
Loading summary
A
Mind Breakdown is supported by Helix Sleep
B
Spring is in the air and so are all of the allergens that come with it. Spring allergens means you need more sleep, but there are a ton of factors that can prevent us from getting a good night's rest. Night sweats, back pain, feeling the person next to you when they roll over a million times. We were so excited to hear that Helix wanted to partner with us. I've had my Helix mattress for about five years now and I have been sleeping so much better. Jonathan and also our kids love their Helix mattresses and all of those issues. Night sweats, back pain, motion transfer. Those things are significantly better with a Helix mattress. Helix delivers your mattress right to your door which is so much fun. With free shipping in the US they have a 120 night sleep trial and limited lifetime warranty plus their Happy with Helix guarantee. Rest easy with seamless returns and exchanges. The Happy with Helix guarantee offers a risk free customer first experience designed to ensure that you're completely satisfied with your new Mattress. Go to helixsleep do/breakdown for 27 off site wide that's helixsleep.com breakdown for 27 off site wide helixsleep.com breakdown a vacation
C
rental shouldn't come with surprises. It should come with verbo Care and 24. 7 Life Support. If the hot tub's broken, that's a verbal care thing. If my teenager starts calling me Leslie, that's a family thing. Leslie Verbo Care and 24. 7 Life Support. If you know you've ERBO terms apply. See verbo.comtrust for details. There are simple solutions out there that will improve the way you feel right now and the way you feel 10 years later, 20 years later. It's not just about living forever. It's about feeling good. It's about being independent.
B
The cure for what ails us is a lot more in our control than we've been taught to believe.
C
Instead of what should I avoid? They should be thinking about what do I need? Multivitamins and supplementation are the low hanging fruit doing two minutes of vigorous intensity exercise. Six studies have found that you have like a 50% lower cardiovascular related mortality, a 50% lower cancer related mortality. That's really significant. Nutrition also plays a role in our mental health as well.
B
Many doctors would see that and be like, take an SSRI and you'll feel better.
C
I think first and foremost it's important to establish the role that chronic inflammation plays in depression, chronic depressive symptoms, anxiety.
B
There are actually things going on chemically in your body that we have control over, that can change the degree to which those depressive symptoms impact or damage your functioning.
C
If you're feeding your body and your brain, all those things do get easier and the stress is less and then you're happier. And like, who doesn't want that?
B
Hi, I'm Imbialik.
A
I'm Jonathan Cohen.
B
Welcome to our breakdown.
A
This is a really important episode.
B
Before we tell you more about this episode, we want to make sure that everyone is following us. Over on Substack. Mayimbialik's breakdown is on substack with never before seen content, never before heard content, behind the scenes stuff, our writing. So go over to my real breakdown on substack. And now we're going to talk about this very important episode.
A
What if there were things that were controlling your health, having huge implications on your physical well being, your emotional well being, but most people, between 80 and 90% of people across the world were actually deficient in these key ingredients that could promote their well being?
B
I think for me, this episode really brings to light the possibility that so much of your health is actually something you do have control over. And in many cases, you may be misdiagnosed with something or sent down an entire medical journey that could be solved with some very, very simple changes in your diet or your supplements. And many people kind of roll their eyes when we talk about supplements, but we're going to be speaking to Dr. Rhonda Patrick. She's a scientist and a health educator, and she specializes in nutrition, aging, and disease prevention. And she's going to tell us all of the things that so many of us could be doing that can change not only our physical health, but our mental health as well. Before we get to the point where we feel like we have no other options, we have a lot of options.
A
The steps that she's suggesting can increase our life expectancy, can reduce our risk of cancer, and dementia and disease all cause mortality. There are so many things that we can be doing, and specifically women. One of the things we cover, women are eight times more likely to have this negative effect. But this can be changed through the simple steps that she recommends.
B
Dr. Patrick earned her PhD in biomedical science, did her graduate research at St. Jude's Research Hospital, where she investigated mitochondrial metabolism, apoptosis, and cancer. And her broader research has been published in literally all the big journals. And she specializes in many different aspects of nutrition, such as omega 3 fatty acids. She's a board member of the Fatty Acid Research Institute. Didn't even know that was a thing and her goal is to challenge the status quo and encourage the wider public to think differently about health and longevity. We have such a fantastic time with her. Can't wait to share with you all of the wisdom that she has gathered. Dr. Rhonda Patrick, welcome to the Breakdown in Person. Listen, break it down.
C
Thank you.
B
We're excited to talk to you about all of the things. There's so much health information, there's so much health misinformation out there. I wonder if you can tell us as we get started, what's your particular mission like? Why do you do what you do and what is it?
C
So my mission is to age the best way that I can. You know, basically delay aging as much as possible, delay age related disease as much as possible, and using science to understand how to do that, evidence based research and to share that with people that I love, my family, my friends and the world. Because, I mean, why wouldn't I want everyone to age better and be happier and healthier? And so my mission is kind of twofold, right? Personal. I want to, you know, age better, but I also want people to understand how they can age better.
B
What do you think people are getting wrong about our understanding of the aging process?
C
I think understanding that the way we age isn't just about genetics. I think a lot of people think that genetics play a big role. And genetics does play somewhat of a role, but it's a small role. I mean, it plays a more of a role in whether or not you're going to live to be 115. And when I say age better, I don't mean I want to live to be 100, like that'd be cool. But what I mean is I, I want to be healthy and active when I'm 70, 80, you know, 85, maybe 90 years old. So genetics doesn't play as big of a role in the way you're aging with respect to your health span and your disease risk as much. It does play somewhat of a role, but your diet and your lifestyle play a really big role in that. And I think something that people aren't really understanding is it's not just about macronutrients, our fat intake and our carbohydrate intake and our protein intake. Right. We're so focused on that. Right. It's a big focus on nutrition. It's also about the things that are called micronutrients that we're not getting from our diet. And that I think is a big, for me, I think people are just ignoring that and overlooking it. And it's so, so important.
B
I think a lot of people sort of go through life like, I'm gonna eat the things that my parents feed me, then I'm gonna eat the things that I find at college. And like, maybe I'll be someone who works out, but maybe I won't be. And then at try to look your best for your wedding and you have children and then at some point your skin starts sagging, your hearing goes and your vision goes, and then you get sick and die. I think for a lot of people that feels like the trajectory. Where am I getting it wrong? Because that's what it feels like to me.
C
Well, you're right. It's basically like, I think people aren't thinking about that when they think about disease risk. They think about like what's happening right now. Right? Like, so I talked about micronutrients and these are, you know, 30 to 40 essential vitamins and minerals that we have to get from our diet. We can't make them, we need to get them. And when you think about a deficiency in one of them, for example, you know, vitamin C comes to mind because this is when people think about scurvy, right? You don't look in the mirror and say, well, I don't have scurvy, therefore I'm getting enough vitamin C. That's exactly
B
what I do actually.
C
Right?
B
I mean, I'm like, every morning I'm like, scurvy, no good.
C
But what you don't realize is, is that, well, there's subclinical deficienc. In fact, like 40% of people aren't getting enough vitamin C, believe it or not. And the requirements aren't even that high. And so what happens is wound healing is not as well. So you're not going to like, your wounds aren't going to heal as good. Your immune system isn't going to be quite up to snuff. So you're going to be getting sick more, you know, so things like that, collagen production, it's going to affect your blood vessels, they're going to be stiffer and weaker. And that sort of insidious type of damage accumulates with age and leads to age related diseases. So you're exactly right. And I gave vitamin C. But that's not the best example because there's another one. Yeah, there's examples where people are not, I mean, 90% of people aren't getting enough choline from their diet.
B
What's choline?
C
Choline is a really important nutrient that is abundant in egg yolk. It's abundant in egg yolk. It's also in vegetables you have to eat. You can eat soybeans or chickpeas as well, but you have to get a lot of them or you have to supplement. And choline, the reason it's so important, and I said 90% of the population's not getting an adequate intake of it. The reason for that is because they're not really eating enough eggs or, you know, the vegetables that have choline in it. And choline is, first of all, it's a precursor for acetylcholine, which is an important neurotransmitter. It's also important to make phosphatidylcholine, which is important for all our cells, including neurons and neurotransmission. But maybe even more important, it's. It plays a very important role in what's called this, this methyl metabolism in our body and methylation. You hear a lot about that. Well, I'll just save going into the weeds for another episode. But essentially what happens is something called homocysteine in our body doesn't get reconverted into methionine. And so we end up having high homocysteine. You may have heard of this. High homocysteine dramatically increases atherosclerosis risk, cardiovascular disease risk, also dementia and Alzheimer's disease. And that's just if you have a little bit less choline than you're supposed to have. This isn't like a clinical deficiency. When you start to have a clinical deficiency, you start to get fatty liver, non alcoholic fatty liver. So 90% of people are walking around and they probably have high homocysteine. And it's not something that's routinely measured. You go to your physician and you get like, you know, a standard test. They're not measuring for homocysteine. Usually you have to, like, ask for it or you have to have a really good doctor that's looking into that. And it's really important because it does biomark your cardiovascular disease risk and your Alzheimer's disease risk. And there's a simple solution. You can, you know, eat your eggs. About three eggs a day is enough to get women, women to their choline. There's a shortage, you know, there's a shortage in eggs. Or you can supplement is the other option as well. So phosphatidylcholine from lecithin is another option. So choline is very important also for, you know, the way our brain is functioning and brain development even. In fact, there's been studies showing that pregnant Women. There's a randomized controlled trial showing pregnant women, even Those meeting the RDA, which is around five, they were giving a little over that. So about 500 milligrams a day, they, their children did good. But when they doubled that to about 900 a day, those women had children that had dramatically better IQ tests. They scored better on cognitive function. So choline, it plays a very important role in brain development and brain function as well. And that's just one example. There's also another one that's very common is vitamin E, believe it or not. And you might be going, vitamin E,
B
it's the one you put on scars to make scars go away, right?
C
Vitamin E, that's like, you know, why is seriously like 87% of the population's not getting enough vitamin E from their diet. If you consider supplementation, 60% is not getting enough. So even after supplementation, people are not getting enough vitamin E. My imbalance breakdown
A
is supported by Bio Optimizers.
B
You know, I struggled to get good quality sleep and I just assumed it was stress. But as I learned during perimenopause and menopause, your hormones shift in a way that affects your magnesium levels. And low magnesium, it makes everything harder. Not just sleep, focus, mood, your tolerance for stress. That's why I have added Magnesium Breakthrough by by Optimizers to my nightly routine. It's a blend of seven different forms of magnesium designed to support relaxation and overall sleep quality. Try it. See if you wake up more rested and refreshed, you've got nothing to lose and a lot to gain. Bio Optimizers offers a 365 day, no questions asked money back guarantee. Magnesium Breakthrough is a huge breakthrough to improve hormonal balance, to help with focus, decrease brain fog, increase improve sleep hygiene.
C
Overall.
B
Bioptimizers makes it very easy. Jonathan, what do they get when they go to bioptimizers.com breaker and use the code breaker?
A
You get 50% off your entire order and a free bottle of Masymes, Bioptimizer's
B
best selling digestive enzyme that'll be added to your order automatically when you use our exclusive code.
A
That's a $20 product, free on top of your discount already.
B
This is a limited time offer and while supplies last, you can't get it on Amazon, you can't get it in stores. This offer exists in one place. Our link, our code. That' so maybe you were already thinking about it. This is the sign. Go to bioptimizers.com breaker use the code breaker. Grab it before it's gone. Make 2026 the year you finally start sleeping again.
A
My Ambiox breakdown is supported by Bioptimizers.
B
I struggled to get good quality sleep and I just thought like, ugh, it's stress. But I learned during perimenopause and menopause your hormones shift and it affects your magnesium levels. Low magnesium makes everything harder. Not just sleep, but focus, mood, stress tolerance. That's why we added Magnesium Breakthrough by Bio Optimizers to our nightly routine. It's a blend of seven different forms of magnesium designed to support relaxation and overall sleep quality. Try it. See if you wake up more rested and refreshed, you've got nothing to lose and a lot to gain. BIOptimizers offers a 365 day, no questions asked money back guarantee. Magnesium Breakthrough is a fantastic way to improve that hormonal imbalance that especially happens with magnesium. And then you have better focus, you have have better sleep hygiene in general. Bioptimizers makes it so easy. Here's what you get when you go to bioptimizers.com breaker and use the code breaker. 15% off your entire order and a free bottle of Mass Signs. That's Bioptimizer's best selling digestive enzyme added to your order automatically when you use our exclusive code. That's a $20 product, free on top of your discount. This is a limited time offer while supplies last. You cannot get this on Amazon. You can't get it in stores. The offer exists in one place. Our link, our code, that's it. So if you were already thinking about trying it, this is the sign. Go to bioptimizers.com breaker use the code breaker. Grab it before it's gone.
A
Make 2026 the year you finally start sleeping again.
B
What's with vitamin E?
C
So there's different forms of vitamin E. There's the toco, there's the tocotrienols and the tocopherols. We're just going to focus on one and that is the essential one that you need. That's alpha tocopherol. That's the main form of vitamin E. And why do you need vitamin E? Well, if you don't get vitamin E, what ends up happening is a disease that's acute and that's the kind of stuff you're talking about. You don't really see every day. So you don't really, you think you're fine until you keep going along and all of a sudden, boom, you have it, you have, you know, atherosclerosis or whatever. So with vitamin E The disease is. You get. It's called hemolytic anemia. So your red blood cells start to just burst because of oxidative stress. Vitamin E is a very potent antioxidant. It's found in. It's able to go. It's fat soluble, so it's able to go into the membranes of cells and do its antioxidant thing. But most people are not walking around with that severe form. Some people are, but the subclinical deficiency of it is you end up. You end up having oxidized LDL cholesterol. A lot of people have heard of LDL cholesterol. Oh, that increases my cardiovascular vascular disease risk. But what people don't understand is the oxidized form of it is really bad. And so a lot of people are walking around with oxidized LDL because they're not meeting their vitamin E requirement. And what that does is it essentially tells your immune system inflammation, inflammation, immune system comes and tries to attack the oxidized ldl. And then you have a formation of a foam cell. So you're getting the beginnings of atherosclerosis, essentially.
B
What's the kind of metaphor for the human body? Right? Meaning there are so many different components and there's so many different chemical reactions. And it's not until you sort of look at this level or visit a functional medicine doctor, where they literally will show you the pathways, right. Of any particular cell process and show you, like, oh, you're having this problem. It's because you're not converting this thing, right? And I think a lot of. A lot of women are maybe diving into this in. In hormone conversations. They're finally learning about kind of the precursors and all these things. Can you give us a general framework of how we should be looking at and thinking about the human body as, you know, kind of a mechanistic conglomeration.
C
Gosh, if I could just pull up this one figure. If you. If you Google biochemical pathways and you look at image, there's like this image of. It's just. It's overwhelming how many pathways are in this image. And it's. It's true. I mean, it's just thousands and thousands of reactions going on. And these reactions require not only energy. We think about getting energy in the form of glucose or fatty acids. They require these vitamins and minerals as cofactors to do things so that they're able to do them. And, and so, you know, if you don't have those cofactors, it's like. It's like you have this orchestra ready to play, but there's no conductor there, like, telling you, like, how to play or when to this, you know, instrument is going to play that piece and this one's going to play that. Right? So it's kind of all out of sync. And with the micronutrients, I mean, it's, it's so easy to forget about them because we're so focused on, oh, I shouldn't eat processed foods. Oh, I'm so worried about my glucose spiking. How much protein did I get today? And, you know, protein is important, but if you think about food looking at your plate and going, okay, what is in this food? Okay, I talked about, you know, eggs, having choline, and then, you know, broccoli, soybeans, chickpeas, also having choline. Vitamin E. Why aren't people getting vitamin E? Well, the main source of it is nuts and seeds, and people aren't eating nuts and seeds. It's just not part of our diet anymore. And if you're not eating nuts and seeds, you're not going to be getting enough vitamin E. And so what do you have to do? Okay, well, eat a ounce or two of almonds. You eat an ounce of almonds, that's like 25 almonds or so. That's half of the RDA half right there.
B
Half.
C
So you're, you know, you're, you're good. Then you can get the rest from maybe a multivitamin supplement. Vitamin K is another one. I mean, this one is also 50% of the population, even after supplementation.
B
What is vitamin K?
C
Vitamin K? Vitamin K is interesting because it's actually required by plants to undergo photosynthesis. So plants are a really good source of vitamin K. And there's two types of vitamin K, K1 and K2. The plant source is, is the vitamin K1. It's called phylloquinone, and that is the actual form of vitamin K that is required that you need. Vitamin K2 is found in some fermented foods. Natto, like fermented soybeans, are a really good source of it. You can also find it in some dairy as well. But vitamin K2 isn't as essential because vitamin K1 can do all the functions that K2 does. And the reason people aren't meeting their vitamin K requirements is because they're not eating enough greens, they're not eating enough plants. And vitamin K is a, I was talking about a cofactor. You know, it's required for an enzyme to work properly, and it's a It does three really important functions. One, it goes to the liver and it regulates blood clotting, so coagulation, and that's the most essential one. When your vitamin K is really, really low, you have blood clotting problems where you're not able to clot. Very, very important. Number two, it also activates proteins that are not in your liver, but they're sort of in the periphery and that shuttle calcium out of your, your blood vessels and bring it to your muscle and your bones. And that's really important because calcium precipitates easily, very easily. And so you want to get the calcium out of your vascular system and bring them to other tissues that, where it's required and needed. That's number two. And number three, it also activates another protein called osteocalcin, which is important for bone, rebuilding your bone and making sure bone mineral density doesn't drop too low. And so vitamin K does all those things. And if you think about it back to this, I keep going back to this, you know, this image that you, you gave of your, yourself going through life and like not realizing anything's wrong until you have the heart attack or whatever, you know, something happens. And it's so true because we think about these vitamins and minerals. It's like, well, if something isn't going wrong, then I must be fine, right? Oh, my blood's clotting. I'm, I've got enough vitamin K. Well, this is something that was proposed by my mentor, Dr. Bruce Ames, and he basically proposed that these vitamins and minerals are essentially longevity vitamins. They're not just required for the short term prevention of death, which is essentially what all the RDAs are established for. RDAs are established for. Okay, what happens? Oh, there's this disease that causes death. Let's go a little couple standard deviations above that. And that's the rda, right? Well, he, what he proposed is actually there's all these other functions of these vitamins and minerals that are involved in this insidious type of damage that accumulates over time, year after year, decade after decade. You don't see it. You don't look in the mirror. I mean, your gums aren't fully bleeding and falling off like scurvy.
B
Right.
C
You can't see the oxidation of your ldl. You can't see that. Flatter me. Right? You're not, you, that's, you're not visually, visually seeing it. So it's not happening, therefore it's not happening. Right. But it is happening silently and insidiously and so what happens when you, when you're with the vitamin K? Well, if you, you know, year after year keep not getting enough vitamin K, you're going to have calcium build up in your arteries. That's a known thing that is involved in atherosclerosis. Right.
B
I'm gonna ask a really simple question. What's wrong with just getting old and dying?
C
Well, I mean, essentially, you know what I mean?
B
Like, I'm being really honest. Like, you look amazing, and I'm sure you'll look amazing till you're 95. But for many of us, it's kind of like I'm gonna do the best I can. Like, I think a lot of us feel like I'm balancing so many things, like, I'm juggling kids and this, that, and like, now I'm supposed to deal with my mental health and I barely have time to exercise and now am I doing the right kind of exercise? And I think a lot of us feel like, yeah, how do you fit it all in? Like, I criticize a lot of the people that Jonathan wants me to listen to because I'm like, I don't want to, like, spend my whole day trying to live forever. I want to live my life. Where is that balance and what is the goal?
A
This episode is sponsored by Wondering Jews, an open door media brand.
B
If you've ever found yourself feeling like you have more questions than answers, you're in good company. The Jewish people have been like that for thousands of years. Wandering Jews with Michal and Noam is a podcast where two of today's most dynamic Jewish voices, Michal Bittone and Noam Weissman, dig into the biggest questions about life through a Jewish lens. It's the kind of conversation where you'll laugh, learn something new, and probably shout in disagreement at least once. Michal and Noam tackle the tough topics like antisemitism in America, what happens after we die, and the future of religion with guests like Bret Stephens, Michael Rapoport and Sarah Hurwitz. And this past month, in honor of Jewish American Heritage Month, they've been celebrating some of the Jewish lives and institutions that have shaped American life, from food to music and comedy. Thoughtful, joyful, and always honest. That's Wondering Jews with Michal and Noam, a production of Unpacked. Find it on your favorite podcast app or on YouTube and make sure to hit subscribe. Check out Wondering Jews with Michal and Noam podcast and subscribe at Unpacked. Bio nmx.
A
Let me take this one and then I'm going To pass it back to you. What frustrates me the most is that there are preventable things that we're getting sick with and the system has not been designed to have preventative health or well being, which is my frustration. It's like you hear this, oh, I should be getting these basic micronutrients and then I would avoid a lot of these problems that are building up slowly over time. And then you go to your regular GP and they're like, you don't have a chronic condition that I can fix right now. So you're fine and in the clear as you continue towards this cliff.
C
Yeah, so I agree with you on that. But I also think to sort of speak to your question directly, you know, the low hanging fruit and this is, you know, I'm talking about getting your foods from diet and there's, there's other, there's magnesium, there's so many other of these that are important as well. But, but multivitamins and supplementation are the low hanging fruit because they have been shown to help fill the gaps in many of those places and is something that you try your best, you eat as healthy as you can, but you try to fill the gaps as well. And this is something that's been shown with for example, a multivitamin. So multivitamins, oh, I remember 10 years ago, all the rage. Multivitamins are not only useless, they're harmful. Enough is enough was the name of the article. And, and now here we are ten years later, full circle, three large randomized controlled trials later where we're really testing supplementation against a placebo. And we now know that even just supplementing with a standard cheap Centrum Silver run of the mill multivitamin that's affordable prevents cognitive aging. In fact, older adults that took it for a couple of years, it reversed their episodic aging of their, of their brain by five years and their basically their cognitive aging by three years. So their improvements in executive function, learning, memory, episodic memory, I mean as simple as a Centrum Silver a day. And I, by the way, I have no affiliation with them. But the point is that there is a low hanging fruit and yes, you should try to get as much as you can from your diet, but it is really hard. And as you mentioned, you're juggling all these things, so what can I do? Well, I mean the easiest thing is take a supplement, right? Like that's one you mentioned, exercise, I mean that's another one we should definitely get into. But I mean before even going into that because there's also I think simple solutions there. It's not just about living forever. You know, it's about feeling good, it's about being independent. It's about, it's about not making your kids rely, having your kids to like take care of you. You don't want to be the burden, right? Like, you're not independent. You can't walk on your own, you can't feed yourself. Like, this is, this is the quality of life. We want a better quality of life. We want to be happy.
B
Right.
C
Nutrition also plays a role in our mental health as well, you know, so this is all feeding into the way we live and how happy we are and also just how you are. You know, you mentioned, I got, I got kids, I gotta do this and that. And like, it's the same thing. Like you're overwhelmed and you're stressed, but like, if you have the right, you know, components that you're feeding your body and your brain, all those things do get easier and the stress is less and then you're happier and like, who doesn't want that? Right?
B
Can you talk a little bit about the connection? You know, we're so used to kind of siloing different aspects of our health, right. And there's been so much emphasis and it was the impetus for us, you know, starting this podcast, right, to talk about mental health and mental well being. And it's a huge conversation. Can you discuss the intersectionality between getting the right nutrients and how that impacts our mental health?
C
Absolutely. You know, so mental health is this kind of broad term that, you know, encompasses a lot of things. But in for this discussion, we'll talk about it as, you know, mood, improved mood, less depressive symptoms, depression, anxiety. Right, Depression, anxiety. So, and there's a lot of different lifestyle factors that do affect this. I think first and foremost it's important to establish the role that chronic inflammation plays in depression, chronic depressive symptoms, anxiety. And this has actually been shown in multiple, multiple observational studies, right? High inflammation, increased risk of depressive disorders, you know, major depressive disorder and other ones as well. And you might go, well, at the end of the day, there's a lot of other things going on here. How do we know it's the inflammation? Right. So there have been some studies that have actually tested that directly and they've injected something called lipopolysaccharide, which is essentially the cell membrane of a bacterial cell wall. And we make a lot of it in our gut and it gets into our bloodstream, it's inflammation. And so basically it generates inflammation and inflammatory response. If you inject LPS that, you know, in generating inflammatory response in people, they get depressive symptoms. If you inject a, a placebo control saline solution, they do not. And even moreover, if you give people a omega 3 supplement like EPA that is blunting that inflammation, the depressive symptoms don't happen.
B
So as much as you want to wring your hands about, it's my mom, it's my alcoholic boyfriend, it's my kids making me crazy, guess what? There are actually things going on chemically in your body that we have control over that can change the degree to which those depressive symptoms impact or damage your functioning.
C
Well, there's no doubt all of those things that you mentioned do cause inflammation.
B
Sure.
C
You know, there's cortisol, it's been shown that cortisol actually releases lps. You're actually dumping that very stuff that people were injected with into your bloodstream. So all the psychological stress, all that psychological social stress, financial stress, all of that causes inflammation. And so it's definitely, if you can do other things that can help blunt that inflammation. Obviously you only have so much control over what other people are doing, right? I mean that, that's out of your control sometimes. I mean you can only control so much. But I do think that if you can, if you can really elicit this anti inflammatory response with your diet and lifestyle. And I think, you know, when I say diet, I should also mention that obesity is another, you know, thing that causes inflammation and that's also associated with depression. But, but the omega 3 fatty acids are something that I think are really important because it's not only important for mental health, but also overall your, your, the way you're aging and it is a low hanging fruit, you know, so people can take a omega 3 supplement, either fish oil supplement or microalgae oil. You want to make sure you're getting not the plant source, the alpha linoleic acid because it's just, it's not getting converted into the stuff that you really want. The DHA and epa, Very good. And so you want to get a high quality fish oil supplement. And again there's studies showing it does help with depression, but now it's only going to do it to some degree. I think the bigger lever to pull here would be physical activity. And again, that's another thing you mentioned. Well, there's time, right? Well, who has time to go and do a, you know, two hour run every day or whatever? I mean, I don't. So there's, there's Other ways that you can actually be more efficient about the way you exercise. High intensity interval training being one. And that is something that has been shown to increase brain derived neurotrophic factor. Now that is something that is very important with depression because it plays a role in neuroplasticity, something I'm sure you know more about than I do. And, and that really essentially is allowing our brain to adapt and change to a changing environment. And that's something that people with depression and when you're really stressed out, like you, your brain isn't doing that correctly. It's not plastic enough, it's not able to adapt to the changing environment. And so what happens when you can't adapt is you feel depressed, right? You feel anxious. I can't deal with this. There's so much going on. It's like, you know, so. So brain derived neurotrophic factor is key for that very thing, that neuroplasticity. And you can actually increase that dramatically with a six minute workout. Six minutes. Who has six minutes? We all do. Yes, we all do. And so I think that's important to keep in mind now. You have to have the motivation to do that, right? And that's a whole other factor. And some people are really, I mean, there are some people that are really clinically depressed, right? And that's a whole other sort of ball game here. But if we're just talking about like the stress of life, which we all experience, I think that, I mean, before I came on this podcast, what did I do? I did a, you know, 20 minute high intensity workout. Oftentimes I'll do 10 minutes. Sometimes I'll do exercise snacks. You know, these, these are so, these are, these are very interesting because it's essentially two to three minutes of vigorous intensity exercise. So you're getting your heart rate above, you know, 75% max heart rate. You can do burpees, you can do, you know, air squats, you can do high knees, whatever. You get up from your desk and you do it for a couple of minutes, you get your heart rate up high and they're actually hard. Try it. You know, like we could get up into a break now, but like, essentially what's been shown is there's these large studies that have measured, not the structured type that I'm talking about, there's unstructured type where you're using everyday life scenarios to get your heart rate up. Right. I don't take the elevator, I take the stairs. Not only do I take the stairs, I go briskly up the stairs, right? You kind of use. I don't, you know, I'm walking to my office, I'm not taking the car because I live, you know, four blocks away. So I'm going to walk there and I'm going to walk briskly, like that type of scenario. And there have been these large studies, they're called the vigorous intermittent lifestyle activity studies, VILPA for short. And so people have worn these accelerometers on their wrist which essentially measure their heart rate. And scientists have been able to measure when their heart rates are spiking and how long that spike lasted. And these studies have found that just anywhere between like starting at that two minutes, doing two minutes of vigorous intensity exercise to three minutes and then doing that like two to, you know, anywhere between two to six times a day, the more you're doing it. So if you're doing that like six times a day, studies have found that you have like a 50 lower cardiovascular related mortality, a 50 lower cancer related mortality and you're going to feel better. And these are in people that don't identify as exercisers. And those benefits were, even if it was like three times a day, so they were doing two minutes three times a day, they had like a 30 reduction in cardiovascular related mortality. That's really significant, you know, and I think that everyone has time to get up and do something for two minutes, three times a day. It's really not that hard. And it's, it makes you feel good. Like I do exercise snacks when I'm sitting and working because I need like a pump to my brain. You're getting oxygen flow. You're, you're, you're bringing oxygen to your brain. Nutrients are being delivered to your brain. So it's doing something that's beneficial for your mental health as well. You know, and there have been studies that have actually compared classic, you know, standard SSRI treatments to actually running. And running performs as good, if not even better in some studies than classical, you know, antidepressant treatment. And that's not to say that those don't work for people, but a lot of people, they don't work for a lot of people they don't work for particularly people that have a high inflammation. In fact, there was a study that was really interesting that found people that aren't responding to the SSRIs typically have high biomarkers of inflammation, so C reactive protein. But back to the running, I mean, here you have something that's, you know, at our disposal. I mean, you don't need a gym Membership to run. I mean you just go outside and do it. It's free, right? Something that we can do. It's the only side effects are going to be reduce Alzheimer's disease risk, reduce cardiovascular disease risk. You're going to have a longer life, you're going to be, you're going to be more functional, right. Everything's beneficial, right. I mean, and it's helping with the depression as good as the, the pill you'd be taking with all the other negative side effects.
A
And some people who can't run for whatever reason, whether it's soreness, they can't go very far. Like just getting your heart rate up in whatever capacity you can. It may be like a brisk walk to sort of, that leads to a slow jog, that leads to your running. It sounds like consistency. And just getting your heart rate up is the key.
C
Getting your heart rate up is the key. There's stationary cycling as well. There's, there's a lot of ways to do that, right. And you have to find the way that you like, that you enjoy. I mean, I think that's the most important, you know, I would say briskly walking is you'd have to do a lot of it. So you're trading volume for intensity. Right. But I mean if that's what you love to do and you don't mind doing more of it, then perhaps that's something that you should be doing. But you know, there, then there's the other, you know, flip, flip of the coin and it's like, okay, let's do something intense and short. And that's what I like. I like to be efficient and I like to. The harder you work, it's actually more beneficial for your brain, the bdnf. Like you have to make something called lactate. And that only happens when you're really working hard. Your muscles are working hard. You have to get up past that like 75% max heart rate range. And that's when you start to get the lactate. And it's the lactate that's signaling to your brain, I'm stressed, this is a stressful situation I'm in. And so it's like an adaptation. Your brain starts to make brain derived neurotrophic factor. Because when you're working out, it's not just your muscles that are working hard, your heart that's working hard, your lungs, your brain is also working hard when you're exercising. So it's this, you know, the lactate that you're generating from the exercises like this signaling molecule to the rest of your body. I like to think about it that way because I'm like, I can make my lactate up, right? That's, that's, that's, that's one way I like to think about it.
B
One of the things that strikes me in all of the avenues that you talk about, whether it's nutrition or like, like macro versus micronutrients or whether it's exercise, it seems like, it seems like you have an in to a secret that is kept from most people. And what that is is that, you know, the, the cure for what ails us either physically or psychologically is a lot more in our control than we've been taught to believe. And in many cases, the most efficient way for the medical system as it is now to treat us is to give us a pill and send us on our way, right? Or give us a diagnosis and say, here's the pill you take. And when you have side effects from that, when you have side effects from that, take this other pill. I mean that you just have to watch, you know, any late night television to see the number of drugs they're trying to give you to cure the thing from the pill, from the pill, from the pill. But what you're saying is there's a not very well kept secret, meaning it's open knowledge, right, that we have the key to many aspects of our mental health, our physical health, our longevity. It doesn't have to be something that's just for people who go to fancy functional medicine, doctors or people who are given, you know, SSRIs and anti anxiety meds and told this is what's going to cure, you know.
C
Yeah, absolutely. I think that's, it's really, it's, that's kind of part of my big message that I want to get across is that look, there are simple solutions out there that will improve the way you feel right now and the way you feel later, 10 years later, 20 years later. And it's so, it's so easy, you know, I mean, a vitamin D supplement, Omega 3, making sure you get magnesium, exercise, snacks at the very least, you know, exercise. But you know, polypharmacy is a big issue, as you mentioned. I mean people, the old, the average older adult is on like six or something medications. I mean, it's outrageous. It's outrageous. And, and the reality is, is that like there are things that they can do that may not, you know, you, there's, there's things that you can do that require a lot more effort that you could really do the Whole go, the whole shebang, right? But we're talking about just little low hanging fruit things that people can do right now to pluck that fruit off the tree and improve their lives, improve the way they feel, improve the way they're aging. And that's, I think that's the most important thing.
B
So how do you pick? I think that's sort of my question. I mean I'm on like a huberman diet. I take like 20 million pills a day. I take literally three full handfuls of pills. Like that's my life. What do people choose? And I know you have kind of a select amount that if people wanted to sort of like hone in, I'd like to know what are your top three and then what are your top five, meaning three and then two more.
C
So I think you know, the top three supplements. And again, the reason the supplements are important is to really fill a nutritional gap. But not only nutritional gap, just our micronutrient gap. And I'd say like the top of that list would be vitamin D. And that's really important because it's not something that you're going to get from your diet. Less than 10% of, of vitamin D that we get in our bodies comes from our diet, right? We're making it from UVB radiation from the sun. And the problem is that 70% of us are not making enough because we're not going in the sun. Well, that's problem number one. We're not going in the sun anymore like we used to. We're inside.
B
It gives you cancer. I don't want to go.
C
It gives, yeah, there's, there's skin cancer, right? I mean, so when you are in the sun, you have sunscreen, right? You're blocking out the very thing that can make vitamin D. There's a simple solution. That solution is a vitamin D supplement. Why is it my top of the list? Because vitamin D is actually a hormone. It's a steroid hormone. It is controlling over 5% of our protein encoding human genome. And essentially what that means is it's getting into the nucleus of your cell where all your DNA is binding DNA, turning genes on, turning them off and the way they're supposed to be. I mentioned that orchestra, you know, analogy, you know, a few minutes ago. It's essentially like if all your genes are not being turned on and off at the right moment, then things are out of whack. Like you don't want all your neurotransmitters on when you're sleeping at night, right? Like you want them on in the day when you're awake and alert. So there's a lot of, you know, coordination there. And vitamin D plays a role in that. And so, you know, not being, not having enough vitamin D isn't just not having enough vitamin, it's not having a hormone. Right. That's controlling a lot in our bodies. And so the solution is, and there's all these studies that have shown it accelerates the way you age, dementia risk, goes up, all this stuff, right? So the solution is a vitamin D supplement, which really is one of the cheapest supplements you can buy. It's like 10 cents a pill for a vitamin D supplement. I mean, back 10 years ago when I was saying this, it was 17 a pill. So it is going up in price. But so most people want to have blood levels around 40 to 60 nanograms per milliliter. That's the sweet spot. But really you just want to be above 30 nanograms per mil. And if you're like below 20, then you're deficient. Like, that's, that's pretty bad. So typically around 2,000 to 4,000 IUs a day, depending on the season, can get you to that good range. You have to get a blood test. That would be the top, the top supplement. The next one would be an omega 3 supplement. And I think, you know, 80 to 90% of the U.S. population is not meeting the omega 3 requirements. In terms of EPA and DHA, that's about 250 milligrams a day. And the reason they're not meeting those requirements is because, one, they're not eating, they're eating fish. And if they're vegetarian, they're not supplementing with the right things like microalgae oil. So the EPA and DHA are hugely important for, I mean, brain function, mental health, you know, cognitive aging, but cardiovascular health as well. There's been a lot of work by my colleague, Dr. Bill Harris, showing that people that have a high omega 3 index, so you can measure that in red blood cells. If you have a high omega 3 index of 8%, you have a five year increased life expectancy compared to people with a low omega 3 index of 4%. People in the US have an average of about 5%. So they're about on the low range. Five year increased life expectancy. Now, the thing that's really mind blowing this is from the Framingham cohort. And what was really mind blowing about this study was that Bill and his colleagues then sort of took that data and said, okay, let's look at smokers versus non smokers with the omega 3 index. And what they found was that having A low omega 3 index was like smoking in terms of mortality risk. Yeah. So people with a low omega 3 index but did not smoke had the same mortality risk as smokers with a high omega 3 index. I mean, when I say same, I mean if you were to look at this paper at the graph of their, their life expectancy, they're perfectly overlaid. Perfectly overlaid. And so all the smokers out there are like, yes, I'm gonna take omega three. But like that's not the point I'm making. Right. The point I'm making here is that not getting that those important nutrients I talked about as deleterious as smoking. Right, right. And, and everyone knows to avoid smoking, but nobody's thinking about avoiding Omega 3. You know, there was a study out of Harvard. I always talk about this study, it was like published in, so forever ago, like 2010 or something. And it was, it identified omega not getting the marine sources of omega 3. So DHA and EPA as one of the top, top six preventable causes of death.
B
Wow.
C
Up there with hypertension, type 2 diabetes, smoking. There you go. And, and you know, consuming trans fats were up there. But you know, so, so no one's thinking about not getting enough Omega 3. And again, there's a solution. Not everyone's going to be eating fish. There are fish oil supplements, Omega 3, you know, high quality supplements out there. But there's also algae oil as well there.
B
That's the vegan alternative.
C
Right. I have a free guide that I put together on how to choose that. It's called, it's basically like all the top, you know, omega 3 supplements that are not oxidized and have the right amount of concentration of the stuff that's in there that they should. People can find that@fmfomega3diet.com but essentially you can go and analyze all the data yourself. You can go to these third party testing sites like the International Fish Oil Standard site, which is what we did. They have tons and tons of data on there and you can kind of go through it and look for the quality supplements that have a low oxidation and a high concentration. And so I think that's essentially like, I've got like eight or so that I've listed that are really good quality for both vegan and you know, people that are taking fish oil as well.
A
This is a little bit in the weeds, but what's happening in the oxidation, like people are like a Supplement is a supplement, but clearly not so polyunsaturated
C
fatty acid, which is what omega 3s are. It's also what omega 6s are, is. I mean, they, they oxidize at lightning speed. I mean, it's you. So in fact, that's one of the reasons why you need so much vitamin E. The more polyunsaturated fatty acid you take in, the more your vitamin E requirement goes up as well. But when you eat oxidized fat, it's basically like generating an inflammatory signal on your body is what it's doing. It's an inflammatory signal because it's not right. It's like a oxidized. Your immune system recognizes it as like a foreign object, so it activates inflammation. So you want to avoid, if you can, you know, eating and consuming oxidized fat. And so that's what. With fish oil, you have to be very fastidious about the way you isolate it and stuff. And so.
A
So it's in the manufacturing process.
C
Yeah, manufacturing. But also when you get it, you should store it in the refrigerator. If you buy it in bulk, I store mine in the freezer. Doesn't harm it at all. It's actually great. So you store it in the freezer. And then when I'm ready to get in my new. My new bottle, I thaw it out and take it. Because cold stops oxidation. Right. That's essentially what's happening. So that would be number two. And then I would say the third supplement that's at the top of my list would. It's a race between a multivitamin and magnesium. And so I think I'll defer to the multivitamin on this one because it is covering the vitamin K base, the vitamin E base, the calcium, the vitamin C, all those other plants, ones that are also important. So I think that would be my top three. And then the top five after the multivitamin would be magnesium. And that is also something that half the US Population is not getting enough of. Essentially, it's at the center of a chlorophyll molecule. So any. Anything green is high in magnesium. People aren't eating their greens. We've already established that with vitamin K. They're not eating the greens. Right.
B
What happens when you're deficient in magnesium?
C
Well, it depends on what kind of deficiency we're talking about. If you're severely deficient, you start to get muscle spasms. Like that's one of the, you know, I would say more like clinical symptoms. But when, when you're just kind of suboptimal like half the US population is when you're just not getting that RDA requirement, which for women is about 320 milligrams a day, for men is 420. If you're physically active, that requirement goes up even more because you're sweating and losing magnesium. But your sweat. But for those people, I mean, maybe you're getting some muscle cramps. If that's something that's happening, then you really probably should be taking in more magnesium. But insidious damage, that insidious damage is happening. Magnesium is a cofactor for many important enzymes, 300 different enzymes, DNA repair is one of them. And if you can't repair damage to your DNA, then you increase the risk of getting cancer. And so what happens is DNA damage isn't a problem for five years, it's not a problem for 10 years, it's not a problem For 15 or 20 or 30. It starts to become a problem 40, 50, 60 years later. Right? Then cancer rears its ugly head. And so it's not something that you're really going to pay attention to until it's too late. And so magnesium is, it's in. And there are studies that have looked at this. So people that take, for every hundred milligram decrease in magnesium intake, they have a 24% increase pancreatic cancer risk. And then people with the highest quartile of Magnesium have a 50% lower cancer related mortality compared to people in the lowest. Yeah, 50%. And then there's studies showing supplementation is beneficial as well. And with respect to the supplementation, I tend to think you really should try to get as much magnesium from your diet as you can. Because leafy greens are so good and there's so many different micronutrients that are in them that you're, you're getting like the vitamin K and the calcium and the vitamin C. But if you are going to supplement then you want to probably take smaller doses of it can, it can be an irritant on the gut. So you don't take a big bolus of magnesium, it can cause like muscle spasm, like your, your muscles and your, your intestinal system to kind of spasm and can cause diarrhea and things like that. So you want to take lower doses, maybe like 150 milligram, 300 milligram doses and you want to take a salt form. So, so, so I would say magnesium malate, magnesium citrate are good forms. But also magnesium glycinate, which is what I take is a good form People
B
like these for sleep. Also magnesium, like this is one of
C
these for sleep as well. And stress. I mean when you're stressed, your body pulls on magnesium as well.
A
There are so many different forms of magnesium. How do you decide what to prioritize? Do you take all of them? Like how do people approach it?
C
I like the magnesium glycinate because you're also getting glycine in there, glycinate. So magnesium is bound with glycine. It's very bioavailable, which is what you want. And it does sort of help with calmness. Glycine is like a inhibitory neurotransmitter. Right. So it, I take it before bed as well and it could be the placebo effect, which is a very valid real thing and I love it. But you know, it does seem to help with sleep as well.
A
And are you missing if you're not taking the other ones, like how do we need all of them? Or does glycinate.
C
Glycinate works. If you're taking magnesium threonate, that's kind of a brain specific form of magnesium. And I would say in that regard then you definitely want to make sure you're getting other forms of magnesium for the DNA repair aspect that I was talking about. Also magnesium is important for bone Health, like 60% of magnesium stored in bone. And it, you know, it's one of those things that if you're, if you're having inadequate levels of magnesium as 50% of the US population, your body will pull from your bones because it has to really maintain very tight levels of magnesium, the plasma, very important. And so you'll pull from your bones and by the time you're older, you know, an older adult, you've lost half your magnesium stores which affects your bone mineral density and bone health. Right. So those things all sort of converge together as well. So yeah, I mean, I think magnesium threonate, which is something people do like for their brain, they're taking, it's like a, it's, it's, there's some evidence showing that it can cross the blood brain barrier better and get into the brain better and therefore it has beneficial effects in the brain like energy production. And it seems to be, you know, important for preventing perhaps cognitive decline as well. So if you're taking that form, I would say that you want to make sure you're also getting enough magnesium for the DNA repair and other enzymes as well that are not in the brain. Number five, choline. Because it's, it's. I used to supplement with it more. And I think I'm going to bring it back after, like, kind of diving into it recently again, because it really. It really is important for brain health, you know, for preventing the oxidized. I mean, not oxidized. That's vitamin E. For preventing the homocysteine. The homocysteine is really important. I mean, that's another thing that a lot of people aren't measuring. So I think that would be my number five.
A
Where does vitamin E fall in?
C
Because of the importance the vitamin E RDA is in the multivitamin. Multivitamin.
A
Okay.
C
And I do eat a lot of almonds. Like, I'm. That's my. That's my go to. Like, it's not time for dinner yet. But I've, you know, it's been many hours. It's almonds, raw almonds.
B
Not to get too in the weeds here in our own way. You mentioned nuts and seeds. So I'm a vegan person. He's a vegan. Friendly health nut biohacker. We eat so many nuts and seeds. Like, I'm a walnut person. I prefer walnuts. But we put cashews in our smoothies. I'm trying to get all branches of the vitamins through all the different nuts, but it's work.
C
It's definitely work.
B
It's time to pause our conversation with Dr. Rhonda Patrick because there is so much more to talk about. We're gonna go much deeper into some specifics of things that people often ask about but don't have proper answers to. Coffee, pesticides, microplastics. Please stay tuned for episode two of our conversation with Dr. Rhonda Patrick. Make sure to check it out.
C
It's Maya Bialix. Breakdown. She's gonna break it down for you. She's got a neuroscience PhD or two.
B
One fiction.
C
And now she's gonna break down, so break down. She's gonna break it down.
Missing Micronutrients, Necessary Supplements & The Science Behind Why They Work
Guest: Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Date: July 8, 2025
This episode dives deep into the often-overlooked world of micronutrients and the pivotal role they play in physical and mental health. Neuroscientist and host Mayim Bialik, along with co-host Jonathan Cohen, welcomes Dr. Rhonda Patrick—a leading researcher in nutrition, aging, and disease prevention. Together, they unpack the science behind micronutrient deficiencies, identify the most essential supplements for longevity and wellness, and debunk some persistent myths about diet, mental health, aging, and the power we truly have over our own health outcomes.
Dr. Patrick’s evidence-based “Top 5” list to fill the most common and consequential micronutrient gaps:
| Timestamp | Segment | |---------------|----------------------------------------------------------------| | 05:44 | Dr. Rhonda Patrick’s mission: “age the best way I can” | | 06:23 | Genetics vs. lifestyle in aging—macros vs. micronutrients | | 08:44 | Vitamin C & subclinical deficiencies | | 09:26 | Choline’s underestimation—key for brain, cardiovascular health | | 12:14 | Vitamin E deficiencies and impact | | 15:33 | Detailed micronutrient framework & why ‘invisible’ deficits matter | | 19:32 | Vitamin K: clotting, calcium management, bone health | | 21:32 | “Longevity vitamins” and silent chronic disease risk | | 28:01 | How inflammation drives depression and anxiety | | 29:52 | Exercise “snacks” — high benefit in short bursts | | 35:17 | 2-minute exercise study: 50% mortality reductions | | 40:42 | Dr. Patrick’s Top 3 and Top 5 supplements | | 41:19 | Why vitamin D tops the list | | 44:39 | Omega-3 status as predictive as smoking | | 48:12 | Magnesium: Why most are deficient, forms, functions | | 52:36 | Importance of choline for brain and heart |
The episode concludes with a promise to dig deeper in Part 2, exploring coffee, pesticides, and microplastics. Dr. Patrick and the hosts emphasize that while aging and disease may seem inevitable, the science is clear: small, evidence-based changes in diet and lifestyle—including skillful supplementation—can dramatically shift the odds toward a longer, happier, more independent life.
For more insights and Dr. Patrick’s recommended resources, visit fmfomega3diet.com (for omega-3 supplement selection guide) and check out the upcoming next episode for more on environmental health factors.
Note: This summary skips advertisements and non-content sections as requested. Verbatim quotes are noted with attribution and timestamps.