From Debilitating Pain to Full Recovery: The Diet That Saved Me - Transcript
Dr. Terry Wahls
So it's very clear to me in 2007 that I'm on track to become bedridden by my illness, probably demented by my illness because I'm beginning to have brain fog, and probably dying with intractable, horrific electrical face pain. And then I have this big What if I redesign my paleo diet based on this long list of supplements that I'm taking, and I start this new way of eating? And by Mother's Day, for the first time in six years, I get on my bike, and I bike around the block. And my kids are crying my when I do that. Jackie's crying.
I'm crying.
Dr. Mark Hyman
If you've been dealing with anxiety, low energy, or trouble focusing and still feel like you're missing something, you're not alone. And that's why I created the Brain Shaping Academy, a new program that looks in places most people never think to check, like nutrient deficiencies, the health of your gut, metabolism, your immune system, and lots more. You know, Terry, you and I both have had interesting past medical histories. And I say past because they are past, and we both suffered from incurable diseases according to traditional medicine. You had severe multiple sclerosis and were in a wheelchair.
I pretty much have had anything and everything that you can possibly get that's not lifestyle related. We both discovered that there's a different way of thinking about disease that actually holds the answer to so much suffering that people have across a spectrum of diseases. And, you know, I would love to sort of have you share a little bit about, you know, your your background because you you were really trained as a traditional doctor. You developed a really severe and progressive disease, which in my training and in your training was a one way street. You could mitigate the symptoms, you can maybe relieve a little suffering, but it's kind of a bad news situation.
Just so people understand, like, your background a little, haven't heard you. Yeah. Tell us what happened to you.
Dr. Terry Wahls
As an adolescent, I struggled with depression. And then, you know, I'm a farm kid, physically very active. I'm an artist. I decided I don't wanna be a starving artist. I decided to get back into science.
I get into medical school, complete my internal medicine residency. When I'm 45, I, have some weakness in my left leg, which ultimately is diagnosed with, relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis. And I said, you know, thirteen years earlier, you had a period of dim vision on your left eye that was probably optic neuritis. And I was had a lesion in my brain and my spinal cord. They diagnosed relapsing remitting multiple sclerosis.
I did not wanna take an interferon because that would make my depression much worse. So I took Copaxone, which was, you know, the best DMT that you could take at that time. At age 48, I, clearly am worse. I need a tilt recline wheelchair. I take midazantron, a form of chemotherapy.
And, my neurologist says, you know, functions once lost will never come back, which is why I was happy to take midoxantrone. Did not help. I continued to decline. Then I took Tysabri, the new biologic. Did not help.
I continued to decline. Then I was put on CellCept.
Dr. Mark Hyman
And these are powerful immune suppressing drugs, for those who don't know what they are.
Dr. Terry Wahls
And I wanna tell people, by the way, my neurologist at this big MS center had mentioned the work of direct MS charity, and they turned me on to the paleo diet. I and so I I had already been doing the paleo diet for several years. But it's like, I didn't know how long it would take to recover, and maybe all I could do is slow my decline. So I I was doing the paleo diet. I'm reading the basic science.
I decide that mitochondrial dysfunction is what leads to cognitive decline with Alzheimer's to Parkinson's and to probably the progressive decline with progressive MS. Because now at this point, I have secondary progressive MS.
Dr. Mark Hyman
What does that what does that mean that for people who have what does that mean? Like, does that mean you're you're in a wheelchair, you can't move, you can't walk?
Dr. Terry Wahls
Means that I no longer have these acute flares, these relapses. Instead, there's this I'm a little worse every six months. I'm a little worse, a little worse, a little worse. So in 2003 I'm in a turbo climb wheelchair. By 2007, I could take a couple steps using two walking sticks.
I cannot sit up in a regular chair like I am now, Mark. I'm in a zero gravity chair with my knees higher than my nose. I'm beginning to have brain fog. I've also had trigeminal neurology, these electrical face pains that jolt down my face, like, you know, a jolt of electricity that are more frequent, more severe, and much more difficult to turn off. So it's very clear to me in 2007 that I'm on track to become probably bedridden by my illness because I'm already very close, probably demented by my illness because I'm beginning to have brain fog, and probably dying with intractable horrific electrical face pain.
Now fortunately for me, I had been continuing to keep reading the basic science. I'd come across a study using electrical stimulation of muscles and convinced my physical therapist to let me have a test session. We and we add the electrical stimulation to my exercise program that he has me on. This little tiny I might add tiny, tiny little exercise program that I could do. And then I have this big and, Mark, I really have to laugh at myself for how long it took to have this What if I redesign my paleo diet based on this long list of supplements that I'm taking?
And I start this new way of eating March 20 pardon me. December 26 of two thousand seven. Can't sit up, take a few steps, have, you know, frequent severe electrical face pain. By the end of February, my fatigue is is gone. My mental clarity is much improved.
My physical therapist said, know, Terry, you're definitely stronger. And he advances some exercises. And by Mother's Day, for the first time in six years, I get on my bike, and I bike around the block. You know? And my kids are crying.
My when I do that, Jackie's crying. I'm crying. And then I, you know, I I I bike a little bit more every day. And by October, Jackie signs us up for the courage ride, which is 20 miles, 18.5, and I bike the whole way. And, of course, this really transforms how I think about disease and health.
It will transform the way I practice medicine. Yeah. And I I'm also very privileged in that. My chair of medicine at the university, my chief of staff at the BI are also amazed by what has happened, and they want me to start doing clinical research testing. Can others with progressive multiple sclerosis implement this complicated regimen?
Is it safe, and what's the effect for their quality of life?
Dr. Mark Hyman
You mean, is it safe to eat real food as opposed to take a bunch of powerful immune suppressing drugs?
Dr. Terry Wahls
Isn't that radical?
Dr. Mark Hyman
Oh my god. What a revolutionary idea. You're you're you sort of covered a lot of ground there, and I think that what people need to understand is that multiple sclerosis is a very serious disease where you lose the ability to conduct nerve signals down your nerves and affects almost everything in your body. And there's no cure, except maybe there is. Because Except maybe
Dr. Terry Wahls
there is. And and that
Dr. Mark Hyman
Except maybe there is.
Dr. Terry Wahls
We overlooked why people develop these serious autoimmune diseases. And, yes, and I and I tell my tribes there are there's first, you have the genetic vulnerability. You have genes that increase the pass the vulnerability that this could happen to you. Then you have the infections that nearly all of us have had because these microbes
Dr. Mark Hyman
Like Epstein Barr or something. Right?
Dr. Terry Wahls
No. Epstein Barr, strep, staph, measles, herpes six virus. And nearly everyone has had one or more of these. And then there are these unknown environmental factors that my conventional neurology colleagues will say, so we don't know what they are, so just take your DMTs. And what you and I say are, you know
Dr. Mark Hyman
DMTs are disease modifying therapies. Right?
Dr. Terry Wahls
Oh, thank you. And what you and I tell our tribe is we're going to address all those environmental factors and shift every one of them from disease promoting to health promoting one by one at a pace that you and your family can manage. And what we predict will happen is that if you're on prescription medications, you'll have to work with your medical team because you'll probably need lower and lower and lower doses. And finally, fewer of those prescription meds. And your blood sugars will improve.
Your blood pressures will improve. Your mood will probably improve. Your energy will improve. And your interest in intimate relationships with the people that you love will probably also improve.
Dr. Mark Hyman
But you know what's so amazing, Terry, is that, you know, there's just so much resistance in the system to this. And, you know, both you and I have have seen what would be thought of as miracles. Right? Like, oh, you know, maybe just Terry had a spontaneous remission. Oh, maybe, Mark, you just had a spontaneous remission of all these conditions you had, or maybe your patients with this or that condition that got better, you know, it's
Dr. Terry Wahls
Or that
Dr. Mark Hyman
it was psychosomatic. Or
Dr. Terry Wahls
were incompetent. You never really had progressive multiple sclerosis because nobody gets
Dr. Mark Hyman
They misdiagnosed you. They misdiagnosed But the reality is you and I know that's not true. And and what I just wanna double click on something you said because you jumped over pretty fast, which is you went back to the basic science. And and this underscores a really fundamental thing that's happening right now in medicine is that clinical medicine, what you get when you go to the doctor's office, does not reflect the scientific advancements that we're seeing in our understanding of these diseases, of these quote incurable diseases, of the root causes, and how to restore normal function. And you jokingly or I'm so so joking.
You talked about creating an epidemic of health, which is amazing. That's something that doctors know nothing about, which is what creates a healthy human. And part of your recovery was really understanding the fundamentals of health so you could help restore health as opposed to suppress or inhibit or block some pathway that was causing inflammation that was affecting your nerves, and you approach it very differently. So talk about the bay the frameworks up from the basic science perspective. Because you and I are both trained as academically trained physicians.
We've both done research. We both worked in major institutions, and I was at Cleveland Clinic. You you met the VA and other other academic centers. And yet, you know, there's there's just this credible sluggishness in medicine to help people understand that there is potential for healing and repair from things that most of us as doctors are trained are not curable.
Dr. Terry Wahls
So what my first when I was reading the basic papers from doctor Flint Beale, who's a neurologist, and doctor Bruce Ames, who's a nutritional biochemist. And they were talking about, mitochondrial function. And that when the mitochondria are not working well, we don't make enough ATP, so we we can't drive the biochemical reactions as thoroughly in the brain, which leads to neurodegeneration. So more, Alzheimer's, more Parkinson's, and I'm thinking in more progressive MS because that's, was my suffering. More anxiety and depression, and I had depression all of my life.
And so I'm like, okay. I had to get my mitochondria tuned up. So then I started reading articles that were focused on mitochondrial function. And, you know, gradually, would add supplements for my mitochondria. You know?
And, Mark, after a few months, I think six months of these my initial supplement experimentation, I said, you know, I'm wasting my money, and so I stopped. In thirty six hours, I I could not get up out of bed to go to work. Okay. And at seventy two hours, my my spouse Jackie came in, she said, you know, Terry, why don't you take these again? So I took them.
And the next morning, I was like, well, I could get up and go to work. So, you know, I'm still tired, but I'm back to my usual level of fatigue. So I was pretty jazzed by that. And two weeks later, I said, well, let's let's test that again. So I stopped my supplements.
And at thirty six hours, I completely crashed, couldn't function. I waited my seventy two hours, took my supplements again. And the next morning, I can get get up and go to work. And so after that, I was so excited to be reading the basic science. I, and I was a member of the institutional review board reviewing clinical research.
And I said, please give me for the studies for me to review, studies involving the brain. And so I got better and better at reading basic science and clinical research.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. And it's so important because because the the smoke signals are there. And, you know, when when you talk about mitochondrial dysfunction, we've had a number of podcasts across the spectrum of different experts on mitochondria. But these are the little powerhouses in your cells that turn food and oxygen into energy, but they do so much more than that. And they're so sensitive, they're affected by what we eat.
They're affected by stress. They're affected by a microbiome, by environmental toxins, by pollution, by so much that is some of which we have control over, some of which we don't. But but as you're beginning to understand the kind of fundamental common features among all these different conditions, instead of the reductionism of medicine, which is sort of how medicine's organized with specialties and siloed experts where you have a doctor for every interview, we're now learning that the the common pathways are there's very few, and mitochondria is one of those. And we we're seeing this now with Chris Palmer's work, who's been on the podcast about mental health and schizophrenia and bipolar disease using mitochondrial therapies. We're seeing it with diabetes and reversing diabetes using ketogenic diets, which revitalize mitochondria, which are dysfunctional in diabetics.
We're seeing it in MS, as as you've shown. We're seeing it in Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's. We're seeing it in autism. And all these are are different manifestations of common underlying dysfunctions. In order to actually recover from these things, you have to, you know, create health, and that means removing the causes and adding in the ingredients.
And you were mentioning your supplements, but imagine you were talking about mitochondrial therapies that you were taking, whether it's co q ten or carnitine or ribose or creatine or other things that are part of the body's own physiology and actually taking food and oxygen and turning them to energy. It's like an assembly line, and you need all these different helpers and factors. And if you're lower deficient or you have an exceptional need for them because of some insult or pathway that's being interrupted, you you can you can actually help your biology recover by providing those things, plus the dietary interventions. In terms of, like, the these these sort of mitochondrial sort of thread, can you kind of help us understand that? How it plays a role?
You know, why this reductionism is such a mistake in medicine, and how we need to shift to thinking about treating systems, not just symptoms?
Dr. Terry Wahls
Any tissue that needs lots of energy needs to have more and more mitochondria packed into those cells. So your brain, your retina, and your heart probably have the highest concentration of mitochondria. Therefore, having, you know, these targeted supplements and you've, listed, you know, quite a few creatine, carnitine, lipoic acid, b vitamins, CoQ, and probably a basic, multivitamin mineral, magnesium, and zinc. That's that's a great cocktail. And what what I could tell, you know, even though, you know, I have this progressive MS, I'm getting steadily worse that I'm I take my supplement mitochondrial supplement cocktail.
My fatigue is less when I take my supplement cocktail. It's not enough to get me out of the wheelchair, but it clearly was enough that I felt much, much better taking it. What is super interesting, Mark and I've and I've been following the paleo diet, so I wasn't eating sugar. I wasn't eating grains. And so I had a a really pretty great diet.
But when I redesigned my paleo diet based on, again, a review of the basic science and what I'd learned from functional medicine and my mitochondrial supplements, I said, where are they in the food supply? I and I had a much more structured paleo diet that emphasized what to eat, not just what to avoid. That is when the magic really happened. And in a breathtakingly I mean, just extraordinarily speed to go from being unable to sit up to being able to do an 18.5 mile bike ride in ten months is extraordinary.
Dr. Mark Hyman
And that was eighteen years ago, and you're still going.
Dr. Terry Wahls
I I'm not collapsing. And and yesterday, I jogged on my treadmill. And, you know, I I thought that would never happen. Now that that that did happen. I I I will say that, you know, I'm now 70.
I, like like you, I've had some additional health challenges. I, got to have a GI infection that got me really quite ill over the summer. I I, fortunately, I'm now on the other side of that. I'm back to gain weight and doing well. So things still happen.
I still have to be alert. I still have to think about my functional medicine perspective when stuff happens and I become ill. And I see my conventional physicians, follow their advice, then I go see my functional medicine physician, say, you know what? Here's what I think they're missing. And then we've, you know, we figured out, and we get to the bottom.
And, you know, I I get recovered from my functional medicine approach. And then my conventional doc goes, well, I guess you are better now.
Dr. Mark Hyman
What what I what I want you kinda to dive in on, and I think this is this is where I think most people who talk about, you know, eating healthy or food is medicine, don't really fully understand the the granularity of what that means. In other words Mhmm. Just as though we have hundreds of different drugs or thousands maybe now, and there are different drugs for different problems. In the same way, food is a drug. And it's not just a metaphorical drug, it's an actual drug.
And there are many types of food, and therefore, are many drugs. And not every condition requires the same drug. And so with with food, when you're treating patients with food as medicine, different conditions require different diets. And what you what you hinted at, and I think it's important to double click on this, and I think it was quite brilliant, which is you're like, how do I look at the potential pharmacopeia in food and design my diet to maximize the levels of nutrients that I know I biologically need based on my condition. That's that was a profound insight.
And I I had one patient who's like, I don't wanna take any vitamins, and I'm gonna eat, you know, like, to get all my nutrients. I'm like, alright. It's a lot of work. She's like, well, I'm gonna have, like, 25 pumpkin seeds to get enough zinc, or I'm gonna have, like, three Brazil nuts a day to get my selenium. Right?
And she had all the spreadsheet. I'm like I'm like, okay. That's not that easy to do, but tell us about the categories of food that you realized were so nutrient dense and had such unique nutrients that wasn't just about eating a healthy diet that's plant rich or that's got fats or protein. It was more than that.
Dr. Terry Wahls
So I had, 20 nutrients that I identified as really important, and and some papers from Beale, from Bowman, from Bruce Ames. And when I first started max I wanted to maximize the intake of those 20 nutrients and trying to figure out where they were. I went to the, my dieticians. They said, oh, that's too complicated. I can't do it.
I went to the library. It's too complicated. I can't do it. Ultimately, I found the Linus Pauling Institute for Micronutrients, and that got me the way I could identify the key food sources for those 20 nutrients that I'm tracking. And then, Mark, so I use that for my recovery, and I had these food lists that I was following.
But, you know, when I had my own personal recovery, I wouldn't use this in my clinics, Mark. And I had in my traumatic brain injury clinic, I had twenty minutes with the veteran. When I was staffing residents with the primary care clinic, now I only had five minutes with the veterans. So I had to think deeply. Like, I I want to create a memorable food role to help my veterans remember how to eat.
And now it's ended up, you know, kit creating basically the Wallace diet, the Wallace Paleo diet, a ketogenic version of the same so that I could teach it in just a few minutes. Do you want me to highlight that for your audience now?
Dr. Mark Hyman
Yes. Yes. I think think, like, you know, you talk about organ meats. You talk about mushrooms. You talk about, you know, specific foods.
Dr. Terry Wahls
So I'm gonna go through those big categories. The green leafy vegetables, they're they're great sources of vitamin K, great sources of, some particular carotenoids, rich in the blue green pigments, zeaxanthin, meso zeaxanthin, lutein, which are concentrated in the macula that protect the eye from the blue light and also protect the retina and protect the brain. Great sources of calcium and magnesium. Then we look at the cabbage family mush onions. They induce glutathione, the master antioxidant in the cells, and help support detoxification, and support the NRF two pathways to lower inflammation.
The mushrooms, which I also recommend, boost lower anxiety, depression, lower the risk of cognitive decline. The bright colors mushrooms. What mushrooms? All culinary mushrooms. You just wanna be sure that they aren't poisonous.
So don't go don't go collect mushrooms on yourself unless you are a really expert, mushroom hunter because there are mushrooms that will kill you. So, you know, just be sure that you have culinary mushrooms and have a a wide variety of culinary mushrooms. And then the brightly colored, you know, carrots, beets, peppers, tomatoes, these carotenoids are linked with lower risks of, diabetes, obesity, cancer, heart disease, all cause mortality, particularly blue, purple, black. Again, lower risk of anxiety, depression, cognitive decline. So, those are nine cups of vegetables, measured raw, and you can have them raw or cooked.
Dr. Mark Hyman
So Oh, wait. Just just stop there for a sec. So Yeah. Nine cups of vegetables.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Per day?
Dr. Mark Hyman
Per day. And I was trying to help encourage the dietary guidelines to have, like, you know, like, at least nine servings, which is basically half a cup. And they didn't recommend that much, unfortunately. But you're talking about 18 cups. So a serving of vegetables is half a cup, and you're talking about nine cups.
That's 18 cups of vegetables a day. That's that's an enormous amount. And how did you do that?
Dr. Terry Wahls
You know, it's super fascinating. When I first started doing this, I was probably having six cups of, kale, collards, mustard greens every day. And I probably had that for about four years. And then after four years, I didn't need quite that amount. I'm guessing I had this huge nutritional deficit that I finally got caught up after four years worth.
And remember, I'm I'm practicing in the VA. I didn't want my men to be hungry. And so I I want them to eat all these vegetables, have at
Dr. Mark Hyman
least
Dr. Terry Wahls
six to 12 ounces of meat, fish every day. They could have more if they wanted. And I didn't want them to have sugar and white flour.
Dr. Mark Hyman
I think the the specificity is really important, and the the granularity of it is important. Now there are some just general principles, but you're eating a diet that's supporting all your basic biological functions. It's supporting your gut microbiome, that's reducing inflammation, that's helping detoxification, that's enhancing your mitochondria, that's providing immune modulating compounds in like the polysaccharides and mushrooms. And so, you know, we we have the science to understand these things. But but again, it's something that's just a big black hole in medicine, which is to completely ignore it.
And, you know, you'd think that your story, which is now widely known, you have a popular TED Talk, you have bestselling books, you'd think that the NIH would be banging down your door. That they'd be like they'd be like, here's a $100,000,000, Terry. Like, let's figure this out. It's just striking to me that that it's just such a it's it's such a resistance to change. And I and I see this, you know, in my practice too.
I see miracles after miracle, but they're not. They're just the deliberate application of the fundamental principles of biology to chronic disease in ways that we're trained in functional medicine, but that are not widely appreciated. But I don't know if you know this, but maybe you should actually apply for this. Medicare, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Innovation, I've been helping and trying to advise them. They have now put forth a $100,000,000 to study functional medicine and lifestyle medicine
Dr. Terry Wahls
Yes. For chronic
Dr. Mark Hyman
It's called Maha Elevate. And anybody listening who's
Dr. Terry Wahls
Okay. Taking notes here, Mark.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Yes. Who's a functional medicine practitioner who's doing research, who wants to do research. The government is now going to fund over the next three years probably about 30 projects, $3,000,000 each to to sort of show that, oh, wait. Rather than the I mean, these drugs that you're talking about that you're on are so expensive. You know, the autoimmune drugs are just, you know, so
Dr. Terry Wahls
90,000 a
Dr. Mark Hyman
I mean, it's in huge cost savings, and not just to mention cost saving. I mean, look at your life here. Your life is an example. You were in a wheelchair in 2007. Your life was, you know, I would say, very reduced in terms of the quality of your life, your capacity to function, your ability to engage, your ability to contribute in the world.
And look at just one person, what you've done in their recovery that you've had to actually change the world, like to actually make a difference in how people think. It's just extraordinary. Know, I I was the same way. I was I was about to go on disability when I was 37 years old Yeah. From chronic fatigue syndrome, and I had mercury poisoning.
I couldn't function. I was so ill, and I think God found the same thing. I I started to learn about this and started to try it on myself, and I started to slowly recover, and I went from doing all that to, you know, actually being back back in better shape than I've ever been in my life at 66. And and that's really possible if you know how the body works.
Dr. Terry Wahls
I mean, I I too was, you know, clearly expecting I was gonna finally have to apply for medical disability in 2008. Unfortunately, when I just had my performance review, you know, my boss was asking me, so, Terry, how long are you gonna work? I said, well, you know, I sort of like, Lance Pauling. I wanna be giving lectures to stay room only audiences in my nineties, and continuing to change the world. So my goal is to thrive to a 120.
We'll see.
Dr. Mark Hyman
The condition conditions that you're talking about are so prevalent. Right? And you when you lump them all together, you'd you're talking about, you know, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, Lewy Body, frontotemporal dementia, all the dementias. You're talking about
Dr. Terry Wahls
Anxiety.
Dr. Mark Hyman
MS. You're talking about ALS. I mean, obviously, the depression, anxiety, mental mental illness is just the scope is amazing. You know, what I'm curious about is you're now expanding your work to include other conditions. Right?
You're not just focusing on MS. So can you talk about some of your work and how it applies and what you're seeing and what you're you're doing in in the clinical world? Because it's one thing to be a doctor like me. You know, I was at Cleveland Clinic. We did a lot of work there, but mostly I'm on the outside of the traditional health care system.
But you're in it. And you're all you're you're you're doing academic research, and you're you're running groups, and you're running research studies. Tell us tell us what you're finding in this sort of the next sort of evolution of your work since we talked to you last.
Dr. Terry Wahls
So in the traumatic brain injury clinic, where I practiced for three years, we we saw people who had a traumatic brain injury, usually had PTSD. And as I taught them to improve their diet, add, some stress reduction, get a step counter, they remarkably stabilized their symptoms and improved. Then the VA, at that same time, saw us having tremendous success in primary care and pulled me out of primary care clinic and let me establish a new clinic, the therapeutic lifestyle clinic. And in that, we I got to design the clinic. So I had a dietitian work with me, and I went to primary care specialty medicine, and invited them to give me their most difficult cases, Mark, and said, you know, I'm not gonna use drugs.
We're just gonna use diet and lifestyle medicine. And we had a handful of cases at first, had success, and then steadily grew and grew and grew. And I kept having to redesign my clinic from small group to large group to small classes to large classes to very large classes to then I decided to leave the VA and begin, you know, teaching the the world. And what I what I saw was that people would come to the, therapeutic lifestyle clinic usually on 15 to 30 prescription drugs. They would have multiple diagnoses, autoimmune diagnoses, obesity, type two diabetes, high blood pressure, some sort of mental health problem.
So many diagnoses, a wide variety of diagnoses, but the most common symptoms were fatigue, pain, anxiety or depression, and brain fog. So these were the symptoms that were causing the most suffering. And as we taught them, basically, to either adopt a gluten free, dairy free, nutrient dense vegetarian diet or a paleolithic diet that within three months, their fatigue is markedly reduced, their brain fog is reduced, and their energy is improved. And we're beginning to see that they we have to start dialing back on their prescription meds because they're improving because we're creating health. But I also learned to not offend my partners by focusing on I'm going to just focus on work on creating health, and we will watch your prescription meds and adjust them if in if things begin to improve.
So I was very careful to not be treating any disease state. I'm simply working on creating health and watching, for side effects and adjusting meds as needed. And my partners were okay with that message. I did have to, you know, deal with some intense criticism pushback. And so I had to learn how to massage those relationships.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Well, know, Terry, what you just said is so profound, and I wanna I wanna, you know, just take a deeper dive on this because what traditional medicine does is diagnose and treat disease by some type of combination of therapies, whether it's surgery or medication or radiation to somehow block or inhibit or interrupt some pathway. Now surgery is great. I think I have nothing nothing to say bad about surgery for the most part. It it's a incredible advance in technology, and I've had, you know, saved my life many times. So I'm not opposed to surgery, and I think it's one of those areas of medicine where, you know, we do great at.
It's an acute care thing. We replace hips. We can replace knees. We can cut out cancers. We can, you know, fix backs.
We can do all kinds of stuff. But when it comes to, like, you know, traditional internal medicine diseases that most people suffer from, we we really, I think, have a have it all backwards. And and you kind of did a very kind of polite, nice thing. So we're just gonna work on creating health and not really worry about the diseases. You focus on the diseases.
But the reality is that the way to treat disease is by creating health, and the disease goes away as a side effect. So it's like it's kind of like a little bit a little bit surreptitious and sneaky to say that because it's not offensive, and yet it actually is the thing that has the most leverage when it comes to making people recover from things that are are, quote, incurable. And and I think I want you to double click on what do you mean by creating health? Because in functional medicine, we don't really treat diseases. We create health, and that's the focus is one of those things that impede health and try to remove those.
And one of those things that create health, one of the ingredients for health, how do we provide those? And that's what we become expert in. We become expert in identifying what you have too much of or too little of. What you have too much of that's disturbing your system, or too little of that you need to get to thrive. That's what you did for yourself.
That's what I've done for myself. And the results are amazing. The body wants to be healthy. Like, the body's innate programming is to be healthy, and yet most doctors don't understand that. And they're trying to interrupt something or interfere with something rather than saying, okay.
How do I create the conditions for health? And and so talk us through how how you think about this whole idea of creating health.
Dr. Terry Wahls
In our cells, we're doing 2,000,000,000 chemical reactions every second. And so I can take a drug that interferes with one of those chemical reactions. But if instead I focus on how do I create better support for more of those chemical reactions to happen the way they should. So that means making sure my nutrition is as good as possible, that my sleep is as effective as possible, that my social connections are as deep and meaningful as possible, that I am moving more and exercising more, that that will allow more of those 2,000,000,000 chemical reactions that are happening to be happening correctly. Yeah.
And, unfortunately, you know, our our medical students are not taught the elements that are key for optimal health. They're not taught the the key elements for nutrition. They aren't taught, how to, be more successful with helping people with behavior change. Mark, if, the WHO, has identified that if my conventional when you and I were our conventional, clinicians and we told physicians told our patients to adopt a diet for a medical reason, twenty five percent of them would would go home and would make an attempt. And at a year, two point five percent would actually still be doing the diet that you and I told them to do.
In my clear clinical trials, peer reviewed published research, our adherence rates at twelve months rate are at ninety percent. And in our six months, adherence rates are eighty three to eighty five percent. We are extraordinarily good at this because we understand behavior change and because when people implement the diets that we prescribe and the lifestyle programs we prescribe, they actually feel better. And I I teach them to pay attention to, you know, you have a good day or a good week, look back. What what were you doing?
Can you do more of it? If you have a bad day, look back to the previous twenty four to seventy two hours. Have a an idea what was maybe the trigger. Was it a food you ate, a toxin exposure, a fight with your spouse or your boss, and could you have less of that? And so I and we teach people how to draw links between their environment and how they're feeling.
And the more successfully they draw that link, the more adherent they are to the program.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Part of that is is is is also, you know, the the the the the magnitude of the change that you see with the recommendations. Because if you're a regular doctor and you say, well, I just want you to eat healthier and balanced diet, and it's kind of vague, and it's not really therapeutic. It's like saying, well, I have a headache. Here's a milligram of aspirin. Well, an aspirin doesn't really work, so I'm not gonna take it.
You have to have the right drug, meaning the right food and the right program for the right condition. And and and there are some similarities, obviously, to a healthy diet, but there's very, very much differences. You know, if you're trying to heal a leaky gut or autoimmune disease, it may be different if you're treating a neurodegenerative neurodegenerative disorder, or different than if you're, you know, treating someone with depression or some diabetes, schizophrenia. So it's you have to kind of be very specific. And I think the the, you know, the fundamental principles of creating health are are now pretty well known, but doctors don't really know how to prescribe those things or don't know how to identify the deviations from health and and where you are in the continuum.
And my guess is, Terry, that if if you had looked at your life before you got sick, you could you could track the things that were happening or the insults that happened along your life that led to this moment where you started developing MS. Right? It it wasn't like this thing that just kinda happened out of the blue. And and that's something we're not good at identifying. And I think we're gonna get better and better at it as we have more data driven health care.
Part of the reason I co founded the company Function Health was to allow people to gather large personal health data sets over time so you can look for those subtle changes and clues that will lead to a problem if you don't deal with it. And then you can be proactive about it.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Right. They can give you a lot of information and things to track that help you see like, okay. Things are improving now.
Dr. Mark Hyman
With the other diseases that you're seeing, you're you're seeing, you know, chronic illnesses like diabetes, like you're seeing Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, in addition to MS. Right?
Dr. Terry Wahls
What we see is, you know, the cognitive decline certainly, declines. Brain fog resolves. Fatigue resolves. In my clinical trials, we've added, we we now study some we have some online wellness programs, and we're studying fibromyalgia, long COVID. Those studies, we're still recruiting.
So it'll probably be another eighteen months before I have that data available. We studied cancer, fatigue in cancer patients. We'll be analyzing that data this summer, probably publishing that next year in 2027. And and I've just put in a proposal to study progressive MS, and nobody wants to study progressive MS because those folks never get better. We have a study that's open right now for rheumatologic, diagnoses, things like rheumatoid arthritis, Sjogren's, lupus, mixed connective tissue disease, psoriatic arthritis.
We're recruiting, for those folks. We're also, adding, anxiety and depression, as well. And this morning, I had a meeting with my study team talking about pediatric onset multiple sclerosis because, you know, shockingly enough, we have children, young children that are now being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis as well.
Dr. Mark Hyman
So so, Terry, this is all incredible work you're doing. You know, you've been at this now for a while. We met a decade and a half ago, probably. Don't know. A long time ago.
And I think it was early on when you were just sort of working doing this work, and and you had mostly recovered by then. But I'm curious in in the sort of intervening time you've been working in this field, what what is most exciting to you now that that is emerging in the science? What are the what are the bright lights that you're looking towards and things that you hadn't understood before that you now understand about how how to actually begin to treat chronic disease more effectively?
Dr. Terry Wahls
So one of the really interesting observations that we had, when I looked at the WAVE study that was comparing the low saturated fat diet and the modified paleolithic diet, we saw that the microbiome that you had at baseline could predict if you're going to respond better to the low saturated fat diet or better to the modified paleo diet. So I I think what diseases I develop are are dependent on my genetics, the food I'm eating, and the microbiome I have. I and so I predict there'll be a time, then you'll probably do this in your function health, and and maybe I need to help you think about this, Mark, is that we'll be able to give some saliva, some blood, some urine, some stool. And then in three to six weeks, you'd be able to give a report back to me, and I could tell my patient, given your genetics, your microbiome, and your underlying medical conditions, these are the diets that you'd be most helpful. The these diets would be the least helpful, and these supplements would be helpful.
And you may also wanna take these additional probiotics. That will be the future of medicine. I'm very excited about that. I think AI will help us, get there. We are doing more microbiome, research right now, so we will be, probably having some really interesting papers coming out about that in 2028 and 2029.
And I think
Dr. Mark Hyman
around MS or around around autoimmune disease? Or
Dr. Terry Wahls
Well, that'll be around, the mic the interaction of the microbiome, diet, and clinical outcomes in multiple sclerosis. Because, you know, in in my current study, we've got microbiome data. We have, you know, clinical data. We have patient report outcome data. We'll also have, mic a metabolome data, so metabolites, and brain structure, and brain metabolites as well.
Dr. Mark Hyman
And as you're talking about, you know, MS and the microbiome, I I remember a patient I had probably twenty years ago who said, you know, whenever my gut symptoms get worse, my MS gets worse. And I was like, oh, maybe there's a connection there. Yeah. And I think, you know, the microbiome plays such a role across such a diverse array of conditions. We talked about mitochondria.
We talked about inflammation indirectly through autoimmune disease. We're talking about now the microbiome. These are the fundamental systems that exist in human biology that are the foundations of most chronic disease. And there's a few other things as well, but these are really core. And in functional medicine, that's what we focus on, not the diseases, but on these biological processes.
And the way the way I often talk about it is, you know, we we in medicine are young science. Lewis Thomas, I read his book when I was in med school called The Youngest Science. And and then and Eo Wilson wrote a book called Consilience, The Union of Knowledge, where he's talked about how medicine has no theory. And it's just a bunch of reactive reactions to things that we observe and observe phenomena, but it's not a coherent strategy of how to approach a problem. It's just like, try this, try that, or there's this pathway or that pathway, or let's block this or block that.
Like, amyloid is a great example. Well, you can say, oh, amyloid's in the brain. Let's find a drug to block amyloid and dementia, but it doesn't work. And we spent billions of dollars and hundreds and hundreds of studies and have had no no positive out outcomes. And that's because we're thinking about it wrong.
You know, what we're talking about today is is developing a new theory of medicine, a new theory of human biology that's based on the laws of nature. And so when we talk about the microbiome or mitochondria or inflammation, these are things which are fundamental to human health. And if they're not if these systems aren't working, if your immune system, if your microbiome, if your mitochondria aren't working, you're not well. And depending on your genetics, your predispositions, the various insults, it might manifest as different diseases, but the common roots are the same for so many of these conditions. And that begins we need to figure out how to treat these things and how to help people, like you say, create a healthy immune system or healthy microbiome or healthy mitochondria.
When you say creating health, that's what you're talking about.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Yes. I'm I'm working on and what are the things that can create health? How do we create meaningful, healthy social connection? How do I create a healthy sleep? How do I create more healthy movement?
How do I have better nutrition? So, you know, step by step and when I talk with my patients, I will, I used to always insist they start with diet. Now I'm a little more, open to in which of these domains do you wanna start first. I think diet's particularly powerful, but if there's a different domain you wanna start in first, that's fine. And if you want to do them all at once, we'll give you a big complicated plan.
Or if you want to have one simple next step, we can do that.
Dr. Mark Hyman
I mean, yeah, you have to sort of match the approach to the person. But but like you said, you know, the magnitude of the improvements in health often is determined by the the dose. Right?
Dr. Terry Wahls
The dose of the infection.
Dr. Mark Hyman
The treatment. Right? So, like, you know, you could if you're drinking a, you know, a case of Coke every day, if you have half a case, that's an improvement, but it's probably not gonna move the needle. Right?
Dr. Terry Wahls
It won't move the needle much.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Right. But, you know, what what what what you're seeing is you're you know, just to kinda loop back on your story is you're you're seeing your story repeated over and over. This is not just a n of one, Terry's an anomaly, and a rare case, and we don't know why. You're actually repeating this over and over in clinic, over your research.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Clinically, and I repeat it in my peer reviewed published research. So when when, you know, people would attack me, you know, early on, again and again and again, I had gone these neurology podcast, and I'd be thoroughly attacked. It's okay. Let let's just assume we'll take me out of the equation. Let's look at my peer reviewed published research where other people have verified the diagnosis.
We followed people prospectively, and we published our research. I and so we see this again and again in research. We see this again and again in clinical practice. Mark sees it in his practice. The, Wallace practitioners that we train, they see it in their practice as well.
Dr. Mark Hyman
So imagine imagine you got invited to go to the NIH and meet with the the head of the NIH, Bhattacharya, and you were able to lay out a case for the type of research we need to focus on and invest in heavily, what would you advise him?
Dr. Terry Wahls
We need to do multimodal interventions, you know, for the law and that's why I keep writing grants
Dr. Mark Hyman
in English?
Dr. Terry Wahls
So multimodal oh, thank you. It means that you fix as many of these systems as you can. So we're gonna fix nutrition. We're gonna fix, meaning and purpose in life. We're going to help people identify a stress reducing practice that they can, embrace.
We're going to help them add exercise and movement. We will track their sleep. So we're going to work on using systems biology to create health. And I would want to, track, these measures of nutrition, ideally using twenty four hour recalls, track sleep, using, wearable technology, and there are a variety of wearable technologies that can do that so that we can track how as people implement, again, these multiple interventions, better nutrition, better sleep, better movement, stress stress reducing practice, purpose, meaning, that that can translate into improved cellular function that we can measure with physiology using things like heart rate variability, using things like v o two max, how well we use oxygen, using our, the quality of our nutrition based on twenty four hour recalls.
Dr. Mark Hyman
And these are biomarkers of health, not biomarkers of disease.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Biomarkers of health that we will track biomarkers of health. And by improving health, we can stabilize and and, you know, it it and I'm and I'm writing a new book that talks about, you know, these concepts as a way to prevent disease, stabilize the disease you have, regress most chronic diseases, and many genetic diseases if you focus on these multimodal interventions.
Dr. Mark Hyman
I mean, that that is so key, Terry, that, you know, when you when you realize what does it take to create a healthy human, it's not just a single drug. And most of the problem with our research enterprise in America and the reason we're not getting the answers we really should be getting is that the entire infrastructure is designed to show whether this or that drugs work for this or that disease. And that's what a randomized controlled trial does. It's isolating all variables except for one. It's homogenizing populations, and it's giving them the same thing to look for a single outcome and trying to not do anything else except this one thing, like this one drug.
But that's not how the body works. Right?
Dr. Terry Wahls
Right. They they wanna focus on one receptor. But remember, it's 2,000,000,000 chemical reactions per second. We want to have as many of the elements of the modifiable lifestyle factors of which you and I have some control as individuals that we want people to improve those. Those are the studies that we need.
I keep writing those grants. The NIH doesn't fund me. The MS Society funded me once. Yeah. But what I do have, Mark, are grateful patients whose lives I've transformed who have been extraordinarily generous with my lab, and that's how I do my clinical trials.
Yeah. It's through philanthropic support.
Dr. Mark Hyman
And we we need that for sure, and thank God for those philanthropists who see this and who've been helped. But we really need billions of dollars focused on this. We need billions of dollars. Few 100,000 or a few million. And I think that you know, I was at Cleveland Clinic and tried to do a study on Alzheimer's.
And the head of the Lou Ribbon Center at the time, Doctor. Sabah, was amazing. And he really understood the need for a more comprehensive approach to these conditions. He said, okay. This is not just one disease.
There's many root causes. There's many different kinds of treatments. We can't just do one thing. We need to look at it all holistically as a systems or model of research we call multi modal treatments, which means a lot of different things at once versus just one single thing. And and for multi causal diseases, it's not just one cause up, and it's not just one thing or one receptor that's wrong.
I mean, you you mentioned 22,000,000,000 reactions in every cell. There's 40,000,000,000 cells. That's 80 quintillion, which is like 19 zeros. That's a big freaking number. And so that's a lot of stuff going on, we can't just do one thing.
I I said, well, let we wanna do a comprehensive study. We wanna change diet. We wanna exercise. We wanna optimize sleep. We wanna optimize nutrient levels.
We wanna detoxify, we wanna help the microbiome, we wanna because you you have to do all that stuff to to help someone with with the dementia because it's a pretty serious illness. And she's like, no. No. No. We have to do a study to see if vitamin d works.
Then we can alone just alone. And then we have to do a study to see if exercise works, and just that alone. Or then we have to do a study to see if optimizing sleep works, and just that alone. And I'm like she goes, how will we know what else is working if we just do it altogether? I said, well, you may not, but when you're growing a plant, you just say you don't go, well, I'm just gonna give it water, but no soil or sunlight.
Or I'm gonna give it sunlight, but no water or soil. Like, you you know, how do you create a healthy human? It requires all these different inputs, and they have to be optimized. And there's ways of identifying what those disturbances are, and we're becoming better and better at identifying those through through history, through diagnostics, through genetic testing, through metabolomics, through lab testing. That's what function health is allowing people to do is get brilliant, deep personal data sets on themselves, and that's really the future.
I did wanna kinda double back on something you said because it kinda struck me, and I think maybe people listening would go, oh, wait a minute. You said, you know, we can we can reverse lifestyle related diseases. Okay. People can maybe come to terms with that. But you said we can also potentially reverse genetic diseases.
So can you talk about what you mean by that?
Dr. Terry Wahls
You know, what is so wild, every week, people, you know, are reaching out, to us to tell us that their son or daughter who has genetic disease, who whose physician said, you know, like, there's nothing more I can do. And, someone sends them my book and they say, read this book and implement what you can. And so they read read my book, maximize the nutrition and all the lifestyle factors. And these little boys, little girls begin improving for the first time. And little boys who had, you know, really profound demyelinating disease, begins hitting his milestones and sits ups and starts crawling and is able to walk, and talk again.
People with muscular dystrophy who are far more functional. People with cystic fibrosis who are far more functional. Then people with a wide variety of genetic disorders that I did not learn about, and I have to go look up to figure out what they were. I and so it's not that we stop the genetic disorder, but if you actually eat a better diet and address the modified lifestyle factors, that genetic disorder is nowhere as negative as it was previously. So the person still has their genetic disorder, but we have we have regressed the severity of it.
Dr. Mark Hyman
I think this is such a radical idea. And and, Terry, I'm so excited you're talking about it because it's something that I've noticed in my practice, and I haven't heard many people talk about, but I know it's true.
Dr. Terry Wahls
I'll I'll tell you, person who got me fired up to think about this is Bruce Ames, who said Mhmm. With targeted high dose nutrition, you can prevent and reverse many, genetic disorders. I and so now, I'm, actually talking about that in my in my next book as well.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Well, I wanna unpack this a little bit for people listening so they understand what we're talking about. It's not if you have someone with sickle cell that you're gonna edit their gene and then cure them. That's something that that is going to happen in medicine, and thank God that there are people who have very serious genetic disorders that could have a very advanced technology to edit their genes and change that. That's great. You can't modify the genes other than through gene editing, but you can modify the expression of the genes.
And this is something we know every baby who's born in every hospital in the world, or maybe not everywhere in the world, but most places in the world, gets a heel stick. And they check for a blood test called PKU, phenylketonuria, which is a common inherited genetic disorder, that if you have it and you don't stop the consumption of an amino acid phenylalanine in your diet, the kids turn into highly developmentally delayed, handicapped, mentally challenged, you know, physically physiologically deformed people. And yet, if they don't consume this one amino acid, they're normal. So you're not changing their genes, you're changing the expression of the genes based on modifying some factor that you can change. And I've seen this over and over.
Even with Down's patients I've had, you can't cure Down syndrome, obviously, but you can change the quality of your life. You can improve their functioning. You can perhaps delay some of the complications like dementia or or diabetes that happen with these with these patients. And then I've seen this with many other genetic diseases where you understand that when you have a gene that's making a protein, there's if there's a problem with a gene, it's gonna make a funny protein. Well, what does that protein do?
How do you work around it? What other pathways does your body have to compensate for it? How do you optimize the various nutrients that are involved in regulating those those protein interactions? And and like you said, Bruce Ames talked about this. He talked about how one third of our entire DNA codes for enzymes, and every single enzyme requires a helper.
And all the helpers are vitamins and minerals, and all of us need different varying amounts of those in order to function properly. And so this is this is really deep science, and yet it's it's just heartbreaking to me that it's not applied. And and I when I see somebody or a friend who's got a kid with a genetic issue, I'm saying, hey, don't be hopeless. Like, let's look at the biology here. And and now with AI, it's amazing.
Like, I I saw a friend of mine had a kid who had a mutation, and I was like, well, I don't really know much about this. I read about it in medical school, but let me do some research. And I inquired about it, and I was like, okay. What are the proteins? What are the pathways?
What's the biochemistry? What are the workarounds? What should be the dietary interventions? What supplements could help? And I was like, oh, wow.
There's a whole bunch of stuff you can do. And I'm like, you can actually do something and be proactive about it.
Dr. Terry Wahls
You know, and that is what I want everyone who's listening today to understand is there is so much that we can do to create health, to have the best possible life that is possible for you and the people you care about.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. That's it. It's it's it's really the future of medicine, I believe, is is what you're working on, Terry, and what you're researching, which is less about the science of disease and more about the science of health.
Dr. Terry Wahls
I love that. Mhmm.
Dr. Mark Hyman
I've always said that, you know, when you create health, disease goes away as a side effect. You don't have to treat all the diseases. I mean, when you see this, if you just like, I I I was part of this church called the faith based wellness program called the Daniel Plan, and we got a church of 30,000 people to do this lifestyle change program. It was, you know, healthy eating and exercise, and, you know, they already had the community aspect, and and it was amazing to see the the transformation, not just a quarter million pounds of weight loss, but depression going away, autoimmune diseases going away, people, you know, having hospitalizations 10 times a year, not going to the hospital, getting off medication. It didn't matter what the problem was.
When you create health, it's like disease can't find a place to rest. And we saw this with COVID nineteen. Right? People who died were the ones who were unhealthy, who were diabetic, or overweight, or who had some kind of chronic illness. It wasn't necessarily just the virus, it was the host.
And so what you're really talking about is is bringing back the idea of how to create a healthy host, how to create a healthy human being so that disease doesn't have a place to take root. Well, what's next, Terry, for you? What's what's kinda on the horizon? What are you most excited about?
Dr. Terry Wahls
Well, well, actually, I'm most excited about
Dr. Mark Hyman
You're gonna be a 120, so you're just, like, in middle age right
Dr. Terry Wahls
I'm just in middle age. So we're gonna having more medical students. We're gonna have more postdocs. The research grant that we sent off for progressive multiple sclerosis, I'm very excited about that. Well, I I plan to start that study in October.
And I as I mentioned earlier, I am working on developing a protocol for pediatric onset multiple sclerosis. I think that is what I'm excited about. And now after you mentioned MAHA Elevate, I'm going to have to go look into that and develop a proposal for that because, you know, really, is this multimodal lifestyle intervention that optimizes nutrition, stress reduction, sleep, exercise, deep social connection that is the biggest lever for creating health and therefore excluding disease. When I get off this podcast, I'm going to have to go look up MAHA Elevate.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. You're gonna be
Dr. Terry Wahls
team about, that proposal because
Dr. Mark Hyman
You're you're gonna be blown away, Terry. Imagine a Medicare website that says functional medicine on it. Like, that just blew my mind, honestly. And and I think, I'm gonna meet with the the head of the NIH in a few months. I wanna I wanna talk to you about maybe sharing some of your proposals and ideas with him because I I think he'd be very interested.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Yeah. Because, you know, I I think there is less and less resistance to what basically I investigate in research, which is these multiple modifiable lifestyle interventions at once to create health. And as you say, as a side effect, we stabilize and then regress chronic disease.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Incredible, Terry. Well, thank you for your work. I'm so glad you recovered. I don't I think that you're you know, you're you've taken your own suffering and transmuted into something incredible in the world and have given so many people hope and inspiration. And also not just hope, but you've helped so many people recover, and I I've met many of them, and I'm just so grateful for your work.
And and like you, you know, I also suffered from many chronic illnesses and had to recover, and that's really why I can't stop myself from, you know, going going and going.
Dr. Terry Wahls
Yep. We have to we have to keep letting the world know that if you can recover, if I can recover from such profound disability, there is absolutely hope for you as well.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. There is hope. There is hope. I want everybody to leave with a message of hope and possibility, and don't stop looking, searching, asking, and don't take no for an answer because there is often a way, if not to cure, certainly to dramatically improve whatever is going on with you if you understand how the body works and how to work with it and create health. So thank you, Terry.
Thanks for being the inspiration to hear that you are. It's been an honor to know you all these years and to be on this path with you and keep the, you know, the edifice is cracking. I feel like we we've been in this game for a long time, and I can see, you know, the the old the old edifice of medicine is starting to crack, and there's this opening to these new ideas at major academic centers. And I'm I'm really thrilled. So thank you again, Terri, for what you do and for your work.
And where can people find more about you? Where can they learn about your studies?
Dr. Terry Wahls
So go terrywalls.com. That's terry,walls,wahls,.com. And if you add forward slash trials, you'll see the studies that we're at. And terrywalls.com forward /diet, you get a one page handout for the Walles diet. And if you follow me on Instagram at doctor Terri Walles, d r t e r r y w a h l s, get to see what I'm eating and doing.
And occasionally, you get to see me, run out after my sauna and roll in the snow. So, there's lots of, fun stuff there.
Dr. Mark Hyman
Well, thanks, Terry, and thanks, everybody. Make sure you check out our books, our website, our program, our research. If you're somebody out there who cares about this and has some philanthropic dollars, send them her way. She's gonna make good use of my promise. And and everybody listening, hope you got some hope from this conversation and and understand that there is a way out of of the darkness that you may be feeling around some type of chronic illness.
It just takes pointing in the right direction, and I think, you know, we're we're helping you see that hopefully with with the information we shared today. If you love that last video, you're gonna love the next one. Check it out here.