this as well, and there’s a connection between low levels of BDNF and depression and anxiety and mental health conditions. The low levels of BDNF may be from nutrient deficiencies, or it could be from inflammation in the brain and that inflammation could be just a stress resistance. So, the stress hormone is coursing through our body 24/7 and our brain sort of stops responding to them as well, kind of like a diabetic, a type II diabetic, stops responding as effectively to insulin, an a resistance develops and, since those stress hormones have an anti-inflammatory effect, when you start becoming resistant to them, inflammation ensues. And so what withania and rhodiola do is just help calm down that inflammation. I’m a big fan of herbal medicine because in addition to sort of its active medicinal properties, herbs are also flavonoids, and have really important nutrients, like I talked about that big pile of leafy greens, we’re not exactly sure what is in these nutrients. We just know that, as a whole, they work really well. And so they’re flavonoids, they’re also anti-inflammatory, they’ve got anti-oxidants, as well as their medicinal properties that we can isolate and study. So I like herbs, it sort of brings us closer to nature, it puts a piece of nature into our body and some of that intelligence of nature, rather than just one supplement or one ingredient would do. And, because we’re so stressed out, and not all stress is bad. You think of a new mom, she just had a baby, she’s full of love and joy, but there’s sleep-deprivation, there’s all these kind of thoughts, and new responsibilities that are filling her life, so she’s stressed out, but she’s not full of negativity and negative thoughts. And so that’s still stress, the body still perceives that as stress. Some signs of stress are waking up in the middle of the night wide awake, inability to fall asleep, that tired and wired feeling, feeling like you’re getting an energy crash around 2-4pm, feeling a little bit more tired than usual, feeling a little bit more burnt out, feeling a little bit of ennui, and lack of motivation, so a lot of those signs of depression are actually present in someone who’s chronically stressed out: lots of mental chatter, lots of negative thinking and irritability can also be signs of stress. It manifests differently in every single person and so I’ll go through a full work-up to see how stressed out somebody is feeling and what their state of stress is. And there’s a difference between perceived stress and how stressed out you think you are, and actual, physiological stress and what the body’s under. And being in a state of inflammation, as well as riding the blood sugar roller coaster can also increase our physiological stress.

Finally, I take 5HTP. And I take this before my period, so I don’t take it all the time. I may take a couple hundred mg of it before bed, just to help with sleep. And, so 5HTP is a precursor to make serotonin. A lot of women will experience a dip in serotonin right before their period, sometimes up to a week before, so these women will experience irritability, those mental and emotional PMS symptoms, cravings for sugar, inability to sleep, worsening of depression and anxiety right before their period. And so sometimes they can benefit from 5HTP, which is an amino acid. 5HTP needs magnesium and B6 to work properly, though. So, we need to make sure the body has got adequate amounts of those nutrients, either through supplementation or diet, so that it can take that 5HTP and make it into serotonin. 5HTP crosses the blood brain barrier and so that sort of helps us get it into our brains where it can be made into serotonin. And the good thing about amino acids, like NAC and 5HTP and some of the other ones I mentioned in my amino acid video, is that they work pretty quickly, so sometimes they can exert their effects within hours and sometimes even within a matter of days, whereas something like fish oil can take months to be incorporated into the cell membranes and change the fatty acid profiles of our cells.

Even B vitamins work pretty quickly as well. So, these are what I take. You’re going to need something different, maybe less things, maybe more things. Some of these things are things that I experiment with, and sometimes I’ll do a wash. So, a lot of the time, if my patients are on a ton of things and they come in in that state, I’ll wash them, we’ll have them stop a few things, see if symptoms return, see what their baseline of health is. Because sometimes we just need a boost and to just take these things for a few years or months, and then our body gets back on track, sometimes we need some continual support throughout our lives. And so, everyone is different, everybody has different individual biochemical needs and everyone has different challenges with getting diet into their life and exercise and meeting those foundational health needs. And so someone who is a little bit more challenged in that department, who’s got a really busy and stressful lifestyle may need more nutritional support, someone who’s in a chronic disease state, recovering from more serious health issues may need more support and someone who’s having trouble maintaining their minimal nutritional requirements through diet may need some more support.

Again, I always tell people to pay for a consult with a functional medical doctor or a naturopathic doctor to figure out what your supplement regime would be. I see a lot of people in healthfood stores kind of going it alone and, not to say that you can’t get great information from the internet, but it may result in your taking a lot of things that you don’t really need, spending a lot of money that’s not targeting a specific health concern or meeting your higher levels of nutritional requirements. And also the form of the supplements and the dosing is something that’s individualized, that we need to talk about. So, there was a Marketplace study with CBC that showed that a lot of these vitamins and minerals that aren’t from professional brands and aren’t 3rd party tested don’t actually contain what they say they contain. This is specifically a problem with herbal remedies. So, if you have any questions leave me a comment below my video and you can check out my website at taliand.com .

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