Post With Label inflammation - All Paleo Diet Recipes All Paleo Diet Recipes: inflammation - All Post
Showing posts with label inflammation. Show all posts

Friday, November 13, 2020

thumbnail

Popular Diet Series: All About Paleo








There are so many diet
and food options out there. I have a PhD in Nutrition
and it's even confusing for me to keep up with it all. What's real and what is just the hype
and what did the study support?

There are so many different kinds
of eating and diets out there. There's the paleo and--
oh, yeah the keto, there's vegan, oh, macrobiotic. You get the point.

There is just a lot. The list goes on and on and on. There are so many
different diets out there. Who can keep track?

So, which is best?

What is better for you?

Is the one diet really, really better
for you out there than another. Hello from New Jersey, Eleanor.
Good to see you.

How do you pick the diet program
that is best for you and what if we could take
the best of each of these diets and then build our own super diet. Hint, Hint.
That's what I'm going to do for you. But, more on that later. Hi, everyone.
It's Dr. Nancy.

Thank you so much
for joining my show. Today's live, today's show
is all about popular diets, the most popular diets. Today's show is the first in a series
that I'm going to be doing on popular diet plans
where I take a deeper dive, a non-biased view into
the big diet plans of today. The good and the bad. Today, we are going to look at
the popular-- paleo.

The paleolithic diet.
paleo diet. I'm going to take you through
the paleo diet. What I don't like about it,
what I do like about it and I'm going to answer
your paleo questions the best I can. The best of the best.
That's right, Joe. Good afternoon, Victor.
Hey, Natalie.

Alright. I'm going to share
a sample of a paleo meal plan that also fits with
my anti-inflammatory diet philosophy and I'm going to go through
the associated health benefits as well. Plus, I'm going to show you how to make
some of my favorite, simple but super delicious
paleo-inspired snacks. They're right behind me. So, get super excited.

So, what are we waiting for?

Let's get started. Hey, Lisa.
Good to see you as well. Okay. Paleo. The paleo diet.

The paleo diet, what is it?

Is a diet plan devised based on
the food similar to what might have been eaten
during the Paleolithic era which dates from approximately
2.5 million to 10,000 years ago. There's no quiz on this,
just a good food for thought, good to know. It's basically a caveman diet,
well, almost. A paleo diet typically includes--
What does it include?

Does anyone out here--out here. Does anyone out there
eat a paleo diet or follow a paleolithic diet?

You can indicate
by giving me a thumbs up then you can kind of give
your little tidbits of information as we're going through the show.

So, what does it include?

What does a paleo diet include?

It includes meats and fish
and fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds, whole food sources
that in the past could be obtained
by hunting and gathering. A paleo diet limits foods,
limits foods, okay. Limits foods that became common
when farming emerged about 10,000 years ago
including dairy products. This is my charade for dairy. Moo cow.
Okay, dairy products.

Legumes, beans and grains. So, the purpose,
the purpose of the paleo diet is to return back to a way of eating
that's more like what our ancestors ate. The theory behind the paleo diet
is that the human body, in its current form,
is genetically mismatched to the modern diet,
to what we're eating now, that emerge from agriculture, modern-day
agriculture and farming practices. An idea known
as the discordance hypothesis. Discordance hypothesis.

Although, it's impossible to know
exactly what our early human brothers, sisters, mothers ate,
our ancestors ate in different parts of the world,
we do know that their diet consisted of whole foods that were caught,
that they caught themselves, that they raised themselves,
that they found or grew themselves. Very self-empowered people
are our ancestors. Yes, that was a time
before the processed foods and fast foods and the door dashes. That all didn't exist,
it was back then, alright. So, by following a whole food,
whole food-based diet and leading physically active lives
of hunting and gathering, they had much more rates
of almost little lifestyle diseases such as obesity, diabetes,
heart disease, there were much more likely to die
in a battle with a wild animal.

I just want to throw out
saber-toothed tiger. I don't know. Wild animal or even a dinosaur than from the effects
of heart disease or diabetes. While there are many different offshoots
of adaptations of the paleo diet, in general, paleo diets follow a diet
based on whole unprocessed paleo foods and they include,
here I go with my finger again, grass-fed meat. So, what are some grass-fed meats?

Beef and lamb,
chicken, turkey, pork.

They also include fish and seafood,
salmon and trout, haddock, shrimp, shellfish,
wild-caught if available, eggs, choose free-range pasture
or omega-3 enriched eggs, vegetables including the broccolis
and the kales of the world, onions, carrots, beets,
just to name a few. Fruits, apples, bananas,
oranges, pears, avocado, strawberries, blueberries
and much more. All of these are in
the anti-inflammatory diet, by the way. Root vegetables, potatoes
and sweet potatoes, yams, turnips. Nuts and seeds, okay.

Almonds, macadamia nuts,
walnuts, hazelnuts, lots of nuts, sunflower seeds,
pumpkin seeds, chia seeds, hemp seeds. Healthy fats and oils,
extra virgin olive oil, coconut oil, walnut oil, avocado oil,
super great and others. Salt and spices, sea
salt, turmeric, garlic, rosemary,
herbs, all of those. Sounds pretty good so far, right?

Okay, most of the diet is really very similar
to the anti-inflammatory diet and for those of you familiar with it,
and here are the foods to avoid. What should you avoid
if you are a paleo eater?

Avoid these certain things that were
developed after the onset of farming.

And was not part
of the original hunter-gatherer diet. The paleo books say to avoid
these certain foods and ingredients and I must say that I absolutely agree. They are sugar and high fructose
corn syrup drink, soft drinks, fruit juices,
table sugar, candies, all of Halloween
except for the apples, pastries, ice cream,
grains and flours. You should avoid grains and flours
including the breads, the pastas, the wheat,
the spelt, rye, barley. All of Italy is like,
"But how do we go paleo?

" Alright, legumes, beans and lentils?

Have you ever been
through a CrossFit gym, everyone's on a paleo diet and then you
take out a bag of green peas or beans.

They're like, "What are you doing?

You're ruining--" Okay.
Dairy. Avoid dairy. Adam says, "Bagels are life." Adam, you must not be
on the paleo diet, alright. Avoid dairy, most dairy,
especially low-fat dairy. Some versions of paleo, however,
do include full-fat dairy like butter and cheese
but on the most part, dairy is a no-no.

Vegetable oils, avoid vegetable oils
including soybean oil, sunflower oil, cottonseed, corn,
grapeseed, safflower oil and others. Trans fats, trans fat.
That just doesn't sound good. Trans fats found in margarine
and various processed foods, packaged foods, lots of things,
even breads and crackers, most of them,
unless specified otherwise, have the partially hydrogenated
which is like the worst kind. You want to stay away
from those oils as well. Okay, artificial sweeteners,
aspartame, sucralose, that's like the Splenda,
the saccharin.

Use natural sweeteners
including raw honey, Manuka honey, maple syrup
instead. Highly processed foods. You want to avoid that as well. Highly processed foods
especially labeled diet or low-fat or fat-free,
anything with additives and preservatives, you want to avoid that. And, a general paleo guideline is simply,
if it looks like its process or made in a factory,
then don't eat it.

So, here's a look at
what you might eat during a typical day
in the life of someone eating a paleo. For breakfast,
someone will maybe have boiled salmon and cantaloupe. I am just stating what they eat,
I don't agree with everything because food combining,
cantaloupe with anything is like, "Ha." But, someone typically eating
a paleo diet would have a broiled salmon and cantaloupe
for breakfast. For lunch, someone might graze
on grilled chicken and salad like romaine with carrots
and cucumber, walnuts and lemon juice dressing. And then, for dinner,
salmon hits it again.

Salmon with maybe something like
steamed broccoli or mixed greens, avocados, onions, almond seeds,
lemon dressing, strawberries for dessert perhaps. Oh, snacks. Someone on a paleo diet-- What do you guys eat for snacks
if you are following a paleo diet?

Put them in the comments
because I'm always curious. But, maybe an orange, carrot sticks
or celery sticks, something like that. Alright, not with hummus though.
That's a no-no.

It is very important
to point out that the paleo diet isn't
like the Flintstones where you may be eating
only massive amounts of-- I have a really cute picture
that I want to show you but you're not eating
massive amounts of meat for breakfast, lunch and dinner. Now, that's called the beef diet. Have you heard of that diet?

Where you eat nothing but like hamburgers
for breakfast, lunch and dinner. It's really interesting. But, here are cavemen eating meat
for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

I just thought it was really cute. So, the common misconception
about the paleo diet, what are some?

Yes, meats and fish
are a staple of the diet but they are not the only focus
of the paleo diet. paleo recommends that you include
a 50/50 meat to plant caloric ratio. So, if you have this plate,
you want to make sure that half of it is plants
and then the other half-- the paleo people,
people of paleo. They want to have 50/50, okay.

So, half of this is plants
and half of this is meat. Your plate--I do want to say,
considering the caloric density of meats, however,
and vegetables, your plate should
maybe migrate to 75%, 25%. So, 75%, the majority of this plate
is going to be plant-based, all of your really anti-inflammatory
vegetables. And then, 25%,
right around here, 1/4, it's going to be
your animal-based foods. That's a really good way
to kind of structure your plates.

Another thing
I like about paleo diet is that it emphasizes
drinking of water. Cheers! …of water. Nothing like a Brita. Okay. So, drinking your water,
really, really important especially if you are being
really physically active every day.

Hello, Peter.
How are you?

Good to see you on my show today. Okay, so, is the paleo
an effective diet for health?

Where are the studies?

We want to see some studies. A number of randomized clinical trials have compared the paleo diet
to other eating plants. Overall, these trials suggest
that a paleo diet may provide some real benefits
compared to other diets and here are some benefits. Weight loss, great.

Have you ever seen someone
that just shed in a ton of weight?

You're like,
"What did you do?

" "Well, I went on
the paleo diet." I'm like, "Wow." It's very, very-- I cannot find the word. Compelling!
It's very compelling. Alright, so, weight loss. One of the greatest benefits, okay,
compared to the other diets. Another is improved
glucose tolerance.

Better?

Better what?

Better blood pressure. Great. Better blood pressure
because you're not-- you're not making your body
all inflamed with the processed foods
and the sugars. Low triglycerides,
that's a good thing. Really, really good thing.

Stable blood glucose. Stable blood glucose levels. However, the research I reviewed
also recommended longer trials with larger groups of people
randomly assigned to different diets and that's more needed to understand
the long term overall health benefits and also the possible risks
of paleo diet. Yes, we need more studies
over a longer period of time with more different people in different
regions to truly, truly understand if it's effective
for a longer period of time. Some of the great benefits
I see in paleo diet include-- Benefits?

Tell me about the benefits.

It's a clean diet without additives,
preservatives or chemicals found in processed foods. That's a big bonus,
that's great. You may see improved satiate--
my goodness. And, feeling full over long periods
of time especially between meals due to the higher intake
of protein and fats. Protein, in particular,
helps limit cravings.

Protein limits the cravings,
especially, late night cravings if you eat protein throughout the day. Really, it's proven. There are also great
anti-inflammatory benefits from the plant nutrients you get
from the variety of fruits and vegetables and oils and nuts
and seeds consumed in the paleo diet. In fact, I've really got to give kudos
to this specific diet, other than a few things
like the strong emphasis on red meat and pork products,
most of the foods known to cause inflammation
are the red meat and pork products. But, a lot of the inflammatory
foods are [exiting] out of the paleo diet
which is really nice.

They just go ahead
and write in the descriptions in the very, very beginning
before you start and they say,
"Don't eat this, don't eat this," and then,
they do the work for you. You just got to follow it. Including refined carbohydrates,
they take that out as well. They take out the processed meats,
the trans fats, the refined sugars. Plus, again, the paleo diet is rich,
remember, it's super, super abundant
in several of the foods that we know to be the best natural
anti-inflammatory foods including green leafy vegetables,
the salmon.

This is my piece of salmon. I froze it so I can show it to you
over and over again. The salmon, the fatty fish,
the olive oil and avocados. And, I don't know if you can see
but I have all of these beautiful foods right behind me,
all of the things that I'm talking about. These fruits and vegetables
are high in antioxidants and they are really beneficial for your
entire body to lower the inflammation.

For those of you
that may not know the health consequences of carrying
too much inflammation in your body, it's very important to know
that too much inflammation in your body can increase the risk
of so many problems including type-2 diabetes,
heart disease, joint pain and much more. But, eating a diet rich
in anti-inflammatory foods, particularly, omega-3 fatty acids
helps protect against excess inflammation. It all comes down
to my trusty equation of health and if you don't know it yet, I want you to practice this mantra
or this equation to you inside your head or out loud. "Less inflammation in
plus more inflammation out equals a healthier, happier you." Really important to kind of embed that
into the forefront of your thoughts when you are choosing foods to eat,
choosing foods to prepare your family, the daily things that you do
every day that could cause more inflammation in your body, you want to take that
out of your body so that you keep all the good stuff in. And, you bring in good, non-inflammatory
properties into your body so that you can be a healthier
and happier person.

So, most of the paleo diet
can play an important role in fighting inflammation, period. Studies have shown that highly
processed foods and carbohydrates can promote whole body inflammation,
you don't want that, by increasing the number
of free radicals in the body. And, you know
what free radicals do. Free radicals make you feel
like this: Mr. or Ms.

Inflammation. Inflammatory person,
we don't want to be that person, that's a boo. We don't want that. We also know that healthy fats,
healthy fats and particularly omega-3 fatty acids
play a critical role in decreasing the level of inflammation
throughout the body and added support
with a great curcumin supplement daily like Smarter Curcumin,
this is going to help tremendously. You got inflammation,
you got aches and pains, you have brain fog,
you have GI issues, Curcumin is going to be
your best bet to fight the free radical damage
and inflammation.

Its fast-acting, I take it daily,
it's awesome. It's not just awesome,
it's necessary. Compare this with our current
modern-day Western diet and it's loaded with processed foods, compare the paleo diet
with the Western diet, it's loaded with sugars
and trans fats and omega-6s and omega-9 fatty acids
that are just unhealthy. Ni hao, Guy,
speaking Chinese to me. So, how does paleo differ
from other common diets?

Alright.

The difference is-- We talked about the benefits
and now we're going to talk about the differences of paleo diets
versus all the other ones out there. The primary difference
between the paleo, the paleo diet and other healthy diets
is the absence, the absence of whole grains
and legumes in the paleo diet which I believe are good sources
of fiber and vitamins and other nutrients that you need. So, people following the paleo diet
will need to ensure they are getting the fiber,
those nutrients from the plant-based sources
in their diet. This is the one thing that I don't
completely agree about the paleo diet. Whole grains and legumes
are not only healthy but they are also generally
more affordable and accessible than foods such as grass-fed animals
and organic fruits and vegetables.

And, as a result,
some people might find the paleo diet too expensive to maintain
for extended period of time. The paleo diet guidelines
generally suggest eating no more than three meals per day
but I'm a snacker and if you are anything like me,
we eat our emotions-- I'm just joking, I'm half kidding. Okay, if you're anything like me,
when I get hungry, I get hangry if I don't prepare, right?

So, there are paleo-friendly snacks
that are simple and easily portable and these include baby carrots
or celery and hard-boiled eggs. Super easy to make and put into little
containers and take along with you. They're versatile.

A piece of fruit,
simple grab and go. A handful of nuts, super easy. A handful of nuts,
just make your little cornucopia, take in and put it in
a little container, grab it and go put in your car. It's a good one. They're dangerous
so portion it out, your purse, your backpack,
things like that.

Sliced apples. Got sliced apples but we're
going to add some fats to it. We're going to put nut butter,
sea butters, I have here almond butters. Almond butter,
you just take a scoop full. And then, there you go.

Just put like that
and then eat it like that. Kids love this.
This is very, very, very good. Very satisfying. Get that catastrophic crunch
if you're needing that crunch and it's a slightly sweet,
it's got fiber in it and it has pectin
which is really good for you as well. There are also great easy to make
paleo snack recipes out there, a quick internet search or just look
on this beautiful feed right here.

I know that people are taking good notes
and providing some comments about snacks that they love. If you haven't, then,
please put it in there. Snacks that you go to
that are paleo-friendly and thousands of other
great options out there. Let me share a few
of my favorite recipes. The first one is called
cauliflower popcorn.

By the way, I know a lot
of sign language and this is popcorn. I'm not just crazy. Okay, cauliflower popcorn. I know corn on paleo is a no-no
and corn is very inflammatory but I need my popcorn fix. I think that's one of my trigger foods
and my guilt food is popcorn.

I eat a lot of it,
I can shove it in my mouth and no one can actually--
I don't know. I do love popcorn but it's a no-no. From time to time, I do enjoy
something that looks like popcorn and something that's healthy
that I don't have to feel guilty about. So, here is a great alternative. You're going to take cauliflower,
that white broccoli, cauliflower.

And, you're going to take it
and peel it into small little florets, little bite-size florets and then you're going to toss
the florets in olive oil. So, you're going to pour
olive oil all over. You're going to bake it,
you can roast it in the oven 25 minutes on 350 and then it comes out and it's
super easy and healthy and delicious. You're going to sprinkle with onion powder
or sea salt, garlic powder and you can even sprinkle it
with turmeric. So, here I have--
and you can just sprinkle it and it's so fun
and super healthy.

You just toss it
and then you can eat it. Super good. So, cauliflower popcorn. Has anyone had any of these?

So good and it's good for you. Alright.

"Is anyone giving me
any garbanzo beans roasted?

" Yes, Joel, but beans
are not friendly on the paleo diet. Weren't you listening to--
put the sound on. So, yes, the garbanzo bean
are really yummy but they're not paleo-friendly
because they don't like legumes. Okay, the next one
is avocado doubled eggs. Now, all of that Easter fun is gone, I know you guys have
some extra eggs laying around, you might find yourself just hard boiling
those eggs that are just laying around and instead of doing deviled eggs
which is caloric dense and has saturated fats
and all of that stuff.

Why don't you just
boil your eggs?

Okay, lots of boiled eggs. If you can see that.
Alright, boiled the eggs. I've taken out the yolk. I toss the yolk. Yeah, toss it and you forget it.

And then, you mash up avocado,
cilantro, garlic, salt and pepper. So, here I have some avocado
and I'm going to mash it up. Let me see if I can turn it
so that you can see. Not chocolate eggs, James. Alright, so here's cilantro.
Cilantro.

Guinea pigs favorite foods, handy to them. So, I'm taking all
of the cilantro and I'm going to join it with
my avocado that I've mashed. I use one entire avocado. And, I'm going to use
garlic salt with-- this is garlic salt
with Himalayan salt and you just going to put that
in there. And, you're just going to
mash it up together until it becomes
evenly blended together.

How is everyone doing?

No, Darren, I am I am not single,
I'm married but thank you for asking. What does that have to do
with paleo?

Focus, Darren. Alright, okay. Do you see how it is being made
all together into this nice green,
glorious concoction. So, good for you.

This smells so, so, so good. And, if you want,
you can put pepper in it as well. So, now, you're just going
to scoop this into the whites
of the hard-boiled eggs. Here you go. And, it becomes this sweet
little avocado--isn't that cute?

And then, you make
a whole little display.

It's really nice. Super easy.
It took me 30 seconds. Alright. Now everyone knows
how to make avocado deviled eggs. Yes, Maria says,
"I'm making her hungry." Maria, I'm making myself hungry
and I'm weighing whether or not I take the bite.

I'm like, "No, don't take the bite," Because, what if a piece of celery
or cilantro gets stuck on my teeth and everyone's going to be like,
"Do you tell her?

" "No, you tell her." I don't want to be embarrassed. Okay, so, that's fun, right?

Did anyone else give
me a suggestion on what you guys love to eat?

Oh, beef jerky. That's a good one. But, beef jerky is kind of processed
unless you use a food dehydrator and you don't add any salt
or any of the--you know. Store-bought beef jerky
usually has a lot of gunk to it that is not--that is actually
very inflammatory to your body.

Another good snack
is to take turkey. So, we have romaine lettuce here
and you just take some Turkey. And now, this turkey has no salt. It has no nitrates, phosphates,
it doesn't have anything but literally it's just the meat
and it's roasted turkey and you just take it
and you put it on here. Put a bite of avocado
or put some of that avocado devilled egg spread
and then you can eat it.

It's like little tacos. That's paleo-friendly. Okay.
Are we having fun?

Are we hungry yet?

Mm-hmm. We are wrapping it up. Let's wrap it up and let's talk about
what we even learned.

If you just joined me,
I'm Dr. Nancy and we have been talking about
paleo diet. Why it's beneficial?

What are the differences
between paleo and a couple of the other
popular modern-day diets here?

So, the popular paleo diet
you've been hearing about for years and it's on this huge, huge trend
is actually quite simple and has many, many positives. It is modeled after the diets
hunter and gatherers were likely to have followed
while there is not one exact way to follow the paleo diet,
there is a basic idea and that is to avoid processed foods
and focus instead on healthy whole foods. Paleo-friendly foods include
meat, fish, eggs, seeds, nuts, fruits and veggies
along with healthy fats and oils while avoiding processed foods
and avoiding the grains and the dairies in the sugar,
basically, anything that is man-made or has to be made in a factory.

The paleo diet includes
grass-fed lean meats and they recommend that you eat about 50 to 50
meat to plant caloric ratio. But, I find that that is a little too high
and since there are no processed foods, trans fats, grains or sugars
included in the paleo diet, users typically experience weight loss,
lower blood pressure and triglyceride levels are lower as well. And also, more stable
blood sugar levels. So, these are all great stuff. Okay, potatoes are--
yes, you can have potatoes but very, very little, okay.
Very little.

In addition, since the diet avoids
simple carbohydrates, processed foods and refined sugars
and includes fruits and vegetables and healthy oils
loaded with antioxidants, the paleo diet is beneficial in reducing
levels of inflammation in the body. Other benefits of the paleo diet,
well, they include eating clean by avoiding artificial flavors
and preservatives and toxins and chemicals found in processed foods,
increased iron intake and feeling satiated
or fuller for longer after eating. Thank you for giving me
all of the thumbs up. I really appreciate that,
whoever you are, thumb up giver. But, since the paleo diet also avoids
whole grains, beans and legumes, you really need to make sure
that you're eating high fiber fruits and vegetables
to ensure that you are getting enough fiber in your diet each day
if you go paleo.

Something that is a common byproduct
of paleo, I should say, is eating too much meat
too quickly. So, what happens is people
become constipated. So, if you want to avoid
being constipated and you want to have those good,
healthy bowel movements, you want to make sure
that you eat a lot of vegetables paired up with your meats, okay. You're welcome on that one. Thank you so much for watching today.

Please make sure that you like
like you are doing and share this with a family member
or five or your friends and just--
fermented foods are good, yeah. They're always good. They're all my
anti-inflammatory diet. If you guys do not have
my anti-inflammatory diet or don't know about it, there is going to be a link after the show
in the comments and it looks like this and you can look at
what I recommend for health. All health of the body,
inflammation-fighting foods, things that you should buy at the market,
things that you should avoid, a lot of it, mirrors the paleo diet so look at that.

And yes, I will
post the recipes. James, I will, yes. Yes, fruits, berries, blueberries,
absolutely. And, if you've missed any of the show,
after I'm done you are able to go back and review because we talked
about what it includes and what it tells you, suggest you
to avoid for the paleo diet, alright. So, you won't miss anything at all.

Alright, next up is the pros and cons
of the vegan diet. All Yogis are like,
"Yes, finally!" Okay, so, tomorrow
we're going to talk about the pros and the cons
of the vegan diet. This one is super interesting
so try not to miss it. That is the next part
of my popular diet series. I hope that you found this
super, super useful and interesting and if so, please give
me another thumbs up, give yourself a heart.

I really appreciate
each and every one of you taking time out of your day
to engage and to listen and to build up the knowledge
in your head and to activate your amygdala. The amygdala is the part of the brain
that goes, "Ah!" The aha moment. So, that is very, very special
and it's needed each and every day so that we grow and also feel alive. We want our amygdala
to be stroked, yeah. Alright, have a wonderful day,
you guys.

Thank you so much for watching. I'll see you next time. Bye, bye. .


Video Description:




Paleo, Vegan, Macrobiotic… there are so many different diet plans and food options out there. Today Dr. Nancy Lin, PhD holistic nutrition begins the first in her diet series. She will take a deeper, non-biased, look at the big diet plans popular today. The good, the bad and the ugly!
Today’s live with Dr. Nancy is about the Paleo diet. Learn everything you need to know about Paleo, and what the studies really show.
Learn more at smartercurcumin.com

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

thumbnail

Dr. Chad Edwards | Popping Painkillers vs. Prolotherapy












you know if you were to sprain your ankle you're gonna undergo a normal reaction to that ankle sprain a lot of people with low back pain will get better on their own in six weeks you sprained your ankle a lot of times it get better it gets better on its own within six weeks because ligaments and tendons do not have a good blood supply there's only a certain amount of healing that they can do and with Prolotherapy we're restating that a normal inflammatory response trying to achieve the goal of full function without pain my next guest is a board-certified family medicine physician he's the founder of revolution their revolution health and wellness which focuses on functional medicine geared towards optimizing the health of their patients dr. Chad Edwards thanks for coming on man oh man thanks for having me I'm excited to be here it's gonna be a fun one I was looking over your site and there's some topics we've never uncharted territory on the show so I'm excited to get into some IV therapy and Prolotherapy and skincare routines but before we get into that I'm curious how you got into being the guy into all that stuff what was your journey like yeah so you know I was I was an exercise physiology major in college I worked with a lot of soldiers I was an enlisted guy in the army and then a you know into medical school went did my residency at Fort Bragg North Carolina and had kind of a traditional training in that regard where I got out of residency and went to 5th Special Forces Group and when I was there one of my commanders who worked another special operations unit he came to me and said hey I need I need Prolotherapy I was like well I have no idea what that is and of course when your commander comes and says I need something in your job is to go find it so I started looking in the Prolotherapy and actually my PA at the time started looking into it we found a guy in Nashville that that did Prolotherapy and he fixed my commanders elbow and he came up and did an an in-service exam and was talking about what Prolotherapy is what it does how it works and this guy just turned my entire world on its head he said you know I was an athletic trainer in college I was you know a medic and you know as an enlisted guy and I had t-shirts that said just is't and this guy said whatever you do don't ice you know after an injury and certainly don't use anti-inflammatories and it just turned everything upside down and I was like this guy's either crazy or brilliant and it took me six months but I figured out he's on to something and I was able to fix things that I hadn't been able to address before in any other way previously don't ice it use Prolotherapy or what did he say don't ice it and no we go to anti-inflammatories like motrin a person those kinds of things okay and so you started seeing this alternative method of reducing inflammation or our joint pains or back issues and you started going down that path and that's exactly and you know some of these some of the issues that I had dealt with in the past you know plantar fasciitis shin splints there's a lot of things that you know just we didn't have good results in it you know I'd send him physical therapy and they make it a little bit better it may help a little bit but there was a lot of patients that it just didn't it was very frustrating and when I saw Robin the Gatorade cup in two thus influenced exactly exactly so you know with brother therapy I was able to turn that around in a way that I hadn't been able to previously in it it was shocking huh okay and so now before we start getting into that you're doing a functional medicine practice working with the everyday person so describe the everyday person who's coming in and that you're working with probably the most common from a functional medicine perspective probably the most common patient that I see is a female I will say 30 to 45 50 55 years old that comes in says I feel bad I'm tired I'm fatigued I have no sex drive I've been to you know three different doctors nobody can figure out what's going on and there's something wrong I'm not crazy I'm not depressed so figure that out and that's probably our most typical functional medicine patient then we get males that need testosterone replacement those kinds of things that would be the typical patient from a Prolotherapy perspective it can be it can run the gamut they may be athletes they may be older patients with chronic pain that there there is no typical in regards to that I had a teacher in college professor and he was talking about this one student who gay up and gave a public speak or speech and he was on the Wasel which stood for like the Washington State Board Association or something ridiculous but no one knew what it meant cause he never defined it so every time he said Wasel it got funnier and funnier and funnier yeah so I don't want Prolotherapy to be that thing well I don't know anything about it it was certainly sound like the Wasel to me yeah can you kind of explain to me what Prolotherapy is all about absolutely in Prolotherapy the term was coined by dr. George Hackett in the 1950s when he wrote his book on Prolotherapy so this has been around for a long time and it stands for proliferative therapy so basically we know that layman's and tendons are made of collagen you know it's like a steel cable that holds two things together and the the collagen is like the strands of the the it's the little strands in that steel cable so when you have damaged one of these ligaments and tendons the Prolotherapy proliferate snoo new collagen formation so we can actually restore the ligaments and tendons to their normal healthy structure and function okay um sorry what does Prolotherapy do one more time' i blanked when you were talking about so basically what you're doing with Prolotherapy is you're stimulating your body to heal itself that's it okay and it does that through inflammation you know we all think that inflammation is bad but inflammation in the acute phase is actually how your body's it's how it heals that is the mechanism by which we heal without inflammation you don't heal that's why you shouldn't take anti-inflammatories after an acute injury so very interesting paradigm shift and when we treat these musculoskeletal conditions so we're just stimulating your body to heal itself and how do you stimulate how do you like I come in to use insulin so what do we do yeah so first we're gonna do an evaluation we're gonna try and identify the areas that are causing problems and I you usually it's by palpation I'm just pushing and poking when you know ligaments and tendons are very sensitive they've got a lot of nerve fibers in them when they're damaged it irritates the nerves and that sends the signal of the brain causes pain causes a whole host of potential symptoms pain to one of them it's the guys at the shoulder injuries can't bench press and it hurts exactly where the pitchers thrown the ball over and over again right exactly we see a lot of a lot of shoulder injuries in fact it's our number one area that do and our success rate is well in excess of 98 percent it's amazing Prolotherapy I'm coming to you with shin splints how would you go about fixing that you mentioned addressing the problem seeing what's going on and then what sure so we're gonna do an evaluation physical exam I'm gonna push on those things the nerves that live within ligaments and tendons are very sensitive and when the ligaments and tendons are damaged causes pain causes and sometimes it feels weak sometimes you may feel like a kind of a numbness or a weird feeling like that but a lot of times it's pain so when I push on those things and they'll be sensitive so that helps me identify the areas that we need to treat and then we perform the Prolotherapy procedure which are injections and I use a dextrose Prolotherapy standard dexterous Prolotherapy solution very very very safe solution to use in fact you almost can't as long as you understand how to do the injections you really can't screw it up it's very very safe and so we'll inject all of these areas there's a little bit of lidocaine in the solution so the lidocaine helps numb those areas up and when they're numb and they don't the patient doesn't have pain anymore I know we've got in the right area so I haven't get up and walk around if that looks good then we've got in the right area and then we're gonna follow them and see how they do okay so when someone hears injection they're picturing like a syringe this big filled with all sorts of chemicals what's in the actual mixture of the the Prolotherapy yeah very very basic solution use fifty fifteen one five fifteen percent dextrose which is sugar sugar water sterile water and lidocaine lidocaine obviously is the anesthetic that helps you understand what areas that I need to get and if I've gotten the right areas and and completely inadequately treated the area the dextrose because of the concentration that we are using in this injection it causes a fluid shift so the fluids will shift out of the cells and it causes what we call cremation those those cells in those tissues we'll shrink and that shrinking stimulates the inflammatory process hmm okay what was the like liposome what was a solution in the actual pillow therapy lidocaine lidocaine okay and what does that made up of is that that's just the the local anesthetic so if you were you know if you're gonna get stitches yeah the lidocaine numbs up the area so you can get your stitches okay okay got it and so pro therapy is very safe ninety-eight percent success rate you mentioned that you shouldn't ice it and you should actually embrace inflammation acute inflammation you can talk a little bit more about that that was interesting yeah sure so you know if you were to sprain your ankle you're gonna undergo a normal reaction to that ankle sprain there's going to be in the first 72 hours or so you're gonna have the inflammatory phase and in part of your immune system is gonna migrate into this area and specifically what we're looking at with this with with the healing in regards to collagen is a cell called a fibroblast fibroblasts create collagen that's part of what they do so these cells will migrate into the tissues will have a whole host of inflammatory chemicals come in that's where we see that the redness and the swelling and all of those things that go along with you know that ankle pain and the swelling that we see with with a an ankle sprain and so that that initial phase is that first 72 hours after an injury then we have a the second phase is called the proliferative phase and that's where you're actually making new collagen you're trying to strengthen these tissues and that occurs over about a six-week period after the injury and then the last phase is the the remodeling phase and where the collagen you know these fibroblasts they don't it's not like they're laying down railroad tracks where they take a piece of collagen and attach it and it's this linear fashion they're just basically just kind of puking up collagen so they just kind of spit it out and then over that 18-month period we're we're integrating that into the tissues and we're orienting them in the in the structure that they need to be so that we get the maximum strength so the fiber class giving out the collagen do they do that with just one session or is this you have to continue doing yeah so they they'll do that after a normal injury that's why you know that six week mark that helps explain why a lot of people with low back pain will get better on their own in six weeks you sprained your ankle a lot of times it get better it gets better on its own within six weeks yeah that that's an interesting mark for you know healing on our own and with Prolotherapy so anytime there's an injury anything that stimulates that inflammatory response you're going to have those fibroblasts migrate into the area and they're going to begin to produce collagen because ligaments and tendons do not have a good blood supply there's only a certain amount of healing that they can do sometimes it's sufficient and and the pain will go away you'll return to normal function but a lot of times we'll get of course I'm a little bit biased because I see patients that that they didn't get better by traditional methods and so we'll have continued and can be long-term pain and with Prolotherapy we're restating that a normal inflammatory response trying to achieve the goal of full function without pain have you seen back pain go away because I know the l4 l5 is like the most common side of back pain you know it's one of the biggest complaints in the medical field is lower back pain what have you seen Prolotherapy do for people who are suffering from back pain well throughout throughout history back into the 1950s and dr. Hackett started in the 1930s with his case series but since that time we've got a greater than eighty-five percent success rate in treating musculoskeletal pain and problems so and that includes low back pain and we have seen tremendous results with many many cases of low back pain in fact I in the last since I've been in Prolotherapy he started in 2008 I have seen one case only one case of true sciatica where there was actually a nerve root impingement the disc was herniated pushing on the nerve root causing pain going down the leg time after time after time patients will come in and they'll say I've got pain going down my leg and they'll think that's a herniated disc pushing on the nerve my experience most of the time it's a ligament or tendon causing radiating pain going down the leg and the one of the beautiful things about Prolotherapy is that I can identify exactly where the damaged structures are because of the solutions that we use and the nature in which we do these injections I would argue it's much much much better than an MRI my dad got he thought he had the sciatic nerve and so he went in for a few was the hydro cortisone injections and then I don't know if they fused it together to get rid of the back pain but it was to the point you know he's a swimmer five times a week very competitive and he couldn't do it anymore it just was too painful he'd walk around you know like holding his back and then he got I think the surgery and it was all better are you so the Prolotherapy how is it different than like the hydro cortisone injections it's it's as different as hydrocortisone yeah as day is tonight it's the complete opposite into the spectrum hydrocortisone you know any of the steroids or any of the the glucocorticoids are anti-inflammatory we're trying to reduce inflammation in the hopes that we're going to minimize their symptoms the problem is is those those those medications are necrotic to the tissue they destroy the tissue when we know this it's in every Northup edicts textbook we know that those those solutions are damaging to the tissue it's why you can only have so many of them so often because like two or three or something exactly so and we can't inject them you know if you've got an Achilles tendon problem we do not inject steroids into the Achilles tendon because you can actually destroy or rupture that tendon after having a corticosteroid injections so those are reducing inflammation and causing long-term destruction of the tissues whereas Prolotherapy is causing inflammation enhancing the tissues in fact they've done animal studies where they did Prolotherapy injections dextrose Prolotherapy injections and the the the tendon when they they euthanize the animal at the end of the study and they evaluated the tendon and it was 40% thicker than the control group and it was 50 stronger than the control group so we're making the tendons like Bionic tendons we're making them thicker and stronger than they were before the injury why aren't more people talking about this is it starting to come around because the first time I've heard of it and I did an exercise science undergrad so you know of course I know everything right but you know we have people on the show all the time and it's the first time I'm hearing about it is it is it still pretty underground yeah I would say that it is and there's a couple of reasons why it is the first one is most of my colleagues will evaluate does something work or not based on the scientific evidence so what's the study proving that it works and unfortunately many of them will not use an intervention unless there's a study proving that it works my argument from a functional medicine perspective across the board is I don't necessarily need a study to prove it works I need I need to make sure that I'm not causing harm that's my biggest issue don't do any harm that's the first dictum of medicine so as long as I'm not doing harm and there is potential benefit then that's a therapy that would consider so there's you know so how do you get scientific studies well somebody has they're expensive to do you have to have funding the solutions are very very simple and there's no money to be made in these solutions so no one is from a super pharmaceutical perspective is going to do a study on dextrose Prolotherapy so there aren't many studies proving that it works in an environment where you have to have evidence-based medicine to convince people that this works there's just not enough of that now the second piece so the first one is a lack of good scientific data the second piece is the studies that are out there are very conflicted and there's a if I can take a step back and I'll tell the story about when I first started doing Prolotherapy I saw tremendous benefit and I was an evidence-based medicine guy in fact when I was in residency I was the resident in charge of evidence-based medicine that was kind of how I thought and and now that was a big reason why I shifted into functional medicine when I saw probably therapy so I did the injections on these on people and they were getting better left and right I mean almost 100% of the time I was like this is amazing nothing that I do in medicine is this effective so I started looking into the research and I said if I'm gonna do stuff like this then I better know what the research says and be able to you know defend my position and things like that so the first thing I looked at was the Cochrane Collaboration and if your listeners are unfamiliar with the Cochrane Collaboration they're a group that evaluates the scientific evidence and then they look at the quality of the studies and what kind of studies are out there and then they'll make a recommendation this works or it doesn't kind of like skeptics and they're going through everything and seeing if it's yeah okay yeah exactly so they they looked at five studies on Prolotherapy and their conclusion was that it didn't work so I've got a problem I see that it works because my patients got better like almost all of them and now I have a study that shows that it doesn't work this doesn't match we've got a real problem here so I pulled all five of the studies that the Cochrane Collaboration reviewed and I started reading the actual study that they looked at the largest study was done by a physician out of Australia named Yelland and I think this will underscore the point of why they came to their conclusion the study had I think was a hundred and ten patients and they had two groups it was a randomized placebo-controlled double-blind study which would be the gold standard from an evidence based medicine perspective and they so the neither of the physicians nor the patients knew were they getting saline injections or were they getting Dexter's Prolotherapy injections so two different groups one got one got saline injections one got dextrous Prolotherapy injections and at the end of the study they they said that there was no statistically significant difference between the two groups so from their perspective this was no better than quote placebo so it doesn't work that was their conclusion now there's a couple of problems with that the first one is that you've heard of dry needling no okay very common in physical therapy dry needling is where you take a needle and you injected the tissue and there are studies validating the effectiveness of dry needling yeah Sasebo sugarpill exactly so and now with with dry needling there is a physiologic effect it's not a placebo so we know that there's an effect with that so if we are doing an injection we're sticking a needle into the tissues and we're injecting saline we're thinking that that's a placebo the problem is is we know just sticking a needle into the tissue causes a change and there's an impact with with that patient there is an outcome with that patient so then when you inject any solution you can cause an inflammatory response so in effect we're evaluating two different therapies okay cuz even the Saline would cause the inflammation which could cause a similar effect as the Prolotherapy that's correct since that's the mechanism for the healing exactly now at the end of the study the thing that really drove this home for me was the average duration of pain of patients enrolled in the study was 14 years that had 14 years of pain on average at the end of the study both patients were very happy both groups were very happy with their results so both patients got better and a better conclusion instead of saying Prolotherapy doesn't work a better conclusion is saline is as effective as Prolotherapy because these patients got better so that that's one of the many reasons why you know that study does not disprove Prolotherapy and i would argue that it's it is showing the additional benefit and there there were a lot of other things when you look at the procedure they limited the procedure to 10 milliliters of solution I might use a hundred in a low back so it's it's a very different procedure than what I do but regardless they got better yeah yeah that's interesting too cuz the dry needle is if that stimulates somewhat of an effect versus saline it's two different things like you were saying I I think the number one thing people would be skeptical about at home is that is it safe thing and you know when they hear needles and injections they mediately go to like Jason Bourne and a chair get injected with like truth serum or something so the actual the actual mixtures is relatively safe and used on a everyday basis right it's just dextrose the lidocaine and then was it water yep what yeah and you know to go to your point about you know is it safe the former Surgeon General of the United States under President Reagan so we're talking in the 80s his name was C everett Koop and he was actually a print a an advocate for Prolotherapy in his statement was the nice thing about Prolotherapy if properly done is that cannot do any harm so the whole risk of the procedure itself is related to the needle and the injections the needles that we use are very thin so i use a the biggest needle that I use as a 22 gauge in diameter now which is a relatively small needle and I'll use a 25 gauge needle for a lot of things and I'll even go as small as a 30 gauge for some other so 30 gauge needle is like a hair I mean it is a little bitty needle so most of the time it's fairly well tolerated I do offer sedation or medications to kind of you know calm patients down I would say 98 to 99 percent of my patients don't need anything and they it's free medication a good time only giving me Prolotherapy you know and obviously you know we want our patients to you know to have a good experience when they come to see us but our ultimate goal is that they get better and I'm I'm balancing you know when you when you take a medication like valium or versed or fentanyl or one of these kinds of medications it's you're gonna be knocked out for a few hours I mean you may be awake but you're not you're not productive a lot of my patients will come in and get probably therapy in the morning and then go right to work so there's no downtime with this many of my athletes are working out the next day not at their highest level but I want that movement I want motion and because that that helps with the search elation which ultimately helps with the healing so I don't generally give medications although we can I've got some patients that need it and we can do that and I forget was it an ongoing treatment or is it just a one and done kind of thing it it's all really guided by the patient now on average the average patient needs between three and six rounds of the Prolotherapy procedure in order to achieve that goal of full function without pain it's a sprint in the six weeks its I really four weeks because when you look at the way that collagen is produced we want to maximize that collagen production so I re-evaluated and four weeks and then we'll repeat the procedure at that time and the average patient three to four weeks so we're looking at three to six I'm in it which I'm sorry three to six procedures so we're looking on average three to six months and they're they're back to their normal baseline without pain where would you recommend people go to find like a Prolotherapy in their area if they have back pain or shin splints or anything like that yeah and that's a really good question because there is no quote certification for Prolotherapy any physician can hang up a shingle outside their clinic and say I do Prolotherapy and I I've seen some really talented perla therapists and I've seen some really really shady proto therapists do it can you do it yourself probably a learning curve not the safest thing sticking 30 gauge needles into you by yourself yeah exactly so the to answer your question and I strongly recommend the patients do something like this there's a an organization called the Hackett hem wall foundation and it's hack at hem wall org if you want to put that in the show notes or you know whatever you can hem wall org and go to the list of Provo therapists the Hackett hem wall foundation has probably the most rigorous training requirements of any organization out there you have to spend a significant amount of time one-on-one with a with a trained Pro therapist in order to be on the list of recommended recommended Prolotherapy so I'm the only one in Oklahoma and happily on it exactly don't you get certified milk Lahoma but it I think that's probably the best place to start because you just don't know another organization would be the American Osteopathic Association no no no American orthopedic Association the AOA and they also do a lot of training on Prolotherapy and a lot of the people in the hack at home wall foundation are also in the I'm sorry it's AOM American Academy of Orthopaedic Medicine there we go yeah it sounds pretty safe just hearing it for the first time I mean just that mixture alone I mean like aspirins probably got more chemicals in it or even some of the things that are legal in like a drugstore you go to over-the-counter medicines and there's or supplements you know there's you can order bioidenticals online and just start dosing yourself DIY but what all of a sudden when you break out like needles people freak out and throw their hands in the air even though it might be less dangerous and some of the stuff that comes in like a pill form sure yeah I mean it this it's incredibly safe the last serious side effects that we saw were literally in 1956 so you know a long time ago it's very very safe I've done thousands of procedures and I've never seen a single complication even a mild complication I just we just don't see them we're very careful with how we do the procedure and you know we make sure we get good follow-up and patients are taken care of in that acute phase and we get incredible results have you heard of stem cell therapy absolutely okay that's that and is that similar different it's it's very similar but so I would I would argue that there's three basically phases so you got Prolotherapy you know it's a you know we're injecting these solutions that we've talked about there's also PRP or platelet-rich plasma therapy and so you have you heard of PRP no okay so you know names like Kobe Bryant and there's been several there was sorry is that were they spin it in a centrifuge and then they inject it back in yeah that's exactly right so basically and the concept is the exact same as Prolotherapy we're just using the the the growth factors that are derived from platelets to stimulate that inflammation and it's very effective it's a little bit more expensive but will draw the patient's blood spin it down the centrifuge and will draw out just that platelet-rich plasma portion so you know very effective it's a little more potent than probable therapy but it costs a little bit more an average patient who needs between two and four rounds so PRP is also a great way to go okay then the last step that I would consider would be stem-cell and you know there are several different ways that you can harvest stem cell you can use adipose tissue or the fat tissue and go in and get the stem cells from there you can do a bone marrow aspirate or what we call it BMAC and you can get stem cells from that those are autologous meaning they come from the patient and then you can also use a donor stem cell and the one that I use is out of the tissue bank from the University of Miami and they're using amniotic stem cell lower cost very effective very good so I give the patient the option and let them choose but so we do stem cell as well and I usually guide patients to do stem cell if we're having knee or hip problems inside the joint and we're trying to regenerate cartilage you know their bone on bone you know they've got a lot of knee pain and they're just not responding and I would look at stem cell for that but I almost always do it in conjunction with PRP and or stem or a Prolotherapy it's kind of a good break down it's like beginning middle and last resort yeah exactly and probably cost - I mean Prolotherapy yeah probably cheaper yeah it's much cheaper I mean you're looking at it depend on the area i we in our clinic we charge by the area but because it's based on complexity how much solution we're using safety all those things so anywhere from you know 150 dollars to five hundred dollars depending on the region oh yeah it's not bad enough right and that that is per treatment so you know you three to six rounds I mean you're you're talking you know for like low back $1500 now stem cell I incorporate PRP the platelet-rich plasma therapy and I use a higher volume and so it on the on the amniotic and that you're looking at a little less than 3000 for that and that's you know for a one-time deal but stem cell is you do one procedure and that's it I mean just seeing my dad walk around with that pain when I was growing up just like clenching his back and just couldn't do anything but it seems like a investment to get rid of that that's what he was saying you see he tried acupuncture he tried anti-inflammatories tried medications he tried icing it he tried elevating it different kinds of beds yeah so okay so Prolotherapy who would benefit from this what are some of the most common conditions for the people out there we mentioned shin splints back pain are there any others yeah pretty much everywhere from the base of the skull down I can inject so and it runs the spectrum so I've done Prolotherapy for migraines because there's often a musculoskeletal component to that neck pain car accident where they had whiplash I've had shoulder is the number one area that we do see a lot of CrossFit athletes and whether or not they're doing their their techniques correct or incorrect and we've got some very talented CrossFit athletes and we've resolved their shoulder issues and our our success rate with shoulders like I said earlier is about 98% I mean it's really effective we've done wrists things like carpal tunnel syndrome lots of lateral and medial epicondylitis or tennis elbow and golfer's elbow lots of knees hips ankles in fact I just I was a little late getting on the podcast because I was actually doing an ankle and it was a very atypical ankle he didn't one kind of your normal sprained ankle it was just a typical and so you just have to work through them figure out where are they hurting and go for the area that's probably causing their pain so pretty much anywhere from here down okay fascinating stuff and then so if someone's experiencing let's say they just got some back pain like me on the drive I don't want to Yellowstone last week 16 hours from Seattle to Yellowstone and my back was just screaming by the end of it I was I couldn't drive I was hunched over and everything and my first go-to was to ice it and take some ibuprofen or something like that maybe do some foam rolling what would you recommend to the to me in that situation so I would everything that you did except for the the ibuprofen I remember that ibuprofen they've done again animal studies where they cut halfway through the tendon and gave different animals I think it was a rat study that gave different anti-inflammatories to a series of these animals and at the end of the study the groups that got anti-inflammatories didn't heal the group they left alone healed very well so I would argue based on those animal studies and what we see clinically that by taking anti-inflammatories you're inhibiting the healing process they help in the short-term but they don't help heal those tissues but I think foam rolling stretching massage chiropractic you know all of those kinds of things I think are a great way to go and remember that a lot of things will heal on their own within six weeks so if this is a recurrent or repetitive issue you know you're not getting the benefit and I would consider probably okay at that point but there any supplements like fish oil I know that one gets a big like the lubricating of joints for omega-3 since that's that you've seen work I you know working for the joints no not not specifically not fish oil now I'm a big advocate for fish oil because of a multitude of issues it is relatively anti-inflammatory it's not an anti-inflammatory like motrin so I don't recommend that my patients stop the the their fish oil like I would recommend they stop motrin because there's a lot of benefit to that it's balancing inflammation is probably a better way of saying it some of the natural anti-inflammatories like turmeric curcumin those kinds of things may not be a bad idea boswellia may not be a bad idea there's some some question about things like MSM glucosamine chondroitin you know they may be of benefit is MSM the horse cream that's the methyl I think jewel Salama was talking to me on the show he buys like it's not a tub of anti inflammatory horse cream or something made for horses and it was Emma them or something like that I don't know anyway sorry to get you but so there's some things again going back to that what's the risk what's the potential benefit so what they may not be proven to work but if we're not hurting somebody then go for it maybe maybe it helps them and maybe it's just a placebo maybe just think it helps but who cares yeah better than who cares yeah cuz the person at home might be a little confused here we are in the paleo community whole food community talking about anti-inflammatory anti-inflammatory this you can't get inflammation cars heart disease and then in very specific areas with Prolotherapy inflammation is beneficial and that's what you want inflammation in specific areas because it's part of the healing process right and in that acute phase when it goes you know beyond six weeks and you've got chronic repetitive yeah inflammation that's a problem okay without question okay well cool a couple more questions for a chat before I let you go this is a fun one flew by these are closing closing bits here yeah the first one is looking back on 2016 2015 what's been the biggest lesson you've learned oh goodness well the first one I it's almost really more of a life lesson than anything else but never ever quit never ever quit long story on you know I won't go into the details of this but just you know my clinic we faced a number of of issues and I had some staff turnover and things like that and you know you just nose to the grindstone just keep working and you know that I'm a big Dave Ramsey fan and I was watching one of his videos the other day in Financial Peace University and he was talking about this this billionaire that read a book to his grandkids and the book was The Tortoise and the hare and he says every time I win it or every time I read it The Tortoise wins every time so you know it's it's keeping you know hold true to what your what your goals are and just stick your nose to the grindstone that's probably the biggest thing were you looking for specifically a medically no that's perfect man that I'd say nine times out of ten on the show that's the way they go it's out of the medical zone well what what sort of books or resources do you use recommend what are your go-to favorite things oh gosh there's a list right now I'm currently reading The Omnivore's Dilemma great book it goes into you know just the history of the industrialization of our food so that one I love of course you can't ever go wrong with the Paleo solution by Rob Wolfe love that one I do a lot with Wheat Belly there's a book by a Horowitz why can't I get better and it's like the story of Lyme and chronic disease that one is just a wealth of physiology and why do patients get screwed up so that's a really good book so medically those are those are the probably the big ones okay great and the last one what have you changed your mind on in the past year oh goodness well I recently started working in the emergency room again and so you know I like to keep my hat in that game as well there's just a lot of benefit to you know you want to keep the you know keep a nice razor's edge on on all of my medical skills and functional medicine is certainly one of them but it's very different than you know a traditional acute care medicine so the number one thing probably that I've changed my mind on is there are a lot of patients that come into the emergency room that they may not have they may not have health insurance they may not have access to healthcare and I used to think you know go look it up on the internet and they just come in for some of the dumbest things I've been being honest and they'll just come in for some things that you're like this is not an emergency and I I used to get irritated with them and now I just view it as my job is to take care of that patient and the best way that I can they aren't as educated on this as I am so you know what I'm getting paid to take care of them let's do the absolute best job that we can and and just treat them as I would want to be treated regard so you know of their background so used to you know get irritated with them now you know let's just do the best we can to take care of it it's a good one because I think being in the health community for a decade now and getting educated on symptoms and how to and nutrition and everything I'm not perfect I don't stuff so much to learn so I love doing the show but anyway when you don't have that information health seems kind of daunting and scary and when you get a headache you might freak out and think you have something more serious like cancer and so you go to WebMD and type in your symptoms and then it tells you you're pregnant that's impossible and so you can get you can go down that spiral for simple things and I think it's normal for people when they're starting out or maybe they're not as educated as people listening to this call because a lot of people are smart on this to really like put out the information and just be gentle and educate people and it's it's a learning curve with health just like anything yeah there's no question and so often I see my colleagues getting bogged down in illness and disease and if we would do a whole paradigm shift across quote health care which isn't as you and I both know is not health care it's sick care if we would shift toward taking care of someone's health health and illness are mutually exclusive you can't have both of them you know you if you're if you're sick you can't be healthy if you're healthy you're not sick so focus on health you won't have to worry about illness and disease as much dr. Chad Edwards my man our time has come to a close revolution health and wellness is that the best website please to find you at yeah that's for our clinic I've got a podcast at against the grain podcast calm so that is that on iTunes as well it is okay against the grain podcast is that with dr.

Peter Osborne no Oh catch me okay sure good anyway another story for another time all good thanks for coming on man I really appreciate that's dr. Chad Edwards everyone fascinating stuff with the Prolotherapy things we've never talked about on the show before IV replacement therapy as well so I'm sure you can you can google that and find clinics in your area if you're interested in that of course no medical advice is being solicited over the Internet we don't play doctor over the Internet so always check with your health care professional before taking on anything we just talked about we've been doing the show now for three years thank you so much for supporting it and you know the best way to support the show is to go over to iTunes leave a rating and a review takes three minutes and helps us out a lot so this week's on air review get your name read on air is from bass player babe she says great discussion of topics Clark keeps conversation lively and easy to understand thank you so much bass player babe really means a lot you took the time to rate and review the show and we don't currently have any lined up so if you want to be first in line to get your name on the air your review read head on over there again it's it takes three minutes and it helps us out a lot be sure you go to paler XCOM get the show notes get the archives all our previous episodes over there my best journal com again that's my course I'm putting together on how you can use journaling to improve the quality of your life self growth and something so simple so cheap and it it's really just on how you use it so that's the course I put together all right that's it thank you so much for listening we will see you back here next Thursday with let me look Mike mussel gonna be talking about the belly fat effect hormones and fitting your diet the perfect diet on just an index card what does it say that's it thanks so much for listening see you next Thursday .


Video Description:





For more Paleohacks Podcast episodes, make sure to check out http://blog.paleohacks.com/category/podcast/

Do you suffer from chronic pain in your joints, neck, back or shoulders? Do you pop ibuprofen and ice your aches all day long? These popular methods might not be helping you, but stalling the healing process, according to family medicine physician and prolotherapist Dr. Chad Edwards.

What is prolotherapy? An alternative treatment to pain and inflammation, prolotherapy involves injecting a simple, safe solution to stimulate your body to heal itself. A functional medicine practitioner, Dr. Edwards observes a 90 percent success rate of the treatment in his clinic. Listen in to find out if the unique, better-than-painkillers therapy could be for you.

2:30: Soldiers and medical school: How Edwards got into prolotherapy.
6:30: “Stimulating your body to heal itself:” What you need to know about “proliferative therapy.”
8:30: “A success rate well into 90 percent:” How does prolotherapy work?
11:00: Don’t ice it: Why you shouldn’t fear inflammation.
14:00: Could prolotherapy treat your chronic back pain?
17:30: Why is prolotherapy still an underground treatment?
21:30: Dry-needling and prolotherapy: Why it’s not a placebo.
25:00: “A lot of my patients are working out the next day:” Why prolotherapy might be better than painkillers.
27:00: How to find a good prolotherapist: the Hackett Hemwall Foundation.
30:00: Stem cell therapy: What you should know.
33:00: “We can inject from the base of the skull down:” Who can prolotherapy help?
35:00: Ibuprofen: Is it stalling your healing?

GET THE FULL SHOW NOTES: http://blog.paleohacks.com/prolotherapy/

______________________________________

-PALEOHACKS -

➤SUBSCRIBE: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=Paleohacks
➤WEBSITE: http://www.clarkdanger.com
➤ITUNES: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-paleohacks-podcast/id625881787?mt=2
➤INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/paleohacks/
➤TWITTER: https://twitter.com/PaleoHacks?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
➤FACEBOOK:https://www.facebook.com/PaleoHacks

-CLARK DANGER -

➤YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC-dmJ79518WlKMbsu50eMTQ
➤INSTAGRAM: https://www.instagram.com/ClarkDangerous
➤TWITTER: http://www.twitter.com/ClarkDangerous

-CHAD EDWARDS-

➤WEBSITE: http://drchadedwards.com/
➤FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/Doctor.Chad.Edwards/
➤TWITTER: https://twitter.com/drchadedwards
______________________________________

-YOU MAY ALSO LIKE -

JOE CROSS
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyvXadgjmAI
CLARK DANGER
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X6C8OKDipAg
DR. DOUG MCGUFF
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aa3twg6T_fs

For more Paleohacks Podcast episodes, make sure to check out http://blog.paleohacks.com/category/podcast/

Make sure to subscribe to our channel for more episodes of the podcast, and other videos: http://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=Paleohacks

Subscribe to us on iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-paleohacks-podcast/id625881787?mt=2

Subscribe to us on Stitcher: http://app.stitcher.com/browse/feed/34300/episodes

Follow Paleohacks on Facebook: http://facebook.com/paleohacks


About