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Podcasts

Episode 6: The Science Of Aging with Dr. Morgan Levine

Welcome to “Your Lifestyle Is Your Medicine”

This is the podcast that explores how a person’s lifestyle can be the key to their health and happiness.

Epigenetics is the study of how your behaviors and environment can cause changes that affect the way your genes work. These changes are reversible and do not change your DNA sequence, but they can modify how your body reads a DNA sequence.

During development, the DNA that makes up our genes accumulates chemical marks that determine how much or little of the genes are expressed. Every environmental influence, such as children’s experiences,  affects the expression of genes.

In today’s show, I interview Dr. Morgan Levine, a professor at Yale with a research background in epigenetics and aging. Together we explore DNA clocks, things that can predict our biological age, which is different from our chronological age, and diverse ways to reverse them. We also get into the future of anti-aging, which can be things like plasma transfusions, gene editing, and a whole of topics I had never heard of.

Join us to learn how biotechnology is trying to add healthspan to our lifespan.

Follow Dr. Morgan Levine
Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrMorganLevine
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dr.morganlevine/?hl=es
True age: https://www.amazon.com/True-Age-Cutting-Edge-Research-Clock/dp/0593329287

Website: www.edpaget.com
email: ed@edpaget.com
Linktree: https://linktr.ee/ed.paget

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Categories
Blog

How Magnesium helps our immune system?

Did you know that magnesium is an essential mineral for the body? It is involved in more than 300 enzyme systems that regulate diverse biochemical reactions in the body, including protein synthesis, muscle and nerve function, blood glucose control, and blood pressure regulation.

Our bodies use magnesium for energy production, oxidative phosphorylation, and glycolysis. This amazing mineral contributes to the structural development of bone and is required for the synthesis of DNA, RNA, and the, underrated, antioxidant glutathione. It also plays a role in the active transport of calcium and potassium ions across cell membranes, a process that is important to nerve impulse conduction, muscle contraction, and normal heart rhythm.

An adult body contains approximately 25 g of magnesium, with 50% to 60% present in the bones and most of the rest in soft tissues. Less than 1% of total magnesium is in blood serum, and these levels are kept under tight control. The normal serum magnesium concentrations range between 0.75 and 0.95 millimoles (mmol)/L.

However, despite its importance, some studies suggest that approximately 50% of U.S. adults get less than the recommended daily amount of magnesium. (1, 2)

Magnesium deficiency is associated with a variety of diseases, such as infections and cancer. Studies have shown that cancerous growths spread faster in the bodies of mice when the animals received a low-magnesium diet – and that their defense against flu viruses was also impaired. However, there has been little research into exactly how this mineral affects the immune system.

The level of magnesium in the blood is an important factor in the immune system’s ability to tackle pathogens and cancer cells. Researchers have reported that T cells, an essential part of our immune system, need a sufficient quantity of magnesium to operate efficiently. Their findings may have important implications for cancer patients.

How Magnesium helps our immune system? 

According to researchers from the University Hospital Basel the level of magnesium in the blood is an important factor in the immune system’s ability to tackle pathogens and cancer cells. They have reported that T cells need a sufficient quantity of magnesium to operate efficiently and these findings may have important implications for cancer patients. (3).

Potentially important findings for cancer patients

The fact that magnesium is essential for the functioning of T cells may be a highly significant finding for modern cancer immunotherapies. These therapies aim to mobilize the immune system – in particular cytotoxic T cells – to fight cancer cells. In experimental models, the researchers were able to show that the immune response of T cells against cancer cells was strengthened by an increase in the local magnesium concentration in tumors.

They do this by looking for ways to increase the concentration of magnesium in tumors in a targeted manner and using data from previously completed studies of cancer patients, the researchers were able to show that immunotherapies were less effective in patients with insufficient levels of magnesium in their blood.

Whether a regular intake of magnesium impacts the risk of developing cancer is a question that still needs to be answered, new studies are trying to test the clinical effect of magnesium as a catalyst for the immune system.

Knowing how important this mineral is for health and our immune systems is enough for me to include magnesium-rich foods in my diet like almonds, spinach, and cacao. I also like to supplement with magnesium and always look for a magnesium complex rather than just one single substrate.

1. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26404370/

  1. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6316205/
  2. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2022/01/220119121455.htm?_kx=t4If0nOfpNdZ-HC1xYBPDO82IcYl_wFMhDzAApaDTNA%3D.HKMsXE
Categories
Podcasts

Episode 5: Lifestyle problems require lifestyle solutions with Dr. Sally Bell

Welcome to “Your Lifestyle Is Your Medicine”

This is the podcast that explores how a person’s lifestyle can be the key to their health and happiness.

What do you do when you are sick and don’t know the cause of your illness?
Well, like any regular person, you would go to your doctor’s appointment, and in that 10-minute appointment, the doctor might come up with a diagnosis or send you for tests. This can be part of the process, but many people have to wait until they are really sick to fit into a diagnosis. Then they are given medicine to help the symptoms but not treat the cause. But what if you are given medication before you get a clear diagnosis? Can this help or hinder it?

This was the case of Dr. Sally Bell; she is an NHS General Practitioner in the UK with expertise in lifestyle medicine. She has been working as a community doctor for more than 20 years in the UK and Africa and still, today, works part-time in NHS urgent care.

When she suffered health issues, she trusted her doctors but didn’t get the answers she wanted. The medical model that she was taught let her down. This made her look deeper into the root cause of her problems which she managed to heal with lifestyle changes. She is now convinced that there are better solutions to complex and chronic health problems than the conventional medical approach. This led her to undertake more training in Functional Medicine, which opened her eyes to the body’s remarkable ability to heal itself. But, as she now knows, it can only do that if you learn how to create the right conditions.

In today’s episode, Dr. Sally Bell takes us through her journey to cure herself and how she developed the five foundations of well-being. She explains why nutrition, movement, sleep, rest, and connection are the pillars of a healthy life.

Join us and learn why lifestyle problems require lifestyle solutions.

Work with Dr. Sally Bell
Website: https://www.drsallybell.com/home
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drsallybell/

Website: www.edpaget.com
email: ed@edpaget.com
Linktree: https://linktr.ee/ed.paget

Thanks for listening! Send me a DM on Facebook or Instagram