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Welcome to the Mastering Nutrition podcast. Mastering Nutrition is hosted by Chris Masterjohn, a nutrition scientist focused on optimizing mitochondrial health, and founder of BioOptHealth, a program that uses whole genome sequencing, a comprehensive suite of biochemical data, cutting-edge research and deep scientific insights to optimize each person's metabolism by finding their own unique unlocks. He received his PhD in Nutritional Sciences from University of Connecticut at Storrs in 2012, served as a postdoctoral research associate in the Comparative Biosciences department of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's College of Veterinary Medicine from 2012-2014, served as Assistant Professor of Health and Nutrition Sciences at Brooklyn College from 2014-2017, and now works independently in science research and education.
- 751 - How Lactate Alkalinizes Your Muscles
For a long time, most people believed that when we exercise, our muscles make lactic acid, this acidifies the muscles, and the acidity contributes to contractile failure, fatigue, and delayed-onset muscle soreness. Some people still believe this.
You may have heard the argument against it from well-known figures like Andy Galpin, or, if you’re deep into the science, you may have read the work of George Brooks.
In this lesson, we are going to cover the biochemistry of lactate production. We will see that we never make lactic acid, ever. We make lactate. Making lactate is fundamentally alkalinizing.
We will take a look at the presentation of glycolysis in the Berg and Lehninger biochemistry textbooks to see that, on the one hand, they give us everything we need to know to understand that the human body never makes lactic acid, but, on the other hand, they really do not equip us well to understand where acidity does comes from during exercise. This is because they do not consider acid-base balance important enough to completely present the proton balances of the chemical reactions.
Finally, we will cover what does cause muscular fatigue, take a look at the research on lactate supplements, and come to some conclusions about the best way to manage acidity during exercise to maximize performance.
This is part of a larger course on the biochemistry of how we derive energy from food and use it to fuel our wellness, performance, and longevity. Take the full course here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/masterclass-with-masterjohn-energy
To see the slides, watch this lesson on youtube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IrpbLllsSHQ
To obtain the written version with timestamped slides for better studying, see here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/how-lactate-alkalinizes-your-muscles
This lesson is free for one week. After that it will be reserved for Masterpass members. You can learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
You can subscribe to the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/subscribe
2:52 How textbooks present glycolysis
3:36 What is acidity?
4:32 The acidfying and alkalinizing phases of glycolysis
7:09 Glycolysis: A brief review
10:08 The Principles
29:33 The Reactions -- and Where the Textbooks Go Wrong
38:59 Human beings do not make lactic acid
42:13 Lactate transport is even more alkalinizing to muscle
47:44 Robert Robergs Fights an Uphill Battle in Clarifying the Sources of Acidity and the Alkalinizing Effect of Lactate
1:01:08 What causes fatigue?
1:05:15 Does CO2 contribute to acidity?
1:13:45 Where is Glycolysis Getting Backed Up?
1:23:10 Conclusiuons: What's realy going on with exercise-induced acidosis.
1:26:34 Lactate supplements
1:30:53 How to use this information in training for optimal performance.
Fri, 06 Sep 2024 - 1h 34min - 750 - D-Lactate: Groundbreaking Research No One Is Talking About
D-lactate is commonly stated to be exclusively a microbial metabolite.
This is found in assumptions within the medical literature for decades even when it was long-known to be false.
While D-lactate is indeed made by bacteria, D-lactate is also inarguably and irrefutably produced by human enzymes.
In this podcast, moreover, I will argue the following:
Microbial contribution to D-lactate in humans under normal circumstances is negligible.
I coin the term “the D-lactate shuttle” to describe a role for D-lactate that should eventually make its way into biochemistry textbooks alongside the malate-aspartate shuttle and the glycerol phosphate shuttle.
The D-lactate shuttle operates alongside these other shuttles to balance the priorities of conserving cytosolic NAD+, reducing cytosolic acidity, bypassing complex I, or generating ATP. It is uniquely useful as a shuttle when there is an absolute deficit of niacin or NAD(H).
D-lactate is an important contributor to gluconeogenesis that could account for up to 11% of it and rival an individual amino acid.
While D-lactate concentrations in human plasma are infinitesimal, when the downstream metabolism of D-lactate and L-lactate are blocked by genetic disorders, the concentrations of the two forms are similar in plasma. This contrasts wildly with the common claim that flux through D-lactate is “minuscule.” Most likely D-lactate is produced in considerable quantities in liver and kidney but is rarely secreted into plasma because doing so would risk neurotoxicity.
D-lactate should be taken seriously for its potential role in Parkinson’s and in neurological problems generally, for its role in diabetes, and for its extremely underappreciated roles in glycolysis, gluconeogenesis, and the respiratory chain.
Oxalate powerfully impairs D-lactate clearance, so D-lactate should be investigated as a potential link between oxalate and autism, and oxalate-lowering strategies should be seen as a way to improve D-lactate clearance and reduce its potential role in diabetes and neurological disorders.
See the sections on riboflavin, zinc manganese, and glutathione in Testing Nutritional Status: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet, as well as Does CoQ10 Deserve a Spot on Your Longevity Plan? and the How to Detox Manganese guide for managing the relevant nutrients.
Read the written version for live links and references: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/d-lactate-groundbreaking-research
Wed, 31 Jul 2024 - 1h 30min - 749 - Handling Creatine Side Effects
In this podcast we cover elevated creatinine, insomnia, cramps constipation, water retention, hair loss, irritation and anger, lightheadedness during lifting, bloating, aggravation of restless leg syndrome, irritation of asthma, bloody noses, anxiety, headaches, heart palpitations, twitching, and fast or slow heartbeat.
The full podcast and article can be found here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/handling-creatine-side-effectsFri, 12 Jul 2024 - 02min - 748 - Your Cells Are Starving For Creatine
Creatine is like your second mitochondria. Or, the mitochondria’s chief of staff. Or its co-pilot.
Your mitochondria make ATP so you can see clearly, hear accurately, digest your food, power your brain, show off your your shiny skin, lift heavy things, and perform your best at the challenges you face. They do that all with the help of creatine.
Creatine is responsible for spreading the impact of mitochondrial ATP production into the general area of the cell known as the cytosol, and into every organelle outside the mitochondria.
While it is more important in cells with high ATP requirements, variable ATP requirements, and long distances between mitochondria and the source of ATP utilization, it is still incredibly important in every cell.
There is no point in optimizing your mitochondria if you don’t also optimize your creatine.
Many people may believe that the high muscle creatine stores that athletes achieve with creatine supplements are “unnatural” and something not achievable until creatine supplements were available.
Here, I argue that nothing could be further from the truth. Every muscle fiber wants to be exactly as rich in creatine as achieved with creatine supplementation.
All of your cells want to be rich in creatine. Your brain is dying to be this rich in creatine. Your muscles are starving to be this rich in creatine.
It is completely natural to be this rich in creatine, yet most of us in the modern era who don’t supplement just aren’t that optimized.
The creatine we require to be optimized is likely etched deep into our beings by our ancestral consumption of one to two pounds of meat per day. When red and rare, one pound can give the dose that saturates tissue stores. When white and well done, two pounds may be required.
But can we synthesize enough creatine ourselves when all the precursors in place?
Here we examine that question.
But first, a brief review of creatine’s lesser known benefits.
This is educational in nature and not medical or dietetic advice.
The article version has live links, graphs, and references:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/your-cells-are-starving-for-creatine
Handling Creatine Side Effects will be released as a podcast tomorrow but is available as a written article right now:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/handling-creatine-side-effects
Fri, 12 Jul 2024 - 28min - 747 - Is Whole Food Vitamin C Really Different? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #330
Question: Is whole food vitamin C superior to natural because it is part of a tyrosinase complex?
Short Answer: Vitamin C is nearly ubiquitously distributed in plant tissues, and is never bound to any enzyme as a structural complex. Vitamin C promotes absorption of iron from plant foods, inhibits copper absorption, and de-loads copper from ceruloplasmin, which may play a role in distributing copper to tissues. Vitamin C is not capable of destroying ceruloplasmin. These functions follow directly from vitamin C as an electron donor and there is no evidence whatsoever that whole food vitamin C behaves differently in these respects than synthetic vitamin C. However, daily needs in most contexts are 2-400 milligrams of vitamin C per day, which is below the dose shown to potentially cause problems with copper. Getting this from whole foods or whole food supplements is better than using synthetic vitamin C because it avoids GMO corn and Chinese synthetics and provides a host of other beneficial constituents alongside the vitamin C.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-hair-trace-mineral-analysis
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
Is Hair Mineral Testing Useful?
What's the Deal With Seed Oils?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the June 16, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Butyrate for Hashimoto’s? What else?
What in the comprehensive nutritional screening is helping to interpret lactate/pyruvate and ketone ratios?
Is the solution to a respiratory chain disorder to take Niagen?
If I have high manganese on an HTMA, do I need to detox?
Should CFS patients target reducing their serum BH4?
What to do about low alkaline phosphatase?
If my glucose spikes above 140, should I eat fiber and take ACV before the meal, eat cinnamon with the meal, chew slowly, and move for ten minutes after my meals?
Difficulty getting Quest to do the lactate/pyruvate ratio correctly.
Is 38 milligrams of niacinamide enough to rule out niacin deficiency as a cause of low NAD+?
How does optimizing body composition help optimize energy metabolism? Can impaired energy metabolism make someone fatter?
Is monounsaturated fat the best fat?
Manganese followup.
Do you need to stop taking biotin before a biotin test?
What in "a bunch of supplements" flip the lactate/pyruvate ratio from high to low?
NAD infusions, yay or nay?
Why do I feel better after a warm shower, even better than after sunshine?
Should I cut back on vitamin A if I have toxicity symptoms but cutting back makes me get sick?
Do home blood drop tests have to be pricked at the finger?
Is it true that my boyfriend was just born a night owl?
How much eating out is too much?
When measuring ketones, lactate, and glucose at home to optimize energy metabolism, what time of day should we take the measurements?
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-june-a55
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 18 Dec 2023 - 23min - 746 - What's the Deal With Seed Oils? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #329
Question: What Is the Real Issue With Seed Oils? Short Answer: The main issue with seed oils is that they present an oxidative liability. They do not acutely cause oxidative stress, but their polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) are more vulnerable than any other macronutrient to oxidative damage. Oxidative stress can increase because of nutrient deficiencies, toxins, infections, other sources of inflammation, alcohol, or smoking, and it will inevitably increase as a function of aging. As oxidative stress increases, more PUFAs in the tissues mean more damage. At least 0.6 milligrams of vitamin E should be gotten per gram of PUFA in the diet, but vitamin E cannot fully protect against PUFA, so their intake should be moderated to the very low levels needed, as obtained by eating fatty fish once or twice a week, eating eggs daily, and eating 4-8 ounces of liver per week. Additional secondary problems with them include residual solvents and heat damage prior to intake, but the main issue is that we do not want to increase our tissue PUFA content more than needed.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-hair-trace-mineral-analysis
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
Is Hair Mineral Testing Useful?
Is Whole Food Vitamin C Really Different?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the June 16, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Butyrate for Hashimoto’s? What else?
What in the comprehensive nutritional screening is helping to interpret lactate/pyruvate and ketone ratios?
Is the solution to a respiratory chain disorder to take Niagen?
If I have high manganese on an HTMA, do I need to detox?
Should CFS patients target reducing their serum BH4?
What to do about low alkaline phosphatase?
If my glucose spikes above 140, should I eat fiber and take ACV before the meal, eat cinnamon with the meal, chew slowly, and move for ten minutes after my meals?
Difficulty getting Quest to do the lactate/pyruvate ratio correctly.
Is 38 milligrams of niacinamide enough to rule out niacin deficiency as a cause of low NAD+?
How does optimizing body composition help optimize energy metabolism? Can impaired energy metabolism make someone fatter?
Is monounsaturated fat the best fat?
Manganese followup.
Do you need to stop taking biotin before a biotin test?
What in "a bunch of supplements" flip the lactate/pyruvate ratio from high to low?
NAD infusions, yay or nay?
Why do I feel better after a warm shower, even better than after sunshine?
Should I cut back on vitamin A if I have toxicity symptoms but cutting back makes me get sick?
Do home blood drop tests have to be pricked at the finger?
Is it true that my boyfriend was just born a night owl?
How much eating out is too much?
When measuring ketones, lactate, and glucose at home to optimize energy metabolism, what time of day should we take the measurements?
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-june-a55
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 04 Dec 2023 - 30min - 745 - Is Hair Mineral Testing Useful? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #328
Question: How useful is hair trace mineral analysis (HTMA) for nutritional testing?
Short Answer: Hair trace mineral analysis is included as an optional add-on in the comprehensive nutritional screening from Testing Nutritional Status: The Ultimate Cheat Sheet, because it can capture data for some ultra-trace minerals for which there are no better-validated tests, and it might capture a pattern that might not be picked up as quickly with blood work, such as a mineral transport issue. However, its utility is limited by the fact that hair mineral content is not well validated as a test for any specific mineral, is generally anti-validated when there is enough science on a mineral (such as zinc, where hair zinc does not go down in deficiency), and should not be used as a central piece of data without corroboration from other more well-validated tests, which exist for most of the nutrients.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-hair-trace-mineral-analysis
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
What's the Deal With Seed Oils?
Is Whole Food Vitamin C Really Different?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the June 16, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Butyrate for Hashimoto’s? What else?
What in the comprehensive nutritional screening is helping to interpret lactate/pyruvate and ketone ratios?
Is the solution to a respiratory chain disorder to take Niagen?
If I have high manganese on an HTMA, do I need to detox?
Should CFS patients target reducing their serum BH4?
What to do about low alkaline phosphatase?
If my glucose spikes above 140, should I eat fiber and take ACV before the meal, eat cinnamon with the meal, chew slowly, and move for ten minutes after my meals?
Difficulty getting Quest to do the lactate/pyruvate ratio correctly.
Is 38 milligrams of niacinamide enough to rule out niacin deficiency as a cause of low NAD+?
How does optimizing body composition help optimize energy metabolism? Can impaired energy metabolism make someone fatter?
Is monounsaturated fat the best fat?
Manganese followup.
Do you need to stop taking biotin before a biotin test?
What in "a bunch of supplements" flip the lactate/pyruvate ratio from high to low?
NAD infusions, yay or nay?
Why do I feel better after a warm shower, even better than after sunshine?
Should I cut back on vitamin A if I have toxicity symptoms but cutting back makes me get sick?
Do home blood drop tests have to be pricked at the finger?
Is it true that my boyfriend was just born a night owl?
How much eating out is too much?
When measuring ketones, lactate, and glucose at home to optimize energy metabolism, what time of day should we take the measurements?
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-june-a55 Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 20 Nov 2023 - 24min - 744 - Secrets to Superior Cognitive Performance (Without Drugs)
Nutrition is far more powerful than drugs to improve cognitive performance.
We start by looking at cocaine, Adderall, and Ritalin, and show why these drugs cannot possibly hold a candle to nutrition.
Optimal nutrition can definitely optimize the function of dopamine, norepinephrine, acetylcholine, histamine, creatine, and the methylation system, and in doing so can simultaneously optimize focus, motivation, sustained attention, and mental flexibility, and methylation, all while eliminating anxiety, depression, and distraction.
Yet, popular nutritional cognitive stacks in the nootropic space do not have convincing evidence behind them, and this is probably a result of them trying to do too many things in one capsule.
This presentation covers the low-hanging fruit of nutrition for brain power, supplements that help, the importance of individual nutritional optimization, and the central power of finding one's genetic "health super-unlock."
For my simple protocol to optimize methylation, see here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/mthfr-protocol
For more detail on finding your own personal genetic health super-unlock, see here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/unlocking-performance-and-longevity
Fri, 17 Nov 2023 - 51min - 743 - Vitamin C, Whole Food Vs. Synthetic: Does It Matter?
Debunking the myth that vitamin C in plants is found in a special "tyrosinase complex."
For the written article with references, see here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/vitamin-c-whole-food-vs-synthetic
For issues of vitamin C dosing and balancing with other nutrients, see these two links:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/the-powerful-duo-how-glutathione
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/balancing-vitamin-c-and-glutathione-d6f
Thu, 16 Nov 2023 - 07min - 742 - Fact-Checking Gary Brecka on Rogan: A Deep Dive into MTHFR and MethylationTue, 14 Nov 2023 - 06min
- 741 - Cancer, IV Drips, and the Glutathione Vitamin C Connection
Is high-dose vitamin C good for you?
High-dose intravenous vitamin C can selectively kill cancer cells in live patients and can save sepsis patients from dying, but it acts as a pro-oxidant in cancer and an antioxidant in sepsis.
So what does it do in the rest of us?
Oral doses of 2000 milligrams raise oxalate levels in most people, and as little as 400 milligrams raises oxalate in some people.
This seems to be the most sensitive indicator of a delicate imbalance with glutathione and other factors needed to recycle vitamin C. Such a balance actually needs to be avoided when killing cancer yet is critical to maintaining health in every other context.
Given that vitamin C is important to immunity and general health, how do we take advantage of these benefits without upsetting the delicate balance with glutathione and the propensity to generate oxalate?
That is the topic of this podcast.
This podcast is a preview of a video only available to Masterpass members.
Get evergreen access to the video and podcast, as well as the written article with references, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/balancing-vitamin-c-and-glutathione-d6f
Mon, 06 Nov 2023 - 02min - 740 - How to Find the Root Cause of Autoimmunity? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #327
Question: How to Find the Root Cause of Autoimmunity? Short Answer: Autoimmune conditions are likely driven by deficiencies of vitamins A and D, which contribute to post-infectious autoimmunity by compromising the rhythmic rise and fall of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs), and to autoimmunity regardless of infections through impaired suppression of Th17 helper T cells. More broadly, infections and tissue damage are the most likely drivers of autoimmunity onset. However, energy metabolism governs everything through the second law of thermodynamics, which holds that energy must be used to prevent everything from randomly mixing, and this includes randomly mixing the immune defense against pathogens with immune attacks on the host. In this example, we discuss how a respiratory chain disorder would compromise absorption and distribution of zinc and compromise the oxidation of NADH to NAD+, and how both of these would interact with a genetic impairment in acetaldehyde dehydrogenase to prevent the activation of vitamin A to retinoic acid. Autoimmunity thus results as one of many symptoms of vitamin A deficiency driven not by lack of vitamin A, but rather by impaired activation of vitamin A, secondary to impaired energy metabolism.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-nac-biofilms-vitamin
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
Can NAC hurt your gut health?
Why Would Vitamin C Cause Joint Pain, Muscle Pain, and Brain Fog?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the May 13, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
GLA to lower hydroxyhaemopyrrolin-2-one?
When would I use the StrateGene and Genova Methylation Panel for nutritional testing?
Energy metabolism as a root cause of gut issues?
Nutrition for skin healing?
Nutrition for hypnic jerks?
Suggestions for snoring or sleep apnea?
Nutrition to protect against restaurant meals?
What is the cause of crusty eyes in the morning?
What causes brain fog?
How much oxalate should one eat each day?
Should I be concerned about low alkaline phosphatase?
What nutrients give tall children to short parents?
Energy metabolism impairment mimicking Wilson's disease.
Can taking digestive enzymes reduce our own production?
Rapid-fire response to non-winners from the question contest.
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-may
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 06 Nov 2023 - 20min - 738 - The Powerful Duo: How Glutathione and Vitamin C IV Drips Impact Cancer
High-dose intravenous (IV) vitamin C has the potential to kill cancer cells and prolong the survival of terminal cancer patients.
This podcast is a preview, the full video is available only to Masterpass members.
See the written article with links to references here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/the-powerful-duo-how-glutathione
Subscribe to the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/subscribe
I am not a medical doctor and this is not medical advice. Please do not make cancer prevention or treatment decisions based on this information and if you make any such decisions discuss them with your physician first.
Wed, 01 Nov 2023 - 736 - Startled?! Try Glycine!
The ability to become startled is an adaptive behavior that protects us from being injured by a sudden threat, and prepares us for the fight-or-flight response when necessary.
Nevertheless, getting startled too easily can be a sign that something is wrong.
Here's what to do about it.
For the written version with links to references and links to testing, see here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/startled-try-glycine
Sat, 28 Oct 2023 - 12min - 735 - Hormones Are Never In Charge
Hormones matter, but they are never in charge. Their abnormalities are never the root cause of anything.
All hormones do is communicate the biochemistry of one tissue to the biochemistry of another tissue.
In this episode:
Three Reasons For Hormones to Be Messed Up Exceptions to the Rule Leptin, Insulin, and Thyroid Hormone As an Example How to Approach HormonesFor the written version, the links to references, and the links to testing, see here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/hormones-are-never-in-charge
Fri, 27 Oct 2023 - 21min - 734 - Biotin’s Health Benefits: Way Beyond Hair and Nails
Most people who take biotin take it for their hair and nails. Yet biotin does much more than this. Learn what to use it for, how much to take, and how to avoid adverse effects in less than ten minutes.
Read the written and fully referenced version here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/biotins-health-benefits-way-beyond
Get my short and sweet tips on each nutrient in the Cliff Notes here:
https://chris-masterjohn-phd.myshopify.com/products/the-vitamins-and-minerals-101-cliff-notes
It's free to Masterpass members here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/paid-subscribers-now-have-free-access
Thu, 26 Oct 2023 - 07min - 733 - Exposing Harmful Supplements: Biotin's Dark Side
This is how to use a simple home measurement to expose the harmful effects of a supplement before they even happen.
Read the article here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/the-dark-side-of-biotin
Subscribe to my newsletter to get my series on improving respiratory chain function as soon as new articles come out: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/subscribe
See the "super unlock" article here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/unlocking-performance-and-longevity
Tue, 24 Oct 2023 - 14min - 732 - Why Would Vitamin C cause muscle pain, joint pain, and brain fog? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #326
Question: Why Would Vitamin C cause muscle pain, joint pain, and brain fog? Short Answer: Acutely, vitamin C would likely cause these effects by generating oxalate, which could cause crystals that lead to muscle and joint pain, and could cut energy metabolism in half, leading to brain fog. This vulnerability could result from deficiencies of any of the B vitamins, any of the electrolytes, or of iron, copper, or sulfur; from diabetes, low adrenals, or hypothyroidism; or from any of the hundreds of genetic defects in energy metabolism, only one of which is glucose 6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency; or any one of a huge number of toxins that impair energy metabolism. Chronically, vitamin C may increase the harms of iron overload or contribute to copper deficiency. The main ways to manage these latter issues are to take vitamin C away from meals, to maintain good copper status through proper dietary intake, and to treat iron overload with phlebotomy.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-nac-biofilms-vitamin
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
Can NAC hurt your gut health?
How to Find the Root Cause of Autoimmunity?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the May 13, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
GLA to lower hydroxyhaemopyrrolin-2-one?
When would I use the StrateGene and Genova Methylation Panel for nutritional testing?
Energy metabolism as a root cause of gut issues?
Nutrition for skin healing?
Nutrition for hypnic jerks?
Suggestions for snoring or sleep apnea?
Nutrition to protect against restaurant meals?
What is the cause of crusty eyes in the morning?
What causes brain fog?
How much oxalate should one eat each day?
Should I be concerned about low alkaline phosphatase?
What nutrients give tall children to short parents?
Energy metabolism impairment mimicking Wilson's disease.
Can taking digestive enzymes reduce our own production?
Rapid-fire response to non-winners from the question contest.
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-may
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 23 Oct 2023 - 27min - 731 - Why High-Dose Biotin Could be the Answer for Your Blood Sugar, Brains, and Beauty
The use of high-dose biotin supplements has increased almost 30-fold over the last twenty years for such problems as diabetes, smell and taste disorders, disorders of the hair, skin, and nails, and multiple sclerosis.
Studies show it can improve diabetes, and case reports show it can miraculously recover lost smell and taste even when smell and taste were lost as a result of surgery or the side effects of medications or other supplements.
Yet, some studies show multiple sclerosis gets worse on high-dose biotin. I personally developed clumsiness, short-term memory loss, and a short temper on high-dose biotin.
Some studies show it makes blood sugar get better, yet it made my blood sugar get worse.
High-dose biotin can also cause wide-ranging errors in lab tests with the potential to mask recent heart attacks, pregnancies, or allergies; to misdiagnose thyroid conditions; to give false signals about the presence or progression of tumors; to falsely raise vitamin D, B12, and folate levels; to falsely alter many hormone levels; to generate false positives for HIV and hepatitis; and to lead to unnecessary surgery and possibly even death as a result of diagnostic errors.
Most people need more biotin than they get.
Some one in 30 people need high-dose biotin for genetic reasons, and most other people should be getting lower doses.
So, how do we know how much we need, and whether we are getting the right amount? When is the right time to break open the bottle of the ten-milligram capsules?
This article covers the safety and efficacy of high-dose biotin for all the conditions documented in the literature, its potential anti-fertility effects, and how and when to balance it with other vitamins.
This podcast is a preview of a podcast reserved for Masterpass members.
Get permanent access to the video and podcast, and get the written and fully referenced article, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/when-high-dose-biotin-is-truly-needed
Wed, 18 Oct 2023 - 03min - 730 - Why You Need THIS Supplement On a High-Protein Diet: Game-Changing Effects Explained by a PhD
If you are eating a high-protein diet, you probably aren’t getting enough biotin.
This is especially true if you are a protein-fueled athlete and find your skin too oily, too itchy, or too red; if your blood sugar is getting out of control; or if you simply feel down in the dumps. And it’s especially true if you find your hands or feet tingling or get subtle sensations of something crawling on your skin.
Alternatively, if you’re pregnant or looking to conceive, this is something you really need to understand.
This is a free preview of an episode reserved for Masterpass members.
Get the full episode as well as the written and fully referenced article here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/high-protein-you-need-more-biotin
Wed, 18 Oct 2023 - 05min - 727 - A PhD's Secret Weapon: The Four Biomarkers Every Expert Should, But Doesn’t, Analyze
The most useful tests are the ones no one ever orders.
This podcast is available for free for 48 hours, and then will only be available to Masterpass members.
The written and fully referenced article, the podcast, and the permanently available video can be found here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/how-to-interpret-ketone-ratios-and
Fri, 13 Oct 2023 - 04min - 726 - Can NAC hurt your gut health? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #325
Question: Can NAC hurt your gut health? Short Answer: N-acetylcysteine or NAC can be used at a dose of 600 to 2,400 milligrams per day for 5-10 days to disrupt biofilms and make it easier for antimicrobials to kill bacteria. Animal studies suggest that acute doses up to 6 grams do not deplete mucus or cause ulceration, but that an acute dose of 17.5 grams can deplete mucus and cause ulcers within two hours. Human studies suggest that 10 grams per day can be used for 24 weeks with fewer than 1 in 6 people complaining of gastrointestinal side effects. Yet, chronic use of NAC will thin the mucus, disrupt the biofilms used by normal healthy microbiota, and possibly deliver excessive sulfur to certain components of the microbiome. Therefore, I would not use it except for specific, targeted reasons, and I would not use it at a dose higher than needed or for a duration longer than needed.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-nac-biofilms-vitamin
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
Why Would Vitamin C cause muscle pain, joint pain, and brain fog?
How to Find the Root Cause of Autoimmunity?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the May 13, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
GLA to lower hydroxyhaemopyrrolin-2-one?
When would I use the StrateGene and Genova Methylation Panel for nutritional testing?
Energy metabolism as a root cause of gut issues?
Nutrition for skin healing?
Nutrition for hypnic jerks?
Suggestions for snoring or sleep apnea?
Nutrition to protect against restaurant meals?
What is the cause of crusty eyes in the morning?
What causes brain fog?
How much oxalate should one eat each day?
Should I be concerned about low alkaline phosphatase?
What nutrients give tall children to short parents?
Energy metabolism impairment mimicking Wilson's disease.
Can taking digestive enzymes reduce our own production?
Rapid-fire response to non-winners from the question contest.
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-may Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 09 Oct 2023 - 41min - 725 - How I Found My Health “Super Unlock” After 20 Years of Research and 20,000 Genes Tested
Each person has one to six highly unique unlocks that will only work for them, and this is how to find them. This podcast is only available here for the next 48 hours.
This video is a free preview of a full-length 69-minute podcast. You can access the full video, full podcast, and the written and fully referenced article here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/unlocking-performance-and-longevity
Sun, 08 Oct 2023 - 15min - 724 - How can I protect against oxalates? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #324
Question: How can I protect against oxalates? Short Answer: Getting 300-400 mg calcium between food and supplements at each meal will minimize oxalate absorption. Maintaining postprandial urine pH in the 6.4-6.8 range by getting 3-5 grams of potassium per day from food or from organic acid salts such as potassium citrate will prevent its crystallization in the kidney. Reducing dietary oxalate will prevent any possible damage in the gut.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-blood-glucose-and-oxalate
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
Why Should Postprandial Glucose Be Kept Under 140 mg/dL?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the April 12, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
What Causes Hypercholesterolemia and Does It Matter?
How to Reverse Coronary Calcification?
How to do a comprehensive nutritional screening
How long after eating improperly cooked egg whites should I wait to take biotin?
Is the extrusion process as harmful as some claim?
How long can one fast before micronutrient deficiencies become an issue?
Do B vitamins compete with each other for absorption?
Why is thirst a symptom of diabetes?
Do I agree with Peter Attia that ApoB should be driven as low as pharmacologically possible?
During a fast, does the body break down muscle?
How do you rest and refeed your brain?
Why would someone have high RBC magnesium but low serum magnesium?
GLA deficiency?
Should we eat for our ethnicity?
How convincing are polyphenol studies?
Can coronary calcium be driven by oxalate?
Citrulline for vasodilation
How to reduce catabolism
Rapid-fire run-through of orphaned questions from the submission contest, including a detailed look at Nadia’s thyroid numbers
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-april
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 25 Sep 2023 - 04min - 723 - Why Should Postprandial Glucose Be Kept Under 140 mg/dL? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #323
Question: Why should postprandial blood glucose be kept under 140 milligrams per deciliter? Short Answer: When blood glucose rises above 140 mg/dL, this is the approximate point at which it spills into the polyol pathway at a greater-than-normal rate, which represents a suboptimal state of metabolism that is likely to hurt antioxidant status and compromise detoxification pathways as well as the recycling of vitamin K and folate. It must be kept in mind that a healthy person will adapt to glycemic loads they consume regularly. Thus, a one-time spike above 140 mg/dL should never be used to conclude anything whatsoever. Only repeated spikes above this level with repeated consumption of the same glycemic load over several days to several weeks should be used as a cause for concern.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-blood-glucose-and-oxalate
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
How can I protect against oxalates?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the April 12, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
What Causes Hypercholesterolemia and Does It Matter?
How to Reverse Coronary Calcification?
How to do a comprehensive nutritional screening
How long after eating improperly cooked egg whites should I wait to take biotin?
Is the extrusion process as harmful as some claim?
How long can one fast before micronutrient deficiencies become an issue?
Do B vitamins compete with each other for absorption?
Why is thirst a symptom of diabetes?
Do I agree with Peter Attia that ApoB should be driven as low as pharmacologically possible?
During a fast, does the body break down muscle?
How do you rest and refeed your brain?
Why would someone have high RBC magnesium but low serum magnesium?
GLA deficiency?
Should we eat for our ethnicity?
How convincing are polyphenol studies?
Can coronary calcium be driven by oxalate?
Citrulline for vasodilation
How to reduce catabolism
Rapid-fire run-through of orphaned questions from the submission contest, including a detailed look at Nadia’s thyroid numbers
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-april
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 11 Sep 2023 - 10min - 722 - Methylene Blue in 10 Minutes
Watch the full-length video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhgGGbdw4zE&t=8621s
Get my free 51--page report, Methylene Blue: Biohacker's Delight or Playing With Fire?, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/the-guide-to-methylene-blue
Sat, 02 Sep 2023 - 09min - 721 - Methylene Blue: Biohacker's Delight, or Playing With Fire?
Get the written and referenced version here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/the-guide-to-methylene-blue
This is a 51-page guide in which you will learn the following:
The Origin of Methylene Blue
The Entry of Methylene Blue Into Medicine
From Malaria to Many Uses in Medicine
How Methylene Blue Works
A Redox-Reactive Dye
The Blue Bottle Experiment
Methylene Blue Radicals, Photoexcited States, and Demethylated Metabolites
Methylene Blue Can Oxidize and Reduce Many Targets
Methylene Blue Can Rewire the Mitochondrial Respiratory Chain
Rewiring the Respiratory Chain Does Not Make It Better
Methylene Blue Increases Hydrogen Peroxide Hydrogen Peroxide Kills Microbes, Has Hormetic Benefits, But Is Still Ultimately Toxic
Methylene Blue Causes Redox Cycling of Hemoglobin Methylene Blue Is a Strong Monoamine Oxidase A Inhibitor
Methylene Blue Inhibits Nitric Oxide Synthase Mechanistic Conclusions Is Methylene Blue Fundamentally Hormetic?
Methylene Blue Fails in Alzheimer’s, and Causes a Worrisome Side Effect
Whether Methylene Blue Helps Or Hurts Depends on Whether You Need It
Natural Alternatives for Hormesis and Rewiring the Respiratory Chain
Who Should Use Methylene Blue?
Once more you can get it here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/the-guide-to-methylene-blue
Fri, 01 Sep 2023 - 1h 18min - 720 - What is the relationship between copper and estrogen? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #322
Question: What is the relationship between copper and estrogen?
Short Answer: Estrogen moves copper from the mother’s bloodstream to the fetus during pregnancy. Its action at the intestines is poorly understood but I believe estrogen and progesterone interact to promote intestinal copper absorption. Maintaining pregnancy-level hormones while not pregnant poses a risk of promoting too much absorption of copper from food without transferring it to a growing baby. Copper status should be monitored when using supplemental hormones to avoid copper toxicity. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-hair-graying-copper
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
How to slow or reverse graying of hair?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the March 14, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
How to slow or reverse graying of hair?
What about that new erythritol study?
Can nicotinamide riboside cause hemolytic anemia in someone with G6PDH deficiency?
Why is citric acid alkalinizing?
If I switch my vitamin E to tocotrienols, am I missing anything?
Vitamin A deficiency and toxicity symptoms at the same time?
Vitamin A in pregnancy
How long should I wait to measure whole blood riboflavin after making a change to my supplement?
How to stack supplements for blood pressure?
Rejuvant calcium alpha-ketoglutarate for anti-aging?
Are dietary AGEs a problem?
Is it safe to keep taking high-dose zinc?
What’s the best way to get phosphorus?
Weight loss question.
How to eat to 80% full
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-march
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 28 Aug 2023 - 12min - 719 - Why Would Citrate or Malate Cause Insomnia?Wed, 23 Aug 2023 - 31min
- 718 - What to Do About ConstipationTue, 22 Aug 2023 - 41min
- 717 - How to slow or reverse graying of hair? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #321
Question: How to slow graying of hairs and potentially reverse it?
Short Answer: What works for any given individual will likely be to find the weakest link and fix it, from among the following systems: the signaling of energy abundance (body fat, insulin sensitivity, thyroid hormone, adequate protein, individualized meeting of carbohydrate needs, good management of psychosocial stress, supporting neuroendocrine signaling with copper, vitamin C, zinc, and glycine, and supporting thyroid function with iodine and selenium); the biochemical infrastructure of energy production (all the B vitamins, iron, copper, sulfur, magnesium, potassium, and managing genetic idiosyncrasies impacting energy metabolism), and antioxidant protection (protein, vitamin C, vitamin E, zinc, copper, selenium, iron, and manganese). This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-hair-graying-copper
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answer to this question:
What is the relationship between copper and estrogen?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the March 14, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
What is the relationship between copper and estrogen?
What about that new erythritol study?
Can nicotinamide riboside cause hemolytic anemia in someone with G6PDH deficiency?
Why is citric acid alkalinizing?
If I switch my vitamin E to tocotrienols, am I missing anything?
Vitamin A deficiency and toxicity symptoms at the same time?
Vitamin A in pregnancy
How long should I wait to measure whole blood riboflavin after making a change to my supplement?
How to stack supplements for blood pressure?
Rejuvant calcium alpha-ketoglutarate for anti-aging?
Are dietary AGEs a problem?
Is it safe to keep taking high-dose zinc?
What’s the best way to get phosphorus?
Weight loss question.
How to eat to 80% full
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-march
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 14 Aug 2023 - 22min - 716 - How Much Iron Can We Absorb At Once? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #320
Question: How much iron can we absorb at once?
Short Answer: High-dose iron will produce more total absorbed iron, but will also leave more in the gut, which could cause constipation or disturb the gut microbiome. If desperate for quick relief, 200 milligrams per day of iron taken in the morning will work faster than lower doses or the same dose taken in the afternoon. For most people, however, I believe it is best to start with 18 milligrams of iron, and only increase it to 27 or 36 milligrams, or higher, if needed. If it is difficult to raise iron with a supplement, try eating a temporary carnivore diet that includes egg yolks but not whites, or at least try taking your iron with a breakfast that matches this description. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-sulfate-synthesis
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Is It Important to Get Vitamin D Sulfate Specifically From the Sun?
What cofactors are needed to synthesize and recycle BH4?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the February 15, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Is It Important to Get Vitamin D Sulfate Specifically From the Sun?
What cofactors are needed to synthesize and recycle BH4?
What nutrients are important for long-term PPI use?
For how long does transferrin saturation respond to recent iron-rich food?
Muscle spasms: creatine, creatinine, sodium, and potassium.
Hematologists ignore iron saturation.
How to detox arsenic?
Could folic acid supplements impair BH4 recycling?
How to increase butyrate?
More on hematologists and transferrin saturation.
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-february
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 31 Jul 2023 - 28min - 715 - What cofactors are needed to synthesize and recycle BH4? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #319
Question: What cofactors are needed to synthesize and recycle BH4? Short Answer: Zinc, magnesium, potassium, and niacin are the cofactors needed for the synthesis and recycling of BH4. Folate and methylation are not involved, though high-dose folate or folic acid could hypothetically hurt BH4 recycling since both are recycled by dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-sulfate-synthesis
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Is It Important to Get Vitamin D Sulfate Specifically From the Sun?
How Much Iron Can We Absorb At Once?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the February 15, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Is It Important to Get Vitamin D Sulfate Specifically From the Sun?
How Much Iron Can We Absorb At Once?
What nutrients are important for long-term PPI use?
For how long does transferrin saturation respond to recent iron-rich food?
Muscle spasms: creatine, creatinine, sodium, and potassium.
Hematologists ignore iron saturation.
How to detox arsenic?
Could folic acid supplements impair BH4 recycling?
How to increase butyrate?
More on hematologists and transferrin saturation.
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-february
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 17 Jul 2023 - 13min - 714 - Is It Important to Get Vitamin D Sulfate Specifically From the Sun? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #318
Question: Is it important to get vitamin D sulfate specifically from the sun? Short Answer: It is important to get morning outdoor sunlight as close to every day as possible for your circadian rhythm, and to get some exposure to unprotected sunlight during the day when UV is available, but at doses less than needed to cause reddening, and it is equally important to always avoid burning. There are many reasons for this, and the cholesterol sulfate hypothesis — to which the vitamin D sulfate hypothesis is peripheral — is an interesting and worthy hypothesis but should not be the final arbiter of your sun exposure habits. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-sulfate-synthesis
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
What cofactors are needed to synthesize and recycle BH4?
How Much Iron Can We Absorb At Once?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the February 15, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
What cofactors are needed to synthesize and recycle BH4?
How Much Iron Can We Absorb At Once?
What nutrients are important for long-term PPI use?
For how long does transferrin saturation respond to recent iron-rich food?
Muscle spasms: creatine, creatinine, sodium, and potassium.
Hematologists ignore iron saturation.
How to detox arsenic?
Could folic acid supplements impair BH4 recycling?
How to increase butyrate?
More on hematologists and transferrin saturation.
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-february Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 03 Jul 2023 - 28min - 713 - When to Consider Inborn Errors of Metabolism
These are considered rare, yet this reinforces the pattern of never looking for them, leading them to likely be massively under-diagnosed.
Many are highly relevant to nutrition.
Written Version:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/when-to-consider-inborn-errors-of
Mitochondrial Energy Summit:
https://drtalks.com/mitochondrial-summit/?uid=406&oid=47&ref=3053
My MTHFR Protocol:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/mthfr-protocol
Sat, 24 Jun 2023 - 23min - 712 - How to Recover From Fish Oil
Iris from Denmark has generously donated an hour of her consulting time with me to you, the community, so that her case can be used to raise awareness of the importance of arachidonic acid and the pitfalls of getting too much EPA.
In this podcast, we cover:
00:27 Iris's history of too much omega-3 and not enough omega-6. 01:52 The symptoms that have improved upon reversing this. 04:54 Is it correct that the body needs both arachidonic acid and DHA to resolve inflammation? 09:03 How to navigate this during pregnancy, where DHA and AA are both important for the baby but EPA is still a concern? 14:06 Does the body have a storage supply of omega-3? 18:00 What is more important, AA/EPA balance or total PUFA intake? What is more harmful, signaling compound imbalance, oxidative damage, or membrane fluidity distortion? 31:05 Is the proper strategy supplementing AA while reducing EPA, or is it getting more vitamin E? 33:30 What about the ratio of PUFA to saturated fat or total fat? 35:55 Vitamin E cannot protect against all the risks of PUFA. Here are the other things that matter. 41:50 Supporting the marine ecology.
Fri, 23 Jun 2023 - 44min - 711 - Can B12 and Folate Help Detoxify Oxalate?
This may explain why high-dose biotin causes "oxalate dumping" symptoms in some people but not others. Written and referenced version: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/can-b12-and-folate-help-detoxify Mitochondrial Energy Summit: https://drtalks.com/mitochondrial-summit/?uid=406&oid=47&ref=3053 My MTHFR Protocol: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/mthfr-protocol
Fri, 23 Jun 2023 - 16min - 709 - If I have a hereditary weakness in breaking down branched-chain amino acids, what cofactors do I need to consider, and do I need to restrict my protein when losing weight? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #317
Question: If a person has a hereditary weakness for Branched Chain Amino Acid Catabolism would this impact the type of diet they might choose to loose weight? Should they limit protein if it will increase their need for nutrients like Biotin?What are all the possible cofactors we should consider supplementing to support Leucine catabolism?
Short Answer: Metabolizing branched-chain amino acids requires all B vitamins except folate, calcium, magnesium, potassium, and chloride. If you have a genetic impairment in this pathway, then reducing branched-chain amino acid intake and doubling down on cofactors is important during weight loss because the pathway will be stressed more in the catabolic state. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-plant-compounds-and
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque?
How do I consume omega-3 without hurting my omega-6 status?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the January 21, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque?
How do I consume omega-3 without hurting my omega-6 status?
Could carnitine help a fatty acid oxidation disorder?
Should anti-inflammatories be taken away from workouts?
How does vitamin C affect autoimmune disease?
Folate form and purines
Can methylene blue help the respiratory chain?
Best references for omega-3 and inflammation resolution?
Smoothies and blood sugar
Is transdermal magnesium oil effective for osteoarthritis?
Why do K2 and Mg help my nerve pain?
Should I separate my potassium benzoate and vitamin C supplements?
The best and most simple comprehensive micronutrient panel.
How much K2 is needed in pregnancy?
How do I accentuate the fasting-feeding cycle?
Could K2 help with environmental pollution?
Why do shoulders crack when we get older?
Why do I react poorly to anti-inflammatory foods?
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-january
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 19 Jun 2023 - 20min - 708 - How do I consume omega-3 without hurting my omega-6 status? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #316
Question: If I don’t want to hurt my omega 6 status through my omega 3 intake, how do I do that? Is it simply a question of taking them at separate times? Or is it a question of dose? And if it is a question of dose, how do I know when to start eating fish and taking my omega 3 supplement again?
Short Answer: How they are combined in meals is not important, but it is important not to have too much EPA in cell membranes relative to arachidonic acid, and this is driven by cumulative intake over years. For someone who has consumed too much EPA for many years, the best approach is to eat liver and egg yolks for arachidonic acid while getting omega-3s from a DHA supplement and not from fish, fish oil, or fish liver oil.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-plant-compounds-and
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque?
If I have a hereditary weakness in breaking down branched-chain amino acids, what cofactors do I need to consider, and do I need to restrict my protein when losing weight?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the January 21, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque?
If I have a hereditary weakness in breaking down branched-chain amino acids, what cofactors do I need to consider, and do I need to restrict my protein when losing weight?
Could carnitine help a fatty acid oxidation disorder?
Should anti-inflammatories be taken away from workouts?
How does vitamin C affect autoimmune disease?
Folate form and purines
Can methylene blue help the respiratory chain?
Best references for omega-3 and inflammation resolution?
Smoothies and blood sugar
Is transdermal magnesium oil effective for osteoarthritis?
Why do K2 and Mg help my nerve pain?
Should I separate my potassium benzoate and vitamin C supplements?
The best and most simple comprehensive micronutrient panel.
How much K2 is needed in pregnancy?
How do I accentuate the fasting-feeding cycle?
Could K2 help with environmental pollution?
Why do shoulders crack when we get older?
Why do I react poorly to anti-inflammatory foods?
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-january Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 05 Jun 2023 - 24min - 707 - Energy Metabolism Governs Everything
That was not an exaggeration. Everything. In this podcast I cover why riboflavin abolished my allergies, why a respiratory chain disorder could cause an autoimmune condition, and why a hypothetical athlete who went keto to take home the silver might be able to use thiamin to take home the gold.
Most importantly, I cover why these are idiosyncratic needs, not general rules.
The generalizable principle is that nothing is more central to life and health than energy.
Read the written version with links here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/energy-metabolism-governs-everything
Get the methylation protocol here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/mthfr-protocol
Check out my course on energy metabolism here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/masterclass-with-masterjohn-energy
Wed, 31 May 2023 - 42min - 706 - Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #315
Question: Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque?
Short Answer: Yes, but if you don’t have specific intolerances to plant compounds the best thing to do is simply aim to meet your vitamin and mineral targets from a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, herbs, and spices, rather than trying to use specific plant compounds from specific studies in any specific amount.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-plant-compounds-and
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
How do I consume omega-3 without hurting my omega-6 status?
If I have a hereditary weakness in breaking down branched-chain amino acids, what cofactors do I need to consider, and do I need to restrict my protein when losing weight?
If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the January 21, 2023 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Can plant foods and their phytochemicals be used to reduce arterial plaque?
How do I consume omega-3 without hurting my omega-6 status?
If I have a hereditary weakness in breaking down branched-chain amino acids, what cofactors do I need to consider, and do I need to restrict my protein when losing weight?
Could carnitine help a fatty acid oxidation disorder?
Should anti-inflammatories be taken away from workouts?
How does vitamin C affect autoimmune disease?
Folate form and purines
Can methylene blue help the respiratory chain?
Best references for omega-3 and inflammation resolution?
Smoothies and blood sugar
Is transdermal magnesium oil effective for osteoarthritis?
Why do K2 and Mg help my nerve pain?
Should I separate my potassium benzoate and vitamin C supplements?
The best and most simple comprehensive micronutrient panel.
How much K2 is needed in pregnancy?
How do I accentuate the fasting-feeding cycle?
Could K2 help with environmental pollution?
Why do shoulders crack when we get older?
Why do I react poorly to anti-inflammatory foods?
Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-january Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 22 May 2023 - 28min - 705 - What to Do About Twitching | Masterjohn Q&A Files #314
Question: What can be done about twitching? Short Answer: Most twitching will be driven by glutamate/GABA balance or acetylcholine regulation, and the most likely nutritional issues are any of the electrolytes or any factor that influences energy metabolism. The best way to address it is to consider the conditions that influence it and then trial and error your way through each potential nutritional issue in order of which ones make the most sense for your individual case first. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-phosphatidylcholine In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Phosphatidylcholine and TMAO Vitamin K2 and Undercarboxylated OsteocalcinIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the December 14, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Inositol, What Is It Good For? If I am at risk of heart disease, and phosphatidylcholine raises my TMAO, should I stop the supplement? If undercarboxylated osteocalcin (ucOCN) has health benefits and vitamin K2 decreases it, what does that mean for vitamin K2 supplementation? Maragen Calcium Could slow methylation cause high selenium levels? My current thoughts on cholesterol and heart disease If I already have oxidative stress, what ducks should I have in a row before supplementing with iron? Is it safe to take eight milligrams of zinc daily without copper? What to do about developing sensitivities to an increasingly broad range of foods? What else to do about hemochromatosis besides phlebotomy? If gestational diabetes is just a biotin deficiency, why are women who are insulin resistant prior to pregnancy at higher risk for it, including women with PCOS? What to do about chronically elevated amylase and lipase? What to do about a non-drinker having very high GGT and occasionally high ALT? What are the most common vitamin and mineral deficiencies? What are the best supplements, vitamins, and minerals for OCD and depression? What is the connection between low pyruvate and high ketones? Is high LDL a concern if the carotid IMT and coronary calcium scan are clear? Do I trust food allergy tests?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-december
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 08 May 2023 - 07min - 704 - Can Biotin Help Detoxify Oxalate?
This is a hypothesis that may reconcile some anecdotes and has many hints suggested in the enzymological literature.
First, make sure you get my MTHFR Protocol, my free 7-page quick guide to optimizing and personalizing your methylation status, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/blog/2019/03/01/start-here-for-mthfr-and-methylation
For the written version with references, as well as the 58 comments, including from Susan Owens, head over to Substack:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/can-biotin-help-detoxify-oxalate
Wed, 19 Apr 2023 - 40min - 703 - Vitamin K2 and Undercarboxylated Osteocalcin | Masterjohn Q&A Files #313
Question: If undercarboxylated osteocalcin has health benefits, and vitamin K2 decreases it, what does that mean for K2 supplementation? Short Answer: Vitamin K2 helps secure osteocalcin in bone matrix, where it is decarboxylated and released as an endocrine hormone in response to certain stimuli. When released, it acts to optimize insulin secretion, insulin sensitivity, fuel use during exercise, and male testosterone. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-phosphatidylcholine In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Phosphatidylcholine and TMAO What to Do About TwitchingIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the December 14, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Inositol, What Is It Good For? If I am at risk of heart disease, and phosphatidylcholine raises my TMAO, should I stop the supplement? Maragen Calcium Could slow methylation cause high selenium levels? My current thoughts on cholesterol and heart disease If I already have oxidative stress, what ducks should I have in a row before supplementing with iron? Is it safe to take eight milligrams of zinc daily without copper? What to do about developing sensitivities to an increasingly broad range of foods? What else to do about hemochromatosis besides phlebotomy? If gestational diabetes is just a biotin deficiency, why are women who are insulin resistant prior to pregnancy at higher risk for it, including women with PCOS? What to do about chronically elevated amylase and lipase? What to do about a non-drinker having very high GGT and occasionally high ALT? What are the most common vitamin and mineral deficiencies? What are the best supplements, vitamins, and minerals for OCD and depression? What is the connection between low pyruvate and high ketones? Is high LDL a concern if the carotid IMT and coronary calcium scan are clear? An algorithm to fix twitching Do I trust food allergy tests?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-december
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 17 Apr 2023 - 17min - 702 - Self Experiments In the Biochemically Unoptimized State
Finally, the long-awaited results of my self-experiments conducted from September through January are released!
First, make sure you get my MTHFR Protocol, my free 7-page quick guide to optimizing and personalizing your methylation status, here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/blog/2019/03/01/start-here-for-mthfr-and-methylation
The primary abnormalities in my metabolism during this pre-biotin period were 1) 15 minutes of paradoxical rise in ketones after eating rice, 2) paradoxical rise in lactate during fasting that is suppressed by my meals, and 3) a massively outsized lactate response to alcohol. The first two were provoked by an 18-hour fast and the last by undereating prior to the alcohol.
These support a deficiency in the biotin-dependent, manganese-dependent, oxalate-poisoned enzyme pyruvate carboxylase.
This is long, and if your time is limited, you may want to skip to “The Bottom Line” in this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/self-experiments-in-the-biochemically
However, there are some major reasons to commit some time to reading the whole report: It serves as a crash course on the most relevant biochemistry of glucose, ketones, lactate, and ethanol across contexts that include general health, diabetes, infancy, and pregnancy. It includes a literature review of all of the relevant “normal” data.
For example, what usually happens to lactate during fasting?
What is the normal response of ketones to a glucose tolerance test at the 15-minute mark?
How high should you expect your lactate to go up when you drink vodka, bourbon, or beer?
I have laid out a model of self-experimentation that you can borrow from for your own experiments.
There are many thought-provoking nuggets in here.
For example: Is it possible that two pounds of extra body fat prevents peripheral neuropathy in me and perhaps others? I make the case that it may.
Has your fasting glucose gone up on low-carb? See why mine went down after doing repeated glucose tolerance tests on myself (which I don’t recommend at home!)
And, learn why I can fast my way to a glucose of 70 or eat my way to a glucose of 70 and I would choose eating my way there every time.
The full written version with linked references is found here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/self-experiments-in-the-biochemically
And don't forget to get my MTHFR Protocol, my free 7-page quick guide to optimizing and personalizing your methylation status, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/blog/2019/03/01/start-here-for-mthfr-and-methylation
Wed, 12 Apr 2023 - 3h 24min - 701 - My MTHFR Protocol
I have a free gift for you.
That is my MTHFR Protocol, a 7-page quick guide to optimizing and personalizing your methylation status using foods and supplements.
My MTHFR Protocol is free to anyone who subscribes to my Substack, whether free or paid. Use this link to get your copy:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/mthfr-protocol
I hope you enjoy your free gift and find it useful.
Wed, 12 Apr 2023 - 700 - Getting to the Bottom of My Health: Biotin and (V)LCAD
For nearly 20 years, I have strongly suspected that I have a genetic disorder in synthesizing or recycling something that is absent or poorly available from plant foods, is very rich in organ meats, and is not present in any of the supplements I was taking when I was a vegan.
After six months of research, testing, and self-experimenting, I now believe what I have been looking for is a mix of moderate genetic defects in biotin recycling, possibly combined with poor cellular uptake of biotin, and definitely combined with a defect in burning long-chain fatty acids for energy. The treatments for this, which I will be testing one at a time, will be high-dose biotin, high-dose riboflavin, possibly high-dose L-carnitine and glycine, and, if needed, an otherwise low-fat diet supplemented with C8-specific MCT oil.
This episode covers the content of the first of two articles I have written up on Substack.
First, I have a free gift for you: my MTHFR Protocol. This 7-page quick guide to optimizing your MTHFR status using foods and supplements is freely available to all subscribers to my Substack. Subscribe now and you will immediately get it emailed to you in the welcome email. You can subscribe here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/mthfr-protocol
The content of this episode can be found in the written version, with live links, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/getting-to-the-bottom-of-my-health
The second article that will be covered in the next episode is about my self-experiments between September 2022 and June 2023 in the "biochemically unoptimized state" and can be found here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/self-experiments-in-the-biochemicallyThu, 06 Apr 2023 - 1h 41min - 698 - Phosphatidylcholine and TMAO | Masterjohn Q&A Files #312
Question: If I'm at risk of heart disease and phosphatidylcholine increases my TMAO, should I stop the supplement? Short Answer: On a scale of one to ten, my concern about TMAO and cardiovascular disease is a three. There are thousands of things that should be given equal weight as potential contributors to heart disease, but TMAO gets the most attention because the Cleveland Clinic has an incredible PR machine to spread their research, which serves to bolster their financial interest in marketing the test. That said, it is not a universal necessity to supplement with phosphatidylcholine. If you are concerned about your TMAO, you can try substituting trimethylglycine (TMG), and ultimately judge the value of each supplement by whether it is helping you in a demonstrable way. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-phosphatidylcholine In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Vitamin K2 and Undercarboxylated Osteocalcin What to Do About TwitchingIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the December 14, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Inositol, What Is It Good For? If undercarboxylated osteocalcin (ucOCN) has health benefits and vitamin K2 decreases it, what does that mean for vitamin K2 supplementation? Maragen Calcium Could slow methylation cause high selenium levels? My current thoughts on cholesterol and heart disease If I already have oxidative stress, what ducks should I have in a row before supplementing with iron? Is it safe to take eight milligrams of zinc daily without copper? What to do about developing sensitivities to an increasingly broad range of foods? What else to do about hemochromatosis besides phlebotomy? If gestational diabetes is just a biotin deficiency, why are women who are insulin resistant prior to pregnancy at higher risk for it, including women with PCOS? What to do about chronically elevated amylase and lipase? What to do about a non-drinker having very high GGT and occasionally high ALT? What are the most common vitamin and mineral deficiencies? What are the best supplements, vitamins, and minerals for OCD and depression? What is the connection between low pyruvate and high ketones? Is high LDL a concern if the carotid IMT and coronary calcium scan are clear? An algorithm to fix twitching Do I trust food allergy tests?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-december
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 03 Apr 2023 - 21min - 697 - Does Erythritol Cause Heart Disease?
This analysis of the recent study by the Hazen group at Cleveland Clinic published in Nature Medicine claiming erythritol contributes to cardiovascular disease shows the following:
- Why elevated plasma erythritol is likely to reflect thiamin deficiency and NADPH depletion from insulin resistance, inflammation, and oxidative stress Why the in vitro and mouse study blood clotting likely reflects osmotic stress with no relevance to the use of erythritol as a sweetener. Why I strongly suspect the Hazen group is hiding data, specifically the data that they obviously had a chance to collect and would have clinched their case but appears nowhere in their paper. Why even though I do not use erythritol as a sweetener, were I ever to think about doing so, the new Nature Medicine paper would play no role in my decision.
Read the analysis in written form, fully referenced, here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/erythritol-and-blood-clotting
Fri, 24 Mar 2023 - 48min - 696 - Low Blood Sugar on Vegan Keto | Masterjohn Q&A Files #311
Question: How do I fix low blood sugar on vegan keto? Short Answer: Consider how important it is for your ketones to be elevated. Most likely you need to eat more protein, which will lower your ketones. I would aim for a minimum of 0.8 grams per kilogram of ideal bodyweight and consider using 1.2 grams per kilogram of ideal bodyweight. If this does not work, consider all of the nutrients involved in energy metabolism — all of the B vitamins, iron, copper, sulfur, magnesium, potassium — but especially biotin and B6 for their disproportionate role in gluconeogenesis. If the protein you need to normalize your blood sugar does reduce your ketones to a level that are not giving you the benefits you are looking for, you could consider raising them with exogenous ketones. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-questions-on-supplements In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Brain Fog on Calcium, Vitamin D, or K2 Raising Ceruloplasmin When Copper Won't Do ItIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the November 19, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Brain Fog on Calcium, Vitamin D, or K2 How Do I Increase My ATP? Nutrition for Recovery from Alcoholism How to decrease MCV after chemo? What happened to vitamin B4? Should I eat foods specifically for their antioxidant status? How do I get my ceruloplasmin up if copper doesn't raise it? Why would bovine serum immunoglobulins help gut health? Nicotinamide Riboside and Cancer If I need lecithin for gut health, should I worry about its omega-6? What do I think of patented Sucrosomial magnesium and zinc? Is my problem magnesium transport or magnesium excretion? What to do about severe osteoarthritis and muscle stiffness? Should I worry if 5 mg P5P raises my plasma B6 above normal? Is nascent iodine safe when weaning off of thyroid hormone? How to avoid false zeros in Cronometer? What does it mean if I have more energy when taking CoQ10? If NADPH oxidase is unregulated to fight pathogens, is taking antioxidants good or bad? What if my needs for vitamin A and zinc are higher than the tolerable upper intake levels? How accurate are vitamin E tests? Quick redux on muscle stiffness How do I handle my first emergence from lockdown if I am worried about being relatively immunosuppressed? If I supplement with iodine, do I need to supplement with selenium? Should I worry about the beta-carotene in my multivitamin? Why do I wake up tense and with a headache to my alarm clock? Why does starch make me wake up in the middle of the night with increased respiration? What causes crusty eyes? Which nutrients need to be spread out across the day? What are nutritional causes of hypnic jerks? To replicate Weston Price's reversal of tooth decay, do I need dairy? Why would I have a bad reaction to milk thistle?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-november
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 20 Mar 2023 - 15min - 695 - Brain Fog on Calcium, Vitamin D, or K2 | Masterjohn Q&A Files #310
Question: Why would vitamin D, vitamin K2, and calcium give me brain fog? Short Answer: Most likely by decreasing serum phosphorus. The solution is to balance these nutrients with vitamin A and phosphorus. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-questions-on-supplements In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Low Blood Sugar on Vegan Keto Raising Ceruloplasmin When Copper Won't Do ItIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the November 19, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Low Blood Sugar on Vegan Keto How Do I Increase My ATP? Nutrition for Recovery from Alcoholism How to decrease MCV after chemo? What happened to vitamin B4? Should I eat foods specifically for their antioxidant status? How do I get my ceruloplasmin up if copper doesn't raise it? Why would bovine serum immunoglobulins help gut health? Nicotinamide Riboside and Cancer If I need lecithin for gut health, should I worry about its omega-6? What do I think of patented Sucrosomial magnesium and zinc? Is my problem magnesium transport or magnesium excretion? What to do about severe osteoarthritis and muscle stiffness? Should I worry if 5 mg P5P raises my plasma B6 above normal? Is nascent iodine safe when weaning off of thyroid hormone? How to avoid false zeros in Cronometer? What does it mean if I have more energy when taking CoQ10? If NADPH oxidase is unregulated to fight pathogens, is taking antioxidants good or bad? What if my needs for vitamin A and zinc are higher than the tolerable upper intake levels? How accurate are vitamin E tests? Quick redux on muscle stiffness How do I handle my first emergence from lockdown if I am worried about being relatively immunosuppressed? If I supplement with iodine, do I need to supplement with selenium? Should I worry about the beta-carotene in my multivitamin? Why do I wake up tense and with a headache to my alarm clock? Why does starch make me wake up in the middle of the night with increased respiration? What causes crusty eyes? Which nutrients need to be spread out across the day? What are nutritional causes of hypnic jerks? To replicate Weston Price's reversal of tooth decay, do I need dairy? Why would I have a bad reaction to milk thistle? Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-novemberAccess the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 06 Mar 2023 - 25min - 694 - Why Plasma Zinc is the Best Marker of Zinc Status | Masterjohn Q&A Files #309
Short Answer: Plasma zinc is the single most important marker of zinc status. Urine zinc may decline faster in deficiency. Hair zinc increases with supplementation but does not decrease in deficiency. Plasma zinc is decreased by inflammation, oxidative stress, the ovulatory and luteal phases of the menstrual cycle, probably pregnancy and oral contraceptive use, and any kind of stress that leads to an adrenal output. If plasma zinc declines despite supplementation, corroborate that this reflects zinc status by showing normal hair zinc and low urine zinc. Use symptoms as the ultimate arbiter of whether zinc supplementation is helping.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-statins-versus-sulfur
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Statins Vs. Sulfur for Heart Disease Glutathione Intolerance: Getting to the Bottom of ItIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the October 12, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
NADH vs NMN vs NR An unexplained rise in urine ketones Spreading out calcium across meals What should we have in our cold season cabinet? What besides diet could cause my high morning glucose on a CGM? Will some older people benefit from supplementing carnitine? What do I think about the CGM fad? Could my low triglycerides be cholestasis? Why limit the dose of cod liver oil? Why do I always feel better when my sulfur problems are worse? Should I use one lab’s reference range with another lab’s results? Is it safe to eat roasted potatoes? How much weight should I give genetic SNPs in my nutrition? High RBC magnesium but low serum: what could it mean? Burning in the stomach: what could it be? Should I treat low plasma amino acids by supplementing them? Why would MK-4 cause heart palpitations?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-october Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 20 Feb 2023 - 22min - 693 - Glutathione Intolerance: Getting to the Bottom of It | Masterjohn Q&A Files #308
Short Answer: It could be byproducts of any of the three amino acids that make up the glutathione molecule, which include the individual amino acids, ammonia, hydrogen sulfide, sulfite, and propionyl CoA, or it could be microbial metabolites of glutathione produced in the gut. The full answer contains seven hypothesis-driven tests that can be done at home to determine the cause.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-statins-versus-sulfur
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Statins Vs. Sulfur for Heart Disease Why Plasma Zinc is the Best Marker of Zinc StatusIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the October 12, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
NADH vs NMN vs NR An unexplained rise in urine ketones Spreading out calcium across meals What should we have in our cold season cabinet? What besides diet could cause my high morning glucose on a CGM? Will some older people benefit from supplementing carnitine? What do I think about the CGM fad? Could my low triglycerides be cholestasis? Why limit the dose of cod liver oil? Why do I always feel better when my sulfur problems are worse? Should I use one lab’s reference range with another lab’s results? Is it safe to eat roasted potatoes? How much weight should I give genetic SNPs in my nutrition? High RBC magnesium but low serum: what could it mean? Burning in the stomach: what could it be? Should I treat low plasma amino acids by supplementing them? Why would MK-4 cause heart palpitations?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-october
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 06 Feb 2023 - 29min - 692 - Statins Vs. Sulfur for Heart Disease | Masterjohn Q&A Files #307
Short Answer: From the trials, statins seem to reduce heart disease risk and total mortality, but it is impossible to separate this from conflicts of interest and industry funding. There are plausible mechanisms by which they may hurt mitochondrial function and promote soft tissue calcification. Dietary sulfur appears to lower cholesterol. While Lester Morrison showed 1500 milligrams per day of chondroitin sulfate could reduce cardiac events 7-fold, this has a theoretical potential to hurt the microbiome. My preferred way of getting sulfur is 1.2-1.8 grams per kilogram bodyweight of total non-collagen protein, with an emphasis on animal protein.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-statins-versus-sulfur
In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Glutathione Intolerance: Getting to the Bottom of It Why Plasma Zinc is the Best Marker of Zinc StatusIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda
Learn more about the Masterpass here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about
This snippet is from the October 12, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
NADH vs NMN vs NR An unexplained rise in urine ketones Spreading out calcium across meals What should we have in our cold season cabinet? What besides diet could cause my high morning glucose on a CGM? Will some older people benefit from supplementing carnitine? What do I think about the CGM fad? Could my low triglycerides be cholestasis? Why limit the dose of cod liver oil? Why do I always feel better when my sulfur problems are worse? Should I use one lab’s reference range with another lab’s results? Is it safe to eat roasted potatoes? How much weight should I give genetic SNPs in my nutrition? High RBC magnesium but low serum: what could it mean? Burning in the stomach: what could it be? Should I treat low plasma amino acids by supplementing them? Why would MK-4 cause heart palpitations?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-october
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 23 Jan 2023 - 28min - 691 - Why would someone not tolerate methyl donors even if they need them? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #306
Short Answer: I believe most methyl donor intolerances are a result of deficiencies in the glycine buffer system, which requires glycine, vitamin A, fasting (glucagon), androgens, riboflavin, unmethylated folate (THF), and iron. No one should expect to tolerate 30 milligrams of folate, however, and there is almost never a reason to use doses that high. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-cognitive-health-mct In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Does whey protein hurt the kidneys or otherwise hurt our health Why would someone not tolerate methyl donors even if they need them?If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the September 14, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Why isn't my ferritin as high as diabetics when my transferrin saturation is higher? Why are vitamins A and E needed alongside D and K? Sunflower lecithin versus phosphatidylcholine supplements How do I reduce congestion while consuming dairy? Could eggs be raising triglycerides by curing fatty liver? Why would homocysteine ever be high when you can just use it to make glutathione? Why did my eye start twitching after sweating more than usual this weekend? Why do I now think A and D should be in roughly 1:1 ratios? Would MK-7 be enough to take with D or do I need MK-4? Why does water make me hungry? What's the proper ratio of calcium to magnesium, vitamin D, and vitamin K2? Is it safe to take zinc carnosine long term? Why did I recommend only using high-dose zinc for COVID protection for one year? Why did I recommend limiting quercetin phytosome to three months? Why take MK-4 when it has such a short half-life? How to make bowel movements more regular? Could freeze dried animal beef supplements cause gut infections? Do I recommend food sensitivity testing? What are the nutritional causes of restless leg syndrome? What do I think of drinking deuterium-depleted water for COVID severity?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-september Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 09 Jan 2023 - 15min - 690 - Does whey protein hurt the kidneys or otherwise hurt our health? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #305
Short Answer: The main problem with too much protein, particularly animal protein, is that acidity may hurt the bones and increase the risk of calcium oxalate kidney stones, but this can be obviated by balancing it with organic acids, which have bicarbonate-sparing effects that are alkalinizing. The best index of the organic acid content of foods is the potassium content. This balance can be achieved with 750 to 1500 milligrams of potassium for every 100 grams of protein. This is not specific to whey protein. Other than allergies, none of the claimed harms of whey protein are convincing.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-cognitive-health-mct In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Does glucose handling in the brain decline with age? And if so, does this serve as a rationale to supplement with MCT oil to prevent cognitive decline? Why would someone not tolerate methyl donors even if they need them?If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the September 14, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Why isn't my ferritin as high as diabetics when my transferrin saturation is higher? Why are vitamins A and E needed alongside D and K? Sunflower lecithin versus phosphatidylcholine supplements How do I reduce congestion while consuming dairy? Could eggs be raising triglycerides by curing fatty liver? Why would homocysteine ever be high when you can just use it to make glutathione? Why did my eye start twitching after sweating more than usual this weekend? Why do I now think A and D should be in roughly 1:1 ratios? Would MK-7 be enough to take with D or do I need MK-4? Why does water make me hungry? What's the proper ratio of calcium to magnesium, vitamin D, and vitamin K2? Is it safe to take zinc carnosine long term? Why did I recommend only using high-dose zinc for COVID protection for one year? Why did I recommend limiting quercetin phytosome to three months? Why take MK-4 when it has such a short half-life? How to make bowel movements more regular? Could freeze dried animal beef supplements cause gut infections? Do I recommend food sensitivity testing? What are the nutritional causes of restless leg syndrome? What do I think of drinking deuterium-depleted water for COVID severity?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-september
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 26 Dec 2022 - 18min - 689 - Biotin Causes a Multitude of False Lab Tests | Here is What to Do
High-dose biotin supplements can cause a multitude of false lab tests, masking recent heart attacks, pregnancies, or allergies, giving false signals about tumors, and far more.
In this episode, I lay out for you the nature, scope, and magnitude of the problem, and develop actionable strategies you can use to protect your lab tests from generating false information as a result of this phenomenon.
You can find the written and fully referenced version of this episode here:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/biotin-causes-false-lab-tests
The written version also contains some figures that help you visualize the mechanistic information.
If you find this episode valuable, please head over to the written version on Substack using the above link to like it, share it, and comment on it. This will encourage the Substack algorithm to get it in front of more people.
In High Protein? You Need More Biotin, I made the case that 30 micrograms per day is not enough for adults, and that many people need 150-300 micrograms per day, depending on how much protein they eat.
My simple food-based recommendations for getting enough biotin are found in my Cliff Notes (free for Masterpass members here). To learn more about the Masterpass, click here.
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Tue, 20 Dec 2022 - 1h 54min - 688 - Does glucose handling in the brain decline with age? And if so, does this serve as a rationale to supplement with MCT oil to prevent cognitive decline? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #304
Short Answer: Energy metabolism in general declines across the body with aging, but energy metabolism seems to stay healthy enough in the brain in people who do not experience cognitive decline. Cognitive decline does appear to be driven by decreases in brain energy metabolism, but these are not best described as a specific impairment in glucose handling. MCT oil can be modestly beneficial and a ketogenic diet can probably be somewhat more beneficial in people who have cognitive decline from any type. There is no evidence to support using it as a preventative. For prevention, I believe we should focus on aerobic fitness, nutrients required for healthy energy metabolism and antioxidant defense, and maintaining metabolic health with a healthy body composition and a healthy physical activity routine that includes the proper spread of a portfolio of different types of exercise. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-cognitive-health-mct In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions:
Does whey protein hurt the kidneys or otherwise hurt our health Why would someone not tolerate methyl donors even if they need them?If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the September 14, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Why isn't my ferritin as high as diabetics when my transferrin saturation is higher? Why are vitamins A and E needed alongside D and K? Sunflower lecithin versus phosphatidylcholine supplements How do I reduce congestion while consuming dairy? Could eggs be raising triglycerides by curing fatty liver? Why would homocysteine ever be high when you can just use it to make glutathione? Why did my eye start twitching after sweating more than usual this weekend? Why do I now think A and D should be in roughly 1:1 ratios? Would MK-7 be enough to take with D or do I need MK-4? Why does water make me hungry? What's the proper ratio of calcium to magnesium, vitamin D, and vitamin K2? Is it safe to take zinc carnosine long term? Why did I recommend only using high-dose zinc for COVID protection for one year? Why did I recommend limiting quercetin phytosome to three months? Why take MK-4 when it has such a short half-life? How to make bowel movements more regular? Could freeze dried animal beef supplements cause gut infections? Do I recommend food sensitivity testing? What are the nutritional causes of restless leg syndrome? What do I think of drinking deuterium-depleted water for COVID severity?Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-september
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 12 Dec 2022 - 38min - 687 - Why is an IV more hydrating than salted water? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #303
Short Answer: If it can’t be explained by the dose of salt, it may be that the salt is not being absorbed orally. Glucose, starch, or simply a meal consumed alongside the salted water may help with this.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-protein-and-longevity-1a2 In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: Protein and Longevity How to Increase or Decrease SHBG?If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the August 15, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Does which food you eat matter when everything is digested anyway? How to know if your nitric oxide is dilating your blood vessels properly? How big of a problem are transient glucose spikes above 140 mg/dL? Can I take too much collagen? What is the maximum dose of cod liver oil safe to use long-term? How much A is safe to take when I need so much to resolve my symptoms? Generalizing from cell studies of green tea catechins to cups of green tea per day. What to do about lumbar discs bulging? Why would vitamin K2 cause a nosebleed? How to balance A with D when I react poorly to D and need so much A? Why would COVID decrease HRV long-term? How to raise secretory IgA? Rapid-fire answers to pre-submitted questions that didn’t win the contest: alternatives to bone meal powder, herbal tea and nutrient absorption, retinol-binding protein, improving fat digestion, metal provocation tests, fatty liver, high-dose B vitamins, eyebrow thinning, itchy bumps after exercise, brain fog and rifaximin, low cholesterol, tolerating chlorine pools, cycling nutrients, copper toxicity, stopping supplements before blood tests, COVID vaccines causing post-nasal drip, natural vs synthetic vitamins, absorbing iron through baths, elevated EPA and DHA in RBCs, COVID affecting the vagus nerve, supplements for athletic performance, when water doesn’t hydrate, tics and Tourette’s, recalcitrant homocysteine, fraud and corruption in scienctific research. Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-augustAccess the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 28 Nov 2022 - 03min - 686 - Staying Immune Through the WinterWed, 23 Nov 2022
- 685 - How to Increase or Decrease SHBG? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #302
Short Answer: SHBG is increased by adiponectin (vitamin K2, insulin sensitivity), thyroid hormone, fasting physiology (AMPK, fat oxidation), and estrogen (especially estrone), while it is decreased by insulin resistance, obesity, the fed state and carbohydrate-dominant physiology, androgens, and polyunsaturated fat.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-protein-and-longevity-1a2 In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: Protein and Longevity Why is an IV more hydrating than salted water?If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the August 15, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Does which food you eat matter when everything is digested anyway? How to know if your nitric oxide is dilating your blood vessels properly? How big of a problem are transient glucose spikes above 140 mg/dL? Can I take too much collagen? What is the maximum dose of cod liver oil safe to use long-term? How much A is safe to take when I need so much to resolve my symptoms? Generalizing from cell studies of green tea catechins to cups of green tea per day. What to do about lumbar discs bulging? Why would vitamin K2 cause a nosebleed? How to balance A with D when I react poorly to D and need so much A? Why would COVID decrease HRV long-term? How to raise secretory IgA? Rapid-fire answers to pre-submitted questions that didn’t win the contest: alternatives to bone meal powder, herbal tea and nutrient absorption, retinol-binding protein, improving fat digestion, metal provocation tests, fatty liver, high-dose B vitamins, eyebrow thinning, itchy bumps after exercise, brain fog and rifaximin, low cholesterol, tolerating chlorine pools, cycling nutrients, copper toxicity, stopping supplements before blood tests, COVID vaccines causing post-nasal drip, natural vs synthetic vitamins, absorbing iron through baths, elevated EPA and DHA in RBCs, COVID affecting the vagus nerve, supplements for athletic performance, when water doesn’t hydrate, tics and Tourette’s, recalcitrant homocysteine, fraud and corruption in scienctific research. Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-augustAccess the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 14 Nov 2022 - 14min - 684 - COVID Vaccine Side Effects: What Causes Them?
I am done with my work on COVID vaccines, at least until I finish my Vitamins and Minerals 101 Book, so I am now making my scientific review on the likely causes of COVID vaccine side effects public.
This is an excerpt of pages 19-52 of my Healing From COVID Vaccine Side Effects guide (free to Masterpass members here). You can read the written version on Substack using this link, which contains 139 of the 221 references. It does not contain the protocol, but rather the scientific review used to judge the mechanisms most likely underlying the side effects. Since I am no longer working on this, I hope it proves useful to anyone doing further work on the topic. This was originally published on August 10, 2022.
The science described is not intended to be comprehensive. Rather, emphasis is placed on what is likely to provide insights into the mechanisms of side effects.
Please visit the Substack version to like it, comment on it, and share it:
COVID Vaccine Side Effects: What Causes Them? Join the Next Live Q&AHave a question for me? Ask it at the next Q&A! Learn more here.
Join the MasterpassMasterpass members get access to premium content (preview the premium posts here), all my ebook guides for free (see the collection of ebook guides here), monthly live Q&A sessions (see when the next session is here), all my courses for free (see the collection here), and exclusive access to massive discounts (see the specific discounts available by clicking here).
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For $10, you can purchase Healing From COVID Vaccine Side Effects for yourself or a loved one if dealing with this issue. It also contains an extensive well-referenced scientific review, so you can also use this just to learn more about my research into the COVID vaccines.
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Sat, 05 Nov 2022 - 1h 51min - 683 - Protein and Longevity | Masterjohn Q&A Files #301
Short Answer: While protein restriction may have value in people with established cancer or kidney disease, cycling robustly between fasting and feeding states is likely to provide all the value that restriction of protein or calories might otherwise provide, and a high protein intake supports bone mass, muscle mass, and the detoxification of carcinogens, all of which are important to longevity.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access two other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-protein-and-longevity-1a2 In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: How to Increase or Decrease SHBG? Why is an IV more hydrating than salted water?If you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the August 15, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
Does which food you eat matter when everything is digested anyway? How to know if your nitric oxide is dilating your blood vessels properly? How big of a problem are transient glucose spikes above 140 mg/dL? Can I take too much collagen? What is the maximum dose of cod liver oil safe to use long-term? How much A is safe to take when I need so much to resolve my symptoms? Generalizing from cell studies of green tea catechins to cups of green tea per day. What to do about lumbar discs bulging? Why would vitamin K2 cause a nosebleed? How to balance A with D when I react poorly to D and need so much A? Why would COVID decrease HRV long-term? How to raise secretory IgA? Rapid-fire answers to pre-submitted questions that didn’t win the contest: alternatives to bone meal powder, herbal tea and nutrient absorption, retinol-binding protein, improving fat digestion, metal provocation tests, fatty liver, high-dose B vitamins, eyebrow thinning, itchy bumps after exercise, brain fog and rifaximin, low cholesterol, tolerating chlorine pools, cycling nutrients, copper toxicity, stopping supplements before blood tests, COVID vaccines causing post-nasal drip, natural vs synthetic vitamins, absorbing iron through baths, elevated EPA and DHA in RBCs, COVID affecting the vagus nerve, supplements for athletic performance, when water doesn’t hydrate, tics and Tourette’s, recalcitrant homocysteine, fraud and corruption in scienctific research. Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-augustAccess the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 24 Oct 2022 - 33min - 682 - Why do my urinary B6 markers say I'm deficient if I'm supplementing and my plasma levels are high-normal? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #300
Short answer: Low or low-normal alkaline phosphatase may raise the plasma B6 level over the cellular level. Tryptophan metabolites in urine reflect the B6 requirement for the kynurenine pathway, and this requirement increases with more estrogen, more inflammation, or a higher protein intake.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access five other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-fatty-liver In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? Reversing Fatty Liver: How Long Does It Take? What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? Will reishi, turmeric, or curcumin tank my testosterone? The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each OneIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the July 13, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
How do I know if my digestive enzymes are helping or hurting? Why does high-dose glycine give me these terrible symptoms? How to know if my magnesium is messing with my calcium? Why do I have vitamin A symptoms when my lab tests are normal What is my favorite web site for finding enzymatic cofactors Potassium citrate vs potassium chloride Major problems with B vitamin supplements Is food sensitivity testing useful? What nutrients might help with dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase deficiency? Does lipoic acid hurt methylation? Sulfur SIBO that just won’t go away. Using lactate, pyruvate, and ketone ratios to indicate the NADH/NAD+ ratio. Helping bile flow without pharmaceuticals. Managing pernicious anemia. Do we really need to meet the RDA for calcium? Could stretch marks be a sign of copper toxicity? When iron saturation is driven by low binding capacity. How do I know if I need methyl-free Bs? What causes heat intolerance? Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-june-de3Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 10 Oct 2022 - 06min - 681 - The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each One | Masterjohn Q&A Files #299
Short answer: 4-6 hours after a meal the small intestine is emptied and the insulin-to-glucagon ratio declines; 25 hours after, hepatic glycogen is emptied; 5 days later the brain is adapted to ketones and gluconeogenesis reaches its minimal level. Moving from one to the other cannot occur with a small piece of signaling like the bite of an apple. It requires the preponderance of signaling. This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access five other free samples using this link:
https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-fatty-liver In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? Reversing Fatty Liver: How Long Does It Take? What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? Will reishi, turmeric, or curcumin tank my testosterone? The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each OneIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the July 13, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
How do I know if my digestive enzymes are helping or hurting? Why does high-dose glycine give me these terrible symptoms? How to know if my magnesium is messing with my calcium? Why do I have vitamin A symptoms when my lab tests are normal? What is my favorite web site for finding enzymatic cofactors? Potassium citrate vs potassium chloride Major problems with B vitamin supplements Is food sensitivity testing useful? What nutrients might help with dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase deficiency? Does lipoic acid hurt methylation? Sulfur SIBO that just won’t go away. Using lactate, pyruvate, and ketone ratios to indicate the NADH/NAD+ ratio. Helping bile flow without pharmaceuticals. Managing pernicious anemia. Do we really need to meet the RDA for calcium? Could stretch marks be a sign of copper toxicity? When iron saturation is driven by low binding capacity. How do I know if I need methyl-free Bs? What causes heat intolerance? Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-june-de3Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 26 Sep 2022 - 14min - 680 - Will reishi, turmeric, or curcumin tank my testosterone? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #298
Short answer: Probably not. Animal studies showing a difference use huge doses in an unrealistic context. Human studies show they don’t at doses used. Human effect on PSA is vulnerable to regression to the mean and thoroughly unconvincing.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access five other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-fatty-liver In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? Reversing Fatty Liver: How Long Does It Take? What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each OneIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the June 16, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
What to do about persistent SIBO? Are there toxicity concerns for intravenous B vitamins? Should zinc be taken apart from oral rehydration salts? Why would magnesium cause erratic heartbeat, bad dreams, and tinnitus? How do you know if you have low stomach acid? What is a good sweetener to replace granulated sugar? Do I need to eat foods with calcium every day? What bread do I eat? Should you take vitamin D for COVID prevention if you have a history of hypercalcemia? What to do about extreme CFS, depression, anxiety, and brain fog when nothing seems to work. Why balance K2 with vitamin E rather than K1? Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-juneAccess the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 12 Sep 2022 - 17min - 679 - What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #297
Short answer: Trust the CGM. HbA1c is confounded by red blood cell turnover and fructosamine 3-kinase activity.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access five other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-fatty-liver In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? Reversing Fatty Liver: How Long Does It Take? What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? Will reishi, turmeric, or curcumin tank my testosterone? The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each OneIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the June 16, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
What to do about persistent SIBO? Are there toxicity concerns for intravenous B vitamins? Should zinc be taken apart from oral rehydration salts? Why would magnesium cause erratic heartbeat, bad dreams, and tinnitus? How do you know if you have low stomach acid? What is a good sweetener to replace granulated sugar? Do I need to eat foods with calcium every day? What bread do I eat? Should you take vitamin D for COVID prevention if you have a history of hypercalcemia? What to do about extreme CFS, depression, anxiety, and brain fog when nothing seems to work. Why balance K2 with vitamin E rather than K1? Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/recording-and-transcript-of-the-juneAccess the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 22 Aug 2022 - 05min - 678 - Reversing Fatty Liver: How Long Does It Take? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #296
Short answer: You should be able to see changes on imaging within a few weeks if your approach is working well, but ultimately this is entirely dependent on how negative your “delta fatty liver = (fat in) - ((fat out) + (fat burned))” equation is.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access five other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-fatty-liver In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? Will reishi, turmeric, or curcumin tank my testosterone? The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each OneIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the April 13, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
How to balance vitamins E and K What prenatal vitamin do I recommend? Why does my smoothie make my hands cold? What type of choline to use? Is there an interaction between glycine and aspirin? What supplements can be used in the fasting state? How to manage protein intake within a small eating window on an intermittent fasting regimen? Looking at a study on calcium alpha-ketoglutarate supplementation. Should I take vitamin D for COVID if I easily get hypercalcemia from it? What to do about nausea in pregnancy? Brief questions on restless legs, exercise during fasting, puffy eyes, and health effects of spicy foods. Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/ask-me-anything-april-13-2022Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Sat, 30 Apr 2022 - 16min - 677 - What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? | Masterjohn Q&A Files #295
Short answer: 25(OH)D is 1000 times weaker at activating the VDR than 1,25(OH)D, but 1000 times more abundant. This is why I advocate measuring both, and ultimately believe we need to create a calculated index of “biological vitamin D activity” from them.
This is a clip from a live Q&A session open to CMJ Masterpass members. In addition to this episode, you can access five other free samples using this link: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/questions-on-vitamin-d-fatty-liver In that batch of free episodes you will also find the answers to these questions: What's the difference between 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D when it comes to the VDR? Reversing Fatty Liver: How Long Does It Take? What if my A1C says I'm diabetic but my CGM says I'm fine? Will reishi, turmeric, or curcumin tank my testosterone? The 3 Phases of Fasting: And How to Get Kicked Out of Each OneIf you want to become a Masterpass member so you can participate in the next live Q&A, or so you can have access to the complete recording and transcript of each Q&A session, you can save 10% off the subscription price for as long as you remain a member by using this link to sign up: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/qanda Learn more about the Masterpass here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/about This snippet is from the April 13, 2022 AMA. The full recording and transcript is reserved for Masterpass members. Here is a preview of what’s included:
How to balance vitamins E and K What prenatal vitamin do I recommend? Why does my smoothie make my hands cold? What type of choline to use? Is there an interaction between glycine and aspirin? What supplements can be used in the fasting state? How to manage protein intake within a small eating window on an intermittent fasting regimen? Looking at a study on calcium alpha-ketoglutarate supplementation. Should I take vitamin D for COVID if I easily get hypercalcemia from it? What to do about nausea in pregnancy? Brief questions on restless legs, exercise during fasting, puffy eyes, and health effects of spicy foods. Here’s a link to the full AMA: https://chrismasterjohnphd.substack.com/p/ask-me-anything-april-13-2022Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Fri, 29 Apr 2022 - 07min - 676 - What can be done nutritionally to specifically improve antiviral immunity? | Masterjohn Q&A #65
Certainly, the fat-soluble vitamins, vitamins A and D, both important. Lauric acid as a fat. Coconut oil might be a good fat choice for the fat in your diet. Monolaurin would be a very good choice for a supplement. Lauricidin is the best monolaurin to take, 3 to 10 grams a day. Be careful of your bowel tolerance, spread it out among your meals, and cut back if it starts to loosen your stool.
Elderberry, which has mostly been studied in the context of flu, that probably has good antiviral properties.
Garlic. Garlic appears to require very high doses if you're just taking a garlic extract. If you're taking stabilized allicin, 180 micrograms a day is good. But you could raise the question what if you're missing on some of the other important compounds in the garlic. I'll debate with some of my friends about that, but what's really been tested is 180 micrograms of stabilized allicin.
Then zinc for sure in the immune response is super important.
Then you get back to nutrient density. Although I'd give special importance to vitamins A and D, arachidonic acid just mentioned, zinc and copper, both, and then those supplements. If you're missing any one particular nutrient, then you're going to wind up with a specific vulnerability that will persist until you fix that one nutrient. Thanks, anonymous.
This Q&A can also be found as part of a much longer episode, here: https://themasterpass.chrismasterjohnphd.com/products/mastering-nutrition/categories/2811841/posts/9361575
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 18 Feb 2020 - 02min - 675 - Best clinical way to monitor COMT function if you have already tested for SNPs | Masterjohn Q&A Files #04
"What do you think is the best clinical way to monitor COMT function if you have already tested for SNPs?" One way you can look at it is through the DUTCH test — which is at dutchtest.com — it's a dried urine hormone testing platform, they have a methylation index that is based on the methylation of estrogen. For example; the main significance of COMT, is related to long-term risk of estrogen-related cancers. Acute symptoms are primarily going to manifest in the brain in the relation between COMT and dopamine. The higher your COMT activity, the more flexible your brain. The lower your COMT activity, the more rigid your brain. If your nutrition is straight and you don't have a psychological disorder, that's just a personality trait. They call this the worrier/warrior, phenotype. High COMT activity; you don't worry as much, like a warrior who picks his battles, wins, and repeats. There is nothing to worry about, the only concern is victory. If you are a low COMT activity; you're not a warrior, you're a worrier. You think about all the possible ways something could go wrong. Instead of moving forward with an image of invincibility, you struggle to move at all, like a deer in the headlights. But that's the extremes. Within most of the population, it's just a personality trait. So, you really look at, how is your mind operating? If your mind is getting stuck on stuff, low COMT. If your mind is racing around to different things, high COMT. If that's just your personality, don't worry about it. But if it’s starting to interfere with your life, then that’s where it matters. Low COMT, focus on methyl donors: B12, folate, choline, betaine, some of the other assisting B vitamins. High COMT, focus on methyl buffers: Glycine. This Q&A can also be found as part of a much longer episode, here: https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/podcast/2019/02/09/ask-anything-nutrition-feb-1-2019/
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Wed, 13 Nov 2019 - 03min - 674 - Supplements that may increase deep sleep | Masterjohn Q&A Files #03
So, deep sleep is, primarily what's going on in deep sleep is that all of your biogenic amines, which are most of the neurotransmitters that you make from protein with the possible except — like depending on how you classify it, you could say ultimately you make melatonin from protein, but it's not a biogenic amine. Biogenic amines, which are the catecholamines — all are basically shut off. They're probably not zero, zero, but they're almost zero during sleep. Acetylcholine is also shut down during deep sleep, but it pops up during REM sleep. I really don't think this is a supplement issue. First of all, you definitely don't want to be taking anything that has acetylcholinesterase inhibitors at night. Non-organic foods have pesticides that are acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. I don't know if that's relevant here dose-wise. Things that improve cognitive function are often acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. So, gingko biloba is one. I wouldn't take that at night. There are drugs that treat neurological problems, especially Alzheimer's, that are acetylcholinesterase inhibitors; I wouldn't take those at night. I'm on the fence about whether you should take choline at night. I think it's most likely fine to eat eggs at night. If you're taking something like alpha-GPC; I'm not sure. You might want to avoid that at night if you find, particularly if you find that when you're tracking your sleep with an Oura ring your REM is higher than normal and your deep sleep is lower than normal. But other than that — I would say that methylation support is very important to help lower some of the important biogenic amines. Histamine, for example, is primarily gotten rid of with methylation in the brain and if your histamine levels are high during the day, it might cause anxiety during the night and that could interfere with your deep sleep. Electrolytes are also super important. Calcium, magnesium, salt and potassium. All these things you need to get straight in order for your sleep cycle to be working right. If your cortisol is high at night or other factors of anxiety are high at night you might want a targeted supplement there, like phosphatidylserine — the evidence is conflicting, but has been used to lower the stress response. I don't think it's a blanket answer to that question. I think it's like figuring out what's the cause of the low deep sleep and working from there.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Mon, 04 Nov 2019 - 03min - 673 - Chips! The Only Ones I'll Endorse
My friend Steve, who is the one who originally introduced me to the Essex Farm CSA that now supplies me with almost all my food, has invented a new tortilla chip that launches today!
MASA chips are made from organic corn from small New England farms. The corn is nixtimalized, which frees the niacin, makes it more digestible, and eliminates 97-100% of the mycotoxins (based on studies with aflatoxin). Then they are fried in grass-fed beef tallow!
They are full-bodied and feel nourishing, and they are the perfect saltiness. That is, I do not feel like a company has tagged me as eating a low-salt diet just because I want a healthy chip.
The bulk of your diet should be unprocessed and minimally processed foods, but there is an important place for health snacks!
Get your MASA chips today at https://chrismasterjohnphd.com/masa and use the code MASTERJOHN for 10% off. I will get a small commission at no extra cost to you. You will rarely ever find me promoting a chip, but this is one I endorse!
Thu, 21 Jul 2022 - 05min - 672 - What if my vitamin D is normal, but my PTH is high? | Chris Masterjohn Lite #29
Analia Camarasa asked this question on Facebook: Ever since you’ve mentioned PTH on your podcast we’ve been measuring it in the office. It’s nice to see that when patients come in on high doses of D supplementation their PTH is maximally suppressed, as it should be. I wish you could talk about the outliers briefly, normal D at 31 ng/mL and PTH outside of the range eating a healthy WAP diet, for example. Watch the video for my response. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 18 May 2017 - 04min - 671 - How to Tell the Difference Between Vitamin D and Calcium Deficiencies | Chris Masterjohn Lite #28
Vitamin D deficiency and calcium deficiency look very similar, and poorly interpreted blood tests can easily mislead us into taking the wrong supplements. Here’s how to tell them apart.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 16 May 2017 - 05min - 670 - Could Oxaloacetate Supplements Help With Glutamate Sensitivity? | Chris Masterjohn Lite #27
Glutamate is the most abundant amino acid in the diet, but is usually bound up in proteins. In its free form, it contributes to the umami taste, which is the savory flavor associated with meat and mushrooms. Long, slow cooking and fermenting can both bring out this flavor.⠀ Unfortunately, some people don’t tolerate glutamate well. Glutamate sensitivity is controversial, but some of the symptoms people say they experience are headaches, sweating, flushing, or sets of symptoms that mimic allergies. If you don’t tolerate slowly cooked protein foods or fermented foods, you may have glutamate sensitivity. If you do, an oxaloacetate supplement may help. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 11 May 2017 - 04min - 669 - The 5 Best Ways to Lower Cholesterol Naturally | Chris Masterjohn Lite #26
If you’ve got high cholesterol then this video is for you. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 09 May 2017 - 06min - 668 - The Easiest Way to Track Calories | Chris Masterjohn Lite #25
Tracking calories can be really hard, but here’s how to make it easy. Like, easy easy? Easy easy easy easy? Well, no, not easier than not tracking calories. But far easier than you would expect if you haven’t tried it. And thousands of times easier than some other methods of tracking calories. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 04 May 2017 - 08min - 667 - The Most Reliable Way to Lose Weight | Chris Masterjohn Lite #24
This is how I recommend losing weight if you want a method that is reliable and easy to optimize over time.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 02 May 2017 - 08min - 666 - Supercharge Your Folate With Pastured Egg Yolks and Sprouted Legumes | Chris Masterjohn Lite CML #23
The effect of sprouting on the folate concentration of legumes is incredible. It peaks on the fourth day of sprouting, though, according to a recent study. But is it always the fourth day in every legume under any condition sprouted in a home kitchen? Are the sprouted legumes on the store shelf four-day sprouts? Right now there are more questions than answers, but I believe that opting for sprouted legumes is a good way to supercharge your folate status as long as you still make an effort to get 2-3 servings of folate-rich foods per day. I cover this and another way to supercharge your folate status — eating egg yolks from pasture-raised chickens — in today’s Chris Masterjohn Lite video. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Fri, 28 Apr 2017 - 06min - 665 - How to Get Enough Folate | Chris Masterjohn Lite #22
Did you realize even washing vegetables causes loss of folate? Learn everything you need to know to get enough folate from picking the right foods to avoiding loss in the kitchen in this five-minute video.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 25 Apr 2017 - 05min - 664 - Folate: You Can Freeze Your Liver But Not Your Veggies | Chris Masterjohn Lite #21
You absolutely cannot trust frozen veggies as a source of folate. Remarkably, though, folate is stunningly stable in liver during frozen storage, and even cooking.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Fri, 21 Apr 2017 - 04min - 663 - Sometimes Synthetic Folic Acid Is Better Than Natural Food Folate | Chris Masterjohn Lite #20
If you feel better when you eat refined grains or when you take a multivitamin or B complex with synthetic folic acid, this video is for you.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Fri, 24 Mar 2017 - 06min - 662 - How to Know If You’re at Risk of Iron Overload and What to Do About It | Chris Masterjohn Lite #19
Spend eight minutes to know whether you need to manage your iron status and how to do it by watching this video. There’s a 30% chance it could make a big difference in your health, and a 3% chance it could be life-changing. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Wed, 22 Mar 2017 - 08min - 661 - Why It Matters What Type of Millet You Eat | Chris Masterjohn Lite #18
This is a really important update to the video I put out on Tuesday about millet. There are millets on the market that can wreck your thyroid gland and others that are harmless. It’s important to know the difference.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 16 Mar 2017 - 06min - 660 - Why You Should Moderate Your Millet | Chris Masterjohn Lite #17
If you eat millet or eat gluten-free bread, you should watch this video, because you could be hurting your thyroid. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 14 Mar 2017 - 07min - 659 - How to Kill a Cold With Zinc | Chris Masterjohn Lite #16
Last time we talked about supporting zinc nutritional status. Today we talk about how to kill a cold with zinc. Believe it or not, the principles are completely different. Your oysters can help you get sick lest often. But knowing how to find the right zinc lozenge and use it correctly is your secret weapon to stop a cold dead in its tracks when it eventually comes. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 09 Mar 2017 - 06min - 658 - 5 Rules You Need to Follow to Get Enough Zinc | Chris Masterjohn Lite #15
Here’s 5 rules you need to follow to get enough zinc. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 07 Mar 2017 - 07min - 657 - 3 “Healthy” Habits That Could Be Hurting Your Thyroid Gland Change | Chris Masterjohn Lite #14
Restricting salt, replacing iodized salt with natural unrefined salt, and consuming plant foods that generate isothiocyanate can all have their place in a healthy diet, but raise the risk of iodine deficiency. Here’s how to spot the problem and what to do about it. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 02 Mar 2017 - 05min - 656 - How to Safely Recover From Vegetable Oils | Chris Masterjohn Lite #13
There are good reasons to eat traditional fats like butter, olive oil, animal fats, and tropic oils, rather than modern vegetable oils. But years of consuming vegetable oil can cause your vitamin E requirement to remain elevated for up to four years after you make the switch, leaving you vulnerable to some extra wear and tear during the transition. Here’s how I recommend using vitamin E in food or supplements to smooth out the transition. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 28 Feb 2017 - 06min - 655 - How to Make Your Own DIY Home Air Filter | Chris Masterjohn Lite #12
I currently use a Germ Guardian, but for about a decade I used this method, which is half the initial cost and one fifth the long-term maintenance costs.
Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 23 Feb 2017 - 03min - 654 - How to Know If Coffee Can Save Your Life | Chris Masterjohn Lite #11
If you’re one of the 7% who have this gene, then drinking coffee may just save your life. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 21 Feb 2017 - 03min - 653 - Getting Enough B12: Vegans, Omnivores, and Everyone In Between | Chris Masterjohn Lite #10
Although vitamin B12 is mostly found in animal products, there are true vegetarian and vegan sources. Nevertheless, designing a B12-adequate diet is more nuanced than it may seem even for someone with a healthy digestive system, because we can only absorb a limited amount from each meal. In this video, I teach you how to do exactly that for vegans, omnivores, and everyone in between. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 16 Feb 2017 - 06min - 652 - 5 Ways to Make Liver Taste Better | Chris Masterjohn Lite #9
If you’re going to cook your own fresh liver, here are five core principles to make it taste as good as it possibly can. These can be applied to any recipe. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 14 Feb 2017 - 05min - 651 - 5 Ways to Eat Enough Liver | Chris Masterjohn Lite #8
Liver is the most nutritious food on the planet, but many people find it difficult to work into their diet. Here are five ways to do that. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 09 Feb 2017 - 05min - 650 - The Quickest and Easiest Way to Make Bone Broth Change | Chris Masterjohn Lite CML #7
Bone broth is a fantastic way to support your beauty, strength, and health, but can be a pain to make. Here’s how to make it in an Instant Pot and have a week’s worth of reheatable food in the process. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 07 Feb 2017 - 05min - 649 - 5 Easy Ways to Use Ginger for Better Digestion | Chris Masterjohn Lite #6
Sometimes a really simple digestive aid can do wonders for your digestive system and save you from restrictive diets and other more complicated solutions. Here’s five ways to try ginger to do just that. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 02 Feb 2017 - 03min - 648 - That Moment You Wake Up to Pee And Can’t Fall Back to Sleep | Chris Masterjohn Lite CML #5
Here are three practical tips for how to prevent waking up early to pee and help you fall back asleep if you do. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 31 Jan 2017 - 04min - 647 - Better Sleep and Wakefulness With Basic Light Hygiene | Chris Masterjohn Lite #4
Proper light hygiene can help you sleep better, make your sleep more restful, and help you feel more awake during the day. This video covers the three most important principles of light hygiene. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Thu, 26 Jan 2017 - 04min - 646 - Sometimes Sugar is Better Than Starch | Chris Masterjohn Lite #3
Although starch digests more slowly than some sugars and starch-rich foods often contain fibers that slow the release of glucose into the blood even further, the presence of glucose in the mouth helps our bodies coordinate the proper insulin response needed to keep our blood sugar stable. Some of us may tolerate natural sugars better than starches because we have low amounts of the enzyme salivary amylase, which begins converting the starch to sugar within our mouths. If your blood sugar response to starch is poor, providing you do not have diabetes, it is a worthwhile experiment to see if you tolerate natural sugars better. Access the show notes, transcript, and comments here.
Tue, 24 Jan 2017 - 04min
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