Discover this podcast and so much more

Podcasts are free to enjoy without a subscription. We also offer ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more for just $11.99/month.

Researcher Thomas Seyfried: Cancer is a metabolic dysfunction - #64

Researcher Thomas Seyfried: Cancer is a metabolic dysfunction - #64

FromStay Off My Operating Table


Researcher Thomas Seyfried: Cancer is a metabolic dysfunction - #64

FromStay Off My Operating Table

ratings:
Length:
73 minutes
Released:
Nov 8, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

The ketogenic diet was developed in the 1920s as a cure for epilepsy, but when epilepsy medications hit the market, the diet was entirely forgotten. Thomas Seyfried remembers that 35 years ago at Yale University, the challenge was to do something about epilepsy. At that time, it was a prime area of research in neurology. From mapping epilepsy genes, he studied ketogenic diets and how lowering blood sugar and elevating ketones could help manage epilepsy and even cancer.For years, there has been resistance towards metabolic therapy as it's not a standard of care. However, Thomas is optimistic that this will shift soon due to an increasing body of scientific evidence and testimony from patients who have survived the treatment. He goes into great detail about how the ketogenic diet aids in the management of epilepsy, how metabolic therapies function, and why the diet and lifestyle of today are the cause of the prevalence of cancer. It seems like he squeezed a semester's worth of lessons into this jam-packed episode. You might find yourself wanting to sign up for his class as well.Quick Guide:00:59 Introduction02:03 Getting into the study of epilepsy11:53 What happens when you saturate your body with fats20:17 The knowledge transfer and moving the field forward25:02 How metastasis happens30:33 Metabolic therapies will soon be the standard of care for managing cancer37:24 The downstream effect of altered metabolism44:11 The need to keep the mitochondria healthy49:32 The protocols and the benefits of metabolic therapyGet to know our guest:Thomas Seyfried, Ph.D., is a professor at Boston College and has worked on various research on how metabolic therapy can manage epilepsy and cancer.“If I develop the drug in my lab that can do what metabolic therapy can do, oh, you'd say you cure cancer. Yeah, this is the best thing in the world. They would be just running over each other to get this drug. But it can happen. But it's not happening from a drug. It's happening from an entire physiological change. And the body is a healing machine. The body can heal itself if you give it the opportunity, don't stand in the way of the body's ability to heal.”Connect with him:Website: https://tomseyfried.com/BC profile: https://www.bc.edu/bc-web/schools/mcas/departments/biology/people/faculty-directory/thomas-seyfried.htmlEpisode snippets:11:13 - 11:48 - Glucose can inactivate a ketogenic diet14:24 - 15:37 - Ketogenic diet is therapeutic fasting18:55 - 19:35 - Understand both the mouse and human physiology31:53 - 32:47 - Metabolic therapy as a standard of care40:33 - 41:55 - The simple approach that can manage all major cancers45:25 - 46:28 - The diet and lifestyle problem49:32 - 50:08 - Medical school says glucose has nothing to do with cancer52:43 - 53:53 - The body can heal itself if you give it an opportunity to healConnect with Dr. Ovadia:TwitteriFixHearts WebsiteStay Off My Operating Table WebsiteAmazon Theme Song : Rage AgainstWritten & Performed by Logan Gritton & Colin Gailey(c) 2016 Mercury Retro RecordingsProduced by 38atoms & Jack Heald
Released:
Nov 8, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

He was a morbidly obese heart surgeon. Through high school, college, med school and surgical training, he followed the U.S. dietary guidelines for both diet and exercise. Yet nothing he did could keep the weight off. Each day in the operating theater he would split open the chests of people just like himself. He was heading for the operating table and knew he had to find solutions that worked. In 2016, he finally found a way to lose 100 pounds and keep it off. Now - in addition to doing heart surgery - he helps people just like himself get healthy, lose the weight and keep it off. Dr. Philip Ovadia is now a rebel M.D. working to keep people OFF his operating table.