Free Highway to Health e-book
Please submit the following form to receive your download file fo the 2nd edition Highway to Health e-book.
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D.I.Y. Health Reset Protocol Kit$299.00
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Highway to Health$29.99
Please submit the following form to receive your download file fo the 2nd edition Highway to Health e-book.
When you’re at our facility, take a few minutes to step into our Red Light Therapy teepee and experience the benefits:
While you’re enjoying it, check in on social media to show everyone how cool it is and how cool you are!
Red Light Therapy is recommended three to five times weekly for best results. The number of sessions per week may vary depending on your needs and goals.
Red Light Therapy sessions only take 10 minutes. You stand between 2 red light panels so your entire body absorbs the light.
Red Light Therapy stimulates cellular energy, encouraging skin renewal and healing. This helps improve the skin’s look, feel, and texture. It enables the skin to recover from injury while providing anti-aging benefits for the skin. This light improves levels of collagen and elastin. These are partly responsible for youthful-looking skin.
Red Light Therapy is safe and painless. It generates a minimal amount of heat. Although the red lights may be bright, using the service without eyewear is fine unless desired for comfort.
Oxidative stress occurs when there is an imbalance between the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and the body’s ability to detoxify them. One of the ways that Red Light Therapy helps to reduce oxidative stress is by stimulating the production of antioxidants in the body that can neutralize ROS and prevent them from causing damage to cells.
Reference: https://lightpathled.com/
Thank you for Watching the Food Solution Summit 3.0 and for taking the time to listen to Dr Mila McManus and the other Health Experts speak about our relationship with foods. Please complete the following form to receive your download link for your Oral Food Challenges Guide.
Breast augmentation is a popular plastic surgery in the United States. Interestingly, in 2021, amidst the COVID lockdowns, there was a 44% increase in breast implants from the year before! Simultaneously, there was also a 32% increase in women having their implants replaced, and a 47% increase in women having their implants removed. [i]
While silicone and saline breast implantation is generally regarded as low complication risk, more women are expressing concerns in social media and with their doctors about a broad range of symptoms that are very real. More than 100 symptoms have been associated with breast implants, the most common in the constellation being chronic fatigue, brain fog, anxiety or depression, chest and breast pain, hair loss, headaches, chills, photosensitivity, rash, chronic joint and muscle pain, gastrointestinal issues, dry mouth and eyes, and weight changes.[ii] Because these symptoms are associated with other conditions, it’s important to carefully rule out causes unrelated to the breast implants.
Breast implant illness [BII], can best be described as an inflammatory response to a foreign substance in the body. There are some rare cancers associated with the implants and they can and do rupture or leak, which also adds to illness. Many women testify to the significant decline in health after receiving breast implants, and restored health following breast implant removal. The scientific community continues to conduct studies to gain further insight into these observations and complaints, but as of yet, breast implant illness is not yet a formal diagnosis. Nevertheless, if you have unexplained illness, or have chronic illness and aren’t improving with treatment, consider having your implants removed.
[i] Https://utswmed.org/medblog/breast-implant-illness/#
[ii] Gland Surgery 2021;10(1):430-443.
It appears that not only does Advanced Metabolic Support Therapy help millions of people lose weight, but it is also having a favorable impact on cardiovascular health. According to the New England Journal of Medicine, the reduced risk for heart failure appears to be a result of upstream metabolic drivers.
In one trial, people with heart failure who received weekly injections of Advanced Metabolic Support Therapy for 52 weeks experienced substantial improvements in symptoms and physical function than those who received a placebo. This trial involved 529 participants with obesity. In a larger trial by Novo Nordisk, involving 17,604 adults with cardiovascular disease who were also overweight or obese, Advanced Metabolic Support Therapy reduced major adverse cardiovascular events by 20%.
To learn more about Advanced Metabolic Support Therapy and our Weight Loss Program, contact us at 281-298-6742.
References:
Advanced Metabolic Support Therapy Improves Heart Failure and Cardiovascular Disease. Medical News in Brief: Journal of the American Medical Association. September 6, 2023.
Our medical providers often refer patients for coronary artery calcium [CAC] scans which are used to detect and quantify atherosclerosis [hardened and calcified plaque]. There have been several peer reviewed papers, including ICONIC,[1] PROMISE,[2] and SCOT-HEART,[3] confirming that accumulation of plaque within the arteries is the strongest predictor of a heart attack.
The healthcare system misses more than half of patients who appear to be the picture of health but suffer a heart attack. In other words, more than half of the people who suffer from a heart attack do so without any symptoms! [4] Though a CAC scan is affordable and significantly more informative than a stress test, even the CAC scan misses the buildup of non- calcified plaque. More alarming is that 70% of heart attack victims are considered low risk by traditional methods of assessing heart disease. [5] Conventional methods are only identifying a small portion [30%] of people who could have a heart attack at any moment. Stress testing, one of the most conventional methods, misses 75% of the lesions responsible for heart attacks. [6]
Researchers have found that there is more than one kind of plaque, some creating a higher risk for heart disease than others. The more immediate risk lies in softer, non-calcified plaque which is not detected through the CAC scan. The good news, however, is that through a newer, state of the art non-invasive coronary computed tomography angiography, or CCTA analysis with Cleerly artificial intelligence technology, these higher risk plaques can be identified. The CCTA+Cleerly analysis is the first approach that may truly prevent heart attacks by detecting the largest predictor of heart attacks: the high risk soft plaque. This analysis has proven superior to the CAC scan over 2, 5, and 10 year periods in one study. [7]
While our practitioners will continue to encourage our patients to get the CAC scan for its affordability and increased insight to potential disease that cannot be determined by a stress test, we are very excited about the CCTA analysis through Cleerly Health. While more costly, the analysis can provide more precise and comprehensive information needed to prevent a heart attack. The CAC scan cannot detect and quantify low-density, non-calcified plaque, which is more likely than hardened and calcified plaque to rupture and cause a potentially fatal blood clot.[8] Furthermore, several studies have concluded that the CCTA+Cleerly analysis shows coronary atherosclerosis in 41-53% of patients with a CAC score of zero. CCTA+Cleerly analysis also provides physicians with calcium scoring, making the CAC scan unnecessary when the CCTA analysis is used.
Whether or not you have high cholesterol or a family history of heart disease, talk to your healthcare provider about the Cleerly Health CCTA analysis. It could save your life!
Be proactive. Be Well.
References:
[1] Coronary Atherosclerotic Precursors of Acute Coronary Syndromes. Journal of the American College of Cardiology. June 5, 2018.
[2] Prognostic Value of Coronary CTA in Stable Chest Pain: CAD-RADS, CAC, and Cardiovascular Events in PROMISE. Journal of the American College of Cardiology. July 13, 2020.
[3] SCOT-HEART Trial: Reshuffling Our Approach to Stable Ischemic Heart Disease. British Journal of Radiology. September 1, 2020.
[4] Benjamin E.J. et al. Circulation 2019.
[5] Chang, H.J. et al. Journal of American College of Cardiologists. 2018.
[6] Akosah K.O. et al. Journal of American College of Cardiology. 2003.
[7] Nurmohamed, N.S. et al. AI-Guided Plaque Staging Predicts Long-Term CVD. JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging. 2023.
[8] The Fallacy of the Power of Zero. Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Cardiovascular Imaging. June 2022.
The most common nutrition questions we get in our practice are whether or not a particular packaged product is “good” or not. The questions come in about supplements, protein powders, other superfood powders, and all kinds of chips, protein bars, cereals, pastas, and seemingly better peanut butter cups and gummy bears. When it comes to food questions, 99% revolve around wanting the convenience of ready-made and packaged foods. Many of the packages look pretty impressive. Grocery stores and food producers bend over backwards to create convenience, all-the-while convincing you of its nutritional value, healthiness, or goodness. Many of the catch words marketers are hoping will speak to your common sense in the healthy food arena, such as non-GMO, Organic, No Sugar Added, Gluten Free, Keto, Paleo, All Natural, Nothing Artificial, are usually present. But do all those words really make it good for you?
Some words are popular right now that confuse even the best label readers, such as ultra-pasteurized or grass-fed, cage-free, pasture-raised, and natural flavors. “Ultra” is a great example of a word or prefix that can be misleading. Most people think of ultra as an improvement, a finer, better feature. But in the food industry, with rare exception, ultra-filtered or ultra pasteurized simply means another step was taken to further refine and process that food. And what about cellulose powder? Sounds harmless enough, right? Did you know that it is refined wood pulp? When did man ever eat wood?
So here’s the thing. There is plenty of data now demonstrating that more than 75% of the food in our grocery store is ultra-processed food, while only 25% is real, whole, non-MAN-ufactured food. In other words, odds are against you when you are shopping that you will find the good 25%. Meanwhile, the other 75% are being highly marketed, end-capped, taste sampled, specially signed, and stunningly packaged with all the titillating sensory words and colors that attract and draw you to the 75%. And a lot of it looks really healthy.
The point here is to remind you, if it’s in a package, man put it in the package. If you pick it up in a drive-thru, it is ultra-processed. If it is not in the original state from which it comes out of nature (a whole fruit, vegetable, nut, meat from the bone), we should all be asking ourselves just how much had to be done to make this product. This is especially true of powders, flours, pressed bars, baked goods, dressings and sauces, chips, and other snack and convenience choices. Even if all of the ingredients are whole food, many are still heavily processed, void of fiber and precious nutrients. Aiming to swap these percentages in our favor rather than against us is a good goal. Seek to make 75% of your food whole from the store periphery and farmers’ markets. One challenge may be to find all of the packaged food in your house that has a Nutrition Facts and Ingredient label and put it on your kitchen counter. Then ask yourself how much of that makes up your daily diet.
Diets rich in ultra-processed foods cause an increased risk for cognitive decline, dementia, stroke, cancer, and all cause mortality. Consistently, data also shows that people in general today also suffer from significant nutritional deficiencies. Ultra-processed foods fail to provide adequate nutrition. Compared to the historical past, prior to the explosion of the processed food industry, people ate mostly local foods, and whole, real food. And during that time we did not experience the explosion of lifestyle disease and nutrient deficiencies we see today.
No doubt, this is a tough challenge. We all have busy lives, careers, and family responsibilities, and all of the stresses that are common to us all. Changing how we eat and what we eat takes time and effort. It is not easy, especially at first. New habits can nevertheless be developed that, once practiced, are also convenient and easy. If we reorganize our priorities, we might find that we are able to endure the challenges of life as well as pursue our dreams more easily than ever before.
Resources:
Mila McManus MD. Highway To Health: A Nutritional Roadmap.(2019)
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/994958 [Diet and the Brain: From Ultra processed Foods to the Farmers Market]
Joseph Mercola MD. Kids Intentionally Poisoned by Artificial School Lunches. (September 6, 2023)
Weight loss never seems to be as simple as just changing diet or increasing exercise. Often, it is more of a multi-faceted approach that stimulates the body to burn fat. For example, we know that diet, exercise, proper hydration, stress reduction, and quality sleep work well together to stimulate weight loss. Also, within each of these lies many nuanced hacks to help you make even more progress. Check out these hacks and start practicing them for improved weight loss and overall health.
Best wishes and be Well!
References:
Inchausepe, Jessie. The Glucose Revolution. (London: Short Books, 2022).
https://www.myfooddata.com/articles/high-fructose-foods.php#printable
In our August newsletter , we questioned if sodium, or salt, is really bad for you and answered a resounding NO. Salt is important! First, the body requires sodium. Second, sodium must be understood in the context of potassium levels. And finally, not all salts are the same. Purchasing quality salt matters [e.g., Redmond’s Real Salt™, Himalayan Pink Salt from Pakistan].
This week, we continue with true, new, and surprising factoids about sodium[i] that you need to know!
Salt cravings are biologically normal, just like our thirst for water. We should pay attention to our salt cravings and respond by increasing our salt intake.
Eat Salt!
[i] DiNicolantonio, James. The Salt Fix. (New York: Harmony Books, 2017).
[ii] https://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/education/dash-eating-plan
Continuous Glucose Monitors [CGM’s] are a more recent breakthrough in biomedical technology. In a minimally invasive way, CGM’s help individuals to track blood sugar in real time. While the only perfectly accurate glucose reading is by getting a blood glucose tests from a lab, wearers of a CGM can gain meaningful information regarding how their unique metabolism responds to food combinations, as well as to stress, sleep, and exercise.
These devices are helping people to understand the unique aspects of their metabolism, which is directly influenced by genetic make-up, eating habits, and overall health (e.g., thyroid function, hormone balance, muscle mass, chronic stress, poor sleep, disease, toxins, and inflammation). Research is showing that there are significant differences in how each of our bodies manages glucose.
When you wear a CGM, it informs you in real time of what food combinations elevate your blood glucose excessively and which combinations keep it stable. Data patterns can be sent to an app on your phone for evaluation and to increase understanding of your own biochemical response to food, stress, exercise, and sleep. As a result, you are able to make lifestyle changes that directly impact your weight, healing journey, and wellness.
If you are interested in finding our more about a CGM, ask your medical provider if this is a good option for you.
If you missed last week’s newsletter article about blood sugar, click here.
Know you, Be you, Be Well.
Reference: