How to Avoid Insulin Resistance and Why it's Important | Dr. Robert Lustig & Dr. Dom D'Agostino

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  • Опубликовано: 23 янв 2025

Комментарии • 711

  • @barrysmith8193
    @barrysmith8193 Год назад +283

    I’m 75 years old and have a 25 year plan. Dr Lustig is the most important trusted advisor in my support plan.

    • @armikmuson5191
      @armikmuson5191 Год назад +10

      👍👍👍

    • @calibby85
      @calibby85 Год назад +7

      Power to you buddy!💪🏽🙌🏻👏🏼

    • @ddee203
      @ddee203 Год назад +23

      I'm 44 and have a 25 year plan too. Dropped sugar around 6 years ago.. life changer

    • @raymondchan4757
      @raymondchan4757 Год назад

      ​@calibby85 Noooo.koooooo

    • @Acts-1322
      @Acts-1322 Год назад +19

      You might find Dr Chatterjee and Dr Jamnadas videos to also help you on your health journey. 1) nutritious diet with limited poisons (sugars and fake sugars, alcohol, smoking, omega 6 veg seed oils). 2) lots of strength training AND faster movement that strengthens heart/lungs. 3) LOW TECH to get good sleep 7-8 hours every night, no screens an hour before bed. 4) low stress, good relationships

  • @LashusJourney
    @LashusJourney Год назад +94

    My insulin was at a 8 last year, I reversed it to 3 in a year just by lifestyle changes. Thanks for all you do.

    • @dx398
      @dx398 11 месяцев назад +2

      Do you still eat fruits

    • @yumicrisostomo3094
      @yumicrisostomo3094 10 месяцев назад +5

      What is your diet like?

    • @Darketka
      @Darketka 3 месяца назад +1

      God bless

    • @happilysmpl
      @happilysmpl 2 месяца назад

      Please tell us what changes you made. Anything in particular aside from exercise

  • @lilytea3
    @lilytea3 Год назад +82

    0:54: 🔑 Insulin resistance is a phenomenon where the receptors for insulin on the cells are downregulated and signaling beyond the receptor is dysfunctional, leading to various chronic diseases.
    11:21: 💡 The liver is the primary site of insulin resistance and fatty liver disease affects a large portion of the population.
    19:54: 📚 The discussion involves the relationship between diabetic nephropathy, insulin, and glucose levels, as well as the impact of exercise and diet on metabolic conditions.
    28:05: 🍎 The liver plays a crucial role in metabolic health, and fixing the liver is important for preventing and treating chronic metabolic diseases.
    36:58: 📚 Type 2 diabetes is eminently reversible by fixing the diet, but the American Diabetes Association does not emphasize the importance of insulin and does not recommend measuring it.
    46:15: 📉 Fasting insulin is an important measure of metabolic health and should ideally be less than 10 Microunits per milliliter, with insulin resistance occurring above 15 Microunits per milliliter.
    55:35: 👨‍⚕ Fiber is essential for maintaining a healthy intestinal barrier and preventing inflammation in the body.
    1:05:08: 🔬 There is currently no strong evidence to support the use of supplements in improving insulin resistance.
    1:14:00: ✅ The discussion explores the use of GLP-1 analogs for insulin resistance and weight loss, highlighting the need for further research.
    Recap by Tammy AI

    • @garzascreek
      @garzascreek Год назад +2

      Thanks for the quick links.

    • @PromeoRoy
      @PromeoRoy Год назад +1

      Tell me in simple language how to reverse Type 2 diabetes. I had very recently been a Type 2 diabetic as l drank bottles of alphanso mango juices, icecreams and large amount of sweets,chocolares,cakes etc. After being on Insulin ( 2 types ) and regulated diet for 45 days , my fasting sugar is between 89 io 108 and PP readings are 113 to less than 200. I am now being on Insulin Glargine Injection I P 100 IU/ml ( r-DNA - origin ) , 10 units, only, once in the morning. Also l am taking 1 Tab of 2 mg GLIMEPRIDE.

    • @emmwhite3945
      @emmwhite3945 Год назад +6

      @@PromeoRoy hello from Canada,
      Simple advice … just take one day at the time…. really, stop eating anything made from white / even whole grain flour, any pasta, rice, potatoes, tacos…and similar….
      No fruit juices, beer, alcohol, ice cream, donuts and cookies - nothing from flour and sugar….🛎
      Any veggie’s, salads, any lean meat, water to drink-5-6 glasses/day minimum, eggs/ omelette, cheese - not too much, nuts are good..,
      All this information is very important

    • @elizabethsamuel2219
      @elizabethsamuel2219 Год назад

      very useful discussion

    • @SidRay-w9h
      @SidRay-w9h 9 месяцев назад

      K​@@PromeoRoy

  • @marionalbergo1146
    @marionalbergo1146 Год назад +68

    Dr Lustig is a genius he just knows more then anyone else - dr or otherwise! !! Probably because he has been doing this for decades. He is dedicated and really is the only one I follow - period. I bought his book and cut out sugar and processed food. I lost 20 pounds 150 to 130. And ALL my belly fat !!I have more energy and my lungs take in deep breaths better and my oxygen levels went from 93 to 98. My ha1c was 5.6 - I’m going back (6 months later) for another test which I expect to be much lower. I have said this before but I believe Dr Lustig deserves a Nobel Prize for his work and dedication to educating the human race AND the health establishments and doctors all over the world.

    • @juliettailor1616
      @juliettailor1616 Год назад +3

      I agree re: Dr Lustig. Did you cut out bread? I find that to be the main culprit in my diet. I've cut out most sugar and try to go without bread and am thinking of consuming only real sourdough bread if I can find any. Apparently sourdough is the only bread which is good for insulin resistance.

    • @vogeljennifer6318
      @vogeljennifer6318 Год назад +1

      agree

    • @franzpink2403
      @franzpink2403 Год назад

      What is the name of Dr Rob Lustig's book?

    • @RealityCheck1
      @RealityCheck1 Год назад +1

      ​@@juliettailor1616remove ALL highy processed foods

    • @niranjanpaul2176
      @niranjanpaul2176 Год назад +2

      Too noble for the nobel folks

  • @SurenderKVats
    @SurenderKVats Год назад +161

    Dr Lustig, you are doing a favor to citizens of the world. Your advice is simple, straight and so valuable. Thanks for making it available on the net.

    • @debrobinson857
      @debrobinson857 Год назад +7

      Now we just need to get people to pay attention.

    • @evasquez8977
      @evasquez8977 Год назад +1

      ⁠@@debrobinson857😮🎉

    • @christinabengtsson8346
      @christinabengtsson8346 Год назад +1

      About processing food, like juicing. If you destroy all fiber in juicing, your teeth process all food - likewise - by chewing like a grainer - all food - down to puré berörd swolloing. Everything enda up puré.

    • @christinabengtsson8346
      @christinabengtsson8346 Год назад +1

      What about your teeth and chewing? ...which grinds everything down before swollowing anyway. That is total processing! Puré

    • @lynlawley8903
      @lynlawley8903 Год назад +1

      Chewing gets things to process from mouth,to gut to mirobs

  • @salvadorissa7770
    @salvadorissa7770 Год назад +103

    What an amazing, comprehensive and enlightening discussion..! I was diagnosed with Syndrome X, hyperinsulinemia, reactive hypoglycemia about 35+ years ago. Never knew what to do about it until recently, when I decided to actively measure my fasting insulin and find ways to lower it from 17.5 units to 4.7, per the latest test. In my case, understanding how to reduce cortisol was the key. Once I controlled cortisol, my blood pressure and blood sugar normalized. I was able to add 3-day water only fasts to my time restricted eating protocol. Unfortunately, this wasn't anything my medical care providers taught me. IMO it took too long for me to acquire the knowledge and then the resolve to act. Thanks to scientists like Dr Lustig and others that care to tell it like it is and teach others....

    • @ethioamericann
      @ethioamericann Год назад +15

      Thank you 🙏that is really a helpful feedback. Yes Dr. Robert Lustig is the best advocate for people with metabolic syndrome especially kids with fructose overconsumption. I personally have been practicing OMAD diet for almost a year now, and I was able to bring down my HGB A1C from 10.5 to 5.7 primarily due to a time restricted meal time coupled with a regular aerobic exercise ( walking & hiking). I really think if I also incorporate a 3 days of water fasting on weekly bases, I can overcome the weight-loos plateau and rich my eventual goal sooner 🤞🏾

    • @scottfrench9267
      @scottfrench9267 Год назад +9

      ​@Tam Bekele My very humble, non-medical opinion: fasting is one of the most powerful health tools we have. I do a minimum of 16 hours / day, 36 hour fasts regularly, and longer (72+ hour) fasts multiple times a year. It can be overdone, though. A weekly 72 hour fast would be very taxing on your body and maybe too much of a good thing?
      It took us years and decades to get in the ill health we were in. Let's take the time, slow and steady, to heal from the poor nutritional habits of our past.

    • @kenadams5504
      @kenadams5504 Год назад +11

      How did you reduce your cortisol levels ?

    • @salvadorissa7770
      @salvadorissa7770 Год назад

      @@kenadams5504 Long story short....What worked for me was to perform exercises that activate the parasympathetic nervous system (links to videos below.)
      The longer narrative: Around the 52nd hour of fasting my blood pressure increased to the likes of 180 Systolic/100 Diastolic 100 heart rate. ...It would fast normalize if I ate something. Also, during fasting, my blood glucose never went below 90+, even while in ketosis!. And If I went for a walk or worked in the backyard w/o eating my glucose would go up into the 110s.
      My son and I, both not MDs but technically inclined, theorized that both reactions pointed to cortisol and stress. Only recently I heard someone mention that gluconeogenesis is triggered by cortisol.
      These are the exercises that helped me:
      ruclips.net/user/shorts5XXxFrITiEM?feature=share
      By breathing in a manner like this short video recommends, my blood pressure went into the 90/60 82 range within minutes....
      I have made it a habit to breathe like this. BTW I quit taking my ACE2 inhibitor about 6 months ago.
      These two exercises have also been very helpful, especially in high-stress situations:
      ruclips.net/video/LnV3Q2xIb1U/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/zUx5kLFyx-M/видео.html

    • @Mr-hn2bp
      @Mr-hn2bp Год назад +11

      ​@@kenadams5504 Don't get upset, never rush to do anything, stop worrying unnecessarily.

  • @lisaa8795
    @lisaa8795 Год назад +142

    Great slogan: "You cannot outrun a bad diet". Until I was about 50 I believed I would always bounce back from sugar binges by exercising.

    • @Alex-hd6ek
      @Alex-hd6ek Год назад +13

      You are right, we should try swimming...

    • @kenadams5504
      @kenadams5504 Год назад +20

      That was "pre-Lustig "...once you know about the affects of excess sugar , you can never unsee them.

    • @BhagwatiPrasadJoshie
      @BhagwatiPrasadJoshie Год назад +6

      Golden words man

    • @hokeywolf3416
      @hokeywolf3416 Год назад +16

      Same here. Now that I avoid most sugar, my exercise consists of projects around the house.

    • @AquaSunny
      @AquaSunny 10 месяцев назад

      ​@@kenadams5504the most funny thing is that word LUSTIG in German language means ,,funny,, so it really was preLustig 😂

  • @mpoharper
    @mpoharper Год назад +23

    If I ever have a health problem, I want Dr. Lustig on my case!!

  • @jespestana
    @jespestana Год назад +97

    I particularly appreciate the discussion on the origin of insulin resistance in the liver vs. in the muscles. Robert Lustig is great explaining why fructose (for instance, in refined sugar) is so detrimental to health. D'Agostino being a researcher on the same field makes for a great interview discussion so far. Thanks for hosting these important discussions. 😊

  • @yolandacuevas751
    @yolandacuevas751 Год назад +15

    Dr. Lusting, 9 years ago I was diagnosed diabetic type 2, I have lost 100 lbs. in 9 years I was over weight “ very” but unable to take control over my glucose problem. Unable to find a solution and dedicated to find something I have found you. And Oh my goodness am I happy. You have changed my lift and gave me hope. Thank you

    • @BerhaneKirosEmbaye-fn4sb
      @BerhaneKirosEmbaye-fn4sb Год назад

      If doctors could not cure you how can you give them much respect like this. For me I am very hopeless by doctors because they do not want to tell you what their test imply them,they like to hide them so that you can not treat or cure yourself.
      Thanks for advance!
      We do not need much explanation but a final cure for diabetes especially type2 and type 1 too.

    • @lindajones4849
      @lindajones4849 11 месяцев назад +1

      Yolanda - congrats on your success

  • @debbieconrad6616
    @debbieconrad6616 Год назад +8

    As a medical professional who follows a keto and IF lifestyle to heal my metabolic issues, I'm so glad to have found these two docs. I geeked out big time over this fantastic interview!

  • @-DailyInspiration
    @-DailyInspiration Год назад +9

    Wishing everyone who is watching this video to always have strength of heart and peace in soul:
    Amid life's tumultuous sea, a toolkit for the soul we seek,
    To mend the heart, find peace, and joy in times so bleak.
    In this video's embrace, a treasure trove, a hopeful start,
    Bolstering the mind, kindling hope, soothing every wounded heart 💗

  • @aprilek6003
    @aprilek6003 Год назад +42

    Love the Levels team and never get tired of hearing Dr. Lustig. Thanks for putting this old interview up

  • @tonystonebraker
    @tonystonebraker Год назад +105

    Down 122lbs. The difference is amazing. Once I learned about insulin and it’s effect. Game changer. Don’t understand why doctors never mentioned it before.

    • @jamesdean7756
      @jamesdean7756 Год назад

      Isn’t it obvious dummy

    • @JWB671
      @JWB671 Год назад

      You created an energy deficit and lost weight. Your body was still producing plenty of insulin, otherwise you would be dead.

    • @lorellgingrich1334
      @lorellgingrich1334 Год назад +35

      I've referred to this joke in other places but it bears repeating once again:
      From the show "Frasier"
      Niles Crane to Frasier Crane : "He's such a good patient. He always pays his bill and never gets well."
      Pharma stocks...?

    • @tonystonebraker
      @tonystonebraker Год назад +7

      @@lorellgingrich1334 lol. I think you are exactly right

    • @Mr-hn2bp
      @Mr-hn2bp Год назад +11

      These are new findings not incorporated into medical curriculum yet.

  • @MyCleverHandle
    @MyCleverHandle Год назад +6

    I'm sure there's a reason this popped into my feed today; I have a cardiology appt. today during which my doc will no doubt start banging his drum again about the need for me to be on a statin. He always overlooks my 30 year history of PCOS pre-menopause. And he never answers me when I ask why he's never ordered tests for fasting insulin levels or for old-fashioned glucose tolerance over a period of hours. Or why he or my primary care twit have never referred me for a nutrionist's diet evaluation. All he's ever concerned with is cholesterol levels. Like sugar doesn't matter at all. I honestly believe that I've developed Metformin resistance by now, and probably a good case of white coat-induced deafness. We simply aren't listening to each other anymore - a bad marriage! Thanks for this! And I'm a subscriber now!

  • @elpompo5166
    @elpompo5166 Год назад +43

    This content is just amazing and I realize why we have all these issues in the US: we are being led by merchants and not scientists. Appreciate this work!

    • @suzanneemerson2625
      @suzanneemerson2625 Год назад

      We have been led astray by many scientists. Ever heard of Ancel Keys? He’s the one who convinced the American Medical Association that cholesterol causes heart disease, and caused the medical professionals to promote the deadly low fat diet, and statin drugs, which have caused irreparable harm. It turned out that he faked the data in his “scientific study.”

    • @pameti.dragoblago
      @pameti.dragoblago Год назад +1

      not quite. it's the government that provides 'recommendations' (such as food pyramid), based on the 'scientific' findings. they are all in it together. media included.

    • @lymphomasurvive
      @lymphomasurvive 11 месяцев назад

      The government is a merchant too. ​@@pameti.dragoblago

  • @jeffreycash1572
    @jeffreycash1572 11 месяцев назад +17

    As someone who is thin and has developed pre-diabetes,gout, and slight atherosclerosis. I thank God ive come across Dr Lustig.
    He has helped me understand the process of metabolic disease.
    I had A1C of 6.3 1 year ago, now 5.4, with Keto carnivore diet and time restricted eating.
    I mentioned some of the concepts to my Dr's and its like im taking in a foreign language. 😢

    • @barrysmith8193
      @barrysmith8193 5 месяцев назад +4

      I track and log my health statistics every day and have done so for years. I average 5.25 A1C yearly. My current and new doctor provided me, at my request, a lipid panel. He announced that I am pre diabetic and that I need to stop drinking sodas and that I need to start taking statins. Fact number one is that haven’t had any sodas in 20 years. I consume zero sugars in any form ever. Fact number two is that when I wanted to share my health history log with him he told me that he wouldn’t need to see that. It was essentially irrelevant information. Fact number three is that I’ve found that typically doctors have no interest in a preventative health focus. At 77 I trust my own generated information a lot more than their advice. Dr Lustig has provided me with confidence to assure a healthy life.

    • @iorch82
      @iorch82 5 месяцев назад

      Have you checked your LDL cholesterol lately?

    • @jeffreycash1572
      @jeffreycash1572 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@iorch82 60 ldl 54 hdl. 54 triglycerides. Total cholesterol 123
      Eating carnivore very little carbs
      Low dose creator 10mg
      A1c 5.5. Didn't test my insulin level this time.
      I'm down 16 lbs since February 24

    • @jeffreycash1572
      @jeffreycash1572 5 месяцев назад +2

      @iorch82 60 LDL. 54 HDL. 54 Triglycerides total 123. 5.5 a1c
      Fasting insulin, they didn't check this time
      Low dose creator 10 mg
      Eating Carnivore mostly
      Trying to get 160 grams protein per day

    • @lisaware9697
      @lisaware9697 4 месяца назад

      @@jeffreycash1572hmm your total cholesterol is too low?

  • @methods3110
    @methods3110 Год назад +324

    The trouble with Keto is that it is a major threat to the medical and drug ‘industry’ because it is too simple, too effective, and too safe. It just needs one person - YOU.

    • @jumpercable20
      @jumpercable20 Год назад +90

      It worked for me, at the age of 70 I had high blood pressure for over 25 years, taking blood pressure meds, I went on a keto diet with intermittent fasting and went from 230lbs down to 146 lbs. in 18 months. NO MORE HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE. The easy way to fast is a small supper before 6:00 pm and nothing until after 12:00 or 1:00 pm, the next day. An empty stomach is a healthy stomach, I feel better and have more energy. My resting blood pressure is 120/70, you know the Doctors aren't happy because I don't need them or the dangerous meds from big pharma.

    • @linz716
      @linz716 Год назад +16

      @@jumpercable20 That's fantastic results! I was worried that at 66, I was too old to make a difference, so you have given me hope. My BP is fine, but triglycerides 3.5 and suffer from aches and pains in my hips.

    • @jaimeu1463
      @jaimeu1463 Год назад +2

      @@jumpercable20ppppppppppppppppppppppppppp

    • @jaimeu1463
      @jaimeu1463 Год назад +2

      @@jumpercable20p

    • @graememudie7921
      @graememudie7921 Год назад +33

      @@linz716 I have been doing Keto for 2 years and started Carnivore on March 17th 2023. I am feeling amazing. My joint pains are gone, and I no longer need to go to the chiropractor. Indigestion is gone as well. I started doing press-ups, and in the first week, I did 35 per day, which was 5 more than I usually do. I have steadily increased the number every day and did 70 a few days ago! I can't believe it!
      What I added was boron, which was suggested by, Dr. Suresh Khidwadker, one of the many doctors I follow on RUclips. That took it to another level. I am 67 years young and will never eat vegetables again. No carbs, absolutely no carbs. I have not put sugar in my coffee or tea for at least 40 years.
      Another effect of this diet is that the plaque on my teeth has completely gone. After about a week, I could feel it coming off, a very strange sensation. Additionally, I no longer have bleeding gums. I only take thyroxine for my underactive thyroid. I hope to get off of it over the next year on this diet.

  • @lisaa8795
    @lisaa8795 Год назад +22

    Jaw-dropping explanation about the effect of stress on the body. I wondered why my fat is so stubborn....now I have another explanation besides age.

  • @LinhPhamVietNam
    @LinhPhamVietNam Год назад +15

    Everytime I watch Dr. Rob Lustig discussion. I got something new to bring home. Great scientist and great person too, as he stands for what's right, not just for health but also others that affect our living quality.

  • @stanislawpalka9015
    @stanislawpalka9015 Год назад +8

    The best video on Insulin Resistance in the net. Congratulation to Robert Lustig.

  • @humanfamilymember
    @humanfamilymember 6 месяцев назад +2

    51:24 levels less than 10
    52:49 what to do:
    1. Change Diet
    Avoid sugar and refined carbohydrates including ultra processed foods (including corn fed meats)
    2. Exercise
    3. Drugs/Medications
    4. Surgery

  • @hans-jurgenwiegand7465
    @hans-jurgenwiegand7465 Год назад +4

    It’s like listening to my Dad, knowing he actually cares about us! Being 77 years old, I wished I could have learned more, years earlier! It can be weird, to be younger than your son, but nice if you’re appreciative & respectful! I do look up to him! More like an older brother. 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @afdave7
    @afdave7 11 месяцев назад +2

    I just found Dr Lustig and I have to admit, I love his FIRE!! He's super knowledgeable, and he fully understands the holistic view of the issue. Gives me hope we could ebb and fight the diabetic scourge with which the world is faced.

  • @vivianavowlanou8610
    @vivianavowlanou8610 Месяц назад +1

    Dr. Lustig, Thank you for what you do! We appreciate you. This is a life changing information.

  • @philipsheard624
    @philipsheard624 Год назад +16

    Thank you Dr. Rob Lustig & Dr. Dominic D’Agostino for this very insightful and important video. Very grateful x

  • @CashMoneyMoore
    @CashMoneyMoore Год назад +94

    This is incredible content. Thank you levels for hosting these two, hearing them discuss these issues as a fly on the wall is illuminating

  • @edwardbernard9198
    @edwardbernard9198 Год назад +17

    This guy is brilliant! Making so much sense.

  • @lucia_cossu_voiceteacher
    @lucia_cossu_voiceteacher Год назад +5

    Dom D’Agostino, you are facilitating and promoter of great quality science/clinic application.
    And thanks of course to Dr Lustig and his work.

  • @iainneilson1453
    @iainneilson1453 Год назад +50

    Thank you both for a fascinating discussion. The section on different types of diabetes was particularly enlightening. Fortuitously, the question in my mind, for the past two days, has been, "why is insulin not a standard measurement?" Having heard and read several articles about elite athletes with type 2 diabetes, it is clear that the association with obesity is irrelevant. The association with metabolic health, however, is crucial.

    • @Mr-hn2bp
      @Mr-hn2bp Год назад +9

      Insulin secreted into the blood is carried to the liver through the intestinal hepatic vein where it works and a majority of it is metabolized before entering the general circulation. The blood levels of insulin fluctuate fast and in a temporal manner apart from low level and insensitive/nonspecific tests. A better way may be measuring C-peptide level as a serogate .

    • @jr.6199
      @jr.6199 Год назад +4

      Lustig says 80% of obese patients have insulin resistance...that is most relevant!

  • @SC-bd4ou
    @SC-bd4ou Год назад +29

    Great conversation! A great deal of valuable info, and finally someone addresses the lack of routine insulin testing. I have been asking myself why it’s not included in standard testing! Bravo. Thanks for making these conversations public and available!

    • @sharicreamer4514
      @sharicreamer4514 Год назад +15

      I asked my doc for a fasting insulin test once. She told me she wouldn't do it because she wouldn't know what to do with the results. We need to do better.

    • @SC-bd4ou
      @SC-bd4ou Год назад +10

      @@sharicreamer4514 Absolutely! Ignorance is not so much the issue as I can understand science and medicine evolve. It’s the lack of interest and essentially humility many doctors show that bothers me most. We need to be our own health advocates (and find the right doctors).

    • @danadams6477
      @danadams6477 Год назад +3

      @@SC-bd4ou No doubt.

    • @Mr-hn2bp
      @Mr-hn2bp Год назад +5

      ​@@sharicreamer4514 If the fasting insulin is normal, a high postprandial blood glucose level means you are eating too much to keep it high for too long. If it is high, you have insulin resistance. Do OMAD and keto to clear the liver of fat. This should also lower A1C and insulin.

    • @kenadams5504
      @kenadams5504 Год назад

      @@Mr-hn2bp keto /carnivore also eliminate sugar/carbs ; that increase triglycerides. With lower trigs , you get less small dense ldl cholesterol that may cause plaque/heart disease,( depending on how much hdl you have).The carnivore diet of nutrient dense beef can also repair gut permeability, (caused by processed food). This restores the barrier between digesting food and the bloodstream .This polluted blood can also pass a permeable blood brain barrier ,(eventually resulting in neurological/psychiatric conditions.).This is thought to be driving skyrocketing cases of mental health disorders in countries with processed food .

  • @radiogreenblue
    @radiogreenblue Год назад +3

    Dr Lustig, I am so facinated by your interviews and lectures online. I am inn the process of getting my A1C down by not eating fructose and severely limiting carbs.

  • @mikeycbd
    @mikeycbd Год назад +3

    I'm not a medical doctor but I've been watching Dr Robert Lustig for many years. Recently I started viewing again because I wanted to understand how a marathon runner (me) in my very early 50s, 14 marathons, ends up having a 'heart attack'. Sugar was clearly the answer. I may have only been 72kg thinking I could eat whatever I want because I was burning off the sugar. Wrong. I now have been Keto since 2018 and now run in a Keto state. Note easy. I did my triglyceride to HDL ratio and it was 0.62, I'm thinking this year it will be even lower. Thanks for these very informative videos helping us to stay alive. ...oh... my heart attack may have actually just been a raise in troponin due to running and 4 hours in SR Tachycardia but they found a 99% blockage 4 days later when they just 'checked' before sending me home.

  • @cinder176
    @cinder176 Год назад +43

    Dr. Dom, you cut off Dr Robert at a very crucial time. He started to explain the 4 ways to reduce insulin resistance and started with changing the diet. He didn’t finish explaining about the diet nor did he get to the other 3 methods when you interrupted and asked about Lucine in body builders. How many of the public listening are body builders? Let him finish how to heal insulin resistance before worrying about body builders because that’s what the vast majority of the public has.

  • @Jackiea08
    @Jackiea08 Год назад +18

    I love the level of in depth knowledge and explanation dr Lustig provides. I always grateful to listen to you.

  • @CarnivoreAnesthetist
    @CarnivoreAnesthetist Год назад +7

    Did I just hear Robert Lustig he’s just a mere mortal! Hahahaha he’s let’s say he’s very confident! I will say this about the man! He is super smart and a wealth of information! Great interview!

  • @suzikirby1973
    @suzikirby1973 Год назад +9

    Thank you for this offering. Two wonderful minds in this space.

  • @kevindunagan9822
    @kevindunagan9822 Год назад +7

    Quest doesn't even offer a fasting insulin test now. I had to go to the local hospital I use to get my blood insulin level, and I had to ask my PCP to order it. My fasting insulin turned out to be 17.5, but a month of intermittent fasting, keto, and exercise brought it down to 10.6.

  • @rocko100able
    @rocko100able 10 месяцев назад +2

    2-26-"2024 I got a test a A1C test which was
    7.4, my doctor told me I had diabetes a week before, and then less than a week after he told me, I myself fell on the floor with a diabetic coma and I almost died, and then when I recovered weeks later after going to the emergency Ward and was recovering, they gave me my A1C test, but I had no idea then I had such a serious situation that I was in, and now they got me taking a long-lasting shot twice a day, but the only reason I know anything about it is because I studied my situation out by myself by listening to three of your videos, and much reading on the subject,
    and I'm still trying to figure out what to do with myself other than I immediately changed my eating habits, and that my eating habits were wrong, and boy am I glad I watched your videos and studied diabetes type 2 for myself and I'm still learning, but the two long-lasting shots, and I'm realizing that those two shots a day is actually hurting me, so I'm going back to my doctor and showing him the list of things I want to be tested for which is the list you provided in your videos, and I'm just trying to accumulate information to keep myself alive and to know what to do, I need all the help I can get, and after I show my doctor the list of things I want to be tested for he hasn't even said enough to me to know much about diabetes and I'm going in on the 14th of this month and I've got a lot of information and tests according to the list you gave looks like a good list of things that I should be tested for to make sure how I need to go forward with my diagnosis of diabetes type 2, your videos helped a lot and help me find information so I'd even know what to talk to my doctor about cuz I didn't get much information from him, and I'm hoping he's willing to give me these tests to really hone in on what my problem is individually in my own system so I can adjust things and find out if I really need insulin and why they made the decision to make me take long-lasting shots twice a day, I need all the help I can get.

  • @SusanCoombes-v2q
    @SusanCoombes-v2q Год назад +15

    15 years ago I asked a diabetes consultant ' why dont we measure insulin'. I was told it was unreliable. I bought a horse. She was insulin resistant! Vets measure insulin. Her fasting results were normal. I insisted on a postprandial test. The tesult was 20 times normal. Because grass is loaded with sugar she can only eat hay that is 10% sugar. On that she lost nearly half her weight, gained muscle mass and normalised her immune system. Why is it ok to measure insulin in horses and not humans.

    • @jerrytux5246
      @jerrytux5246 Год назад +2

      Big Pharma makes money out of sick people. The more sick people are the more money they make. They want people sick not better.

  • @intothenight9256
    @intothenight9256 Год назад +4

    I can listen to dr lustig all day…thank you doctor!

    • @wadepatton2433
      @wadepatton2433 Год назад

      I go in spells. I watched everything he had up a few years ago--now he's everywhere. I've been binging since Saturday. and Metabolic is on the way to my mailbox. I broke with sugar 8 years ago but am trying to help others.

  • @jimpowers9553
    @jimpowers9553 Год назад +2

    Certainly one of the best videos of medicine ever done by this brilliant endocrinologist.

  • @kommsofort6977
    @kommsofort6977 Год назад +5

    This is fantastic information. I could listen to these guys talk for hours. Thank you!

    • @wadepatton2433
      @wadepatton2433 Год назад

      You're in for a treat. There are hours upon hours of pretty good interviews with him now. Fresh stuff about the same old thing--that folks need to know.

  • @Mac-r9i
    @Mac-r9i Год назад +4

    This is the best explanation I have heard about insulin resistance. When I asked my doctor during my annual wellness visit to check my fasting insulin he said I didn’t need it. I m going back to have him draw it after hearing this. It was drawn a year ago by a different doctor. So I do have something to compare. I’m definitely insulin resistant. Now that I’m on a ketogenic diet I want to know if my levels are going down. I’ll suggest he look at this information. I hope he will.

  • @michaelberman3648
    @michaelberman3648 Год назад +12

    I wish that I can find a knowledgeable physician like you who understands so much about the metabolic processes that go on where so many other physicians would completely over look! And that’s a real pity for most of our population who may not know what to look for in a great physician! I just think the bar must never be watered down especially in the case for physicians where so many lives hang in the balance and are so dependent upon total accuracy!

    • @barrysmith8193
      @barrysmith8193 Год назад +3

      I put together a narrative that demonstrates my health intention, my dietary plan, and my life’s philosophy. I then made appointments with 5 different doctors, met with each of them, and explained that I was looking for a trusted advisor for my life’s plan. I took a copy of Dr lustigs book Medabolical for each. Of the five I them I then selected the one that I was sure would be supportive in spirit and technical skills. I then wrote a letter of thanks and hand carried it to his office and asked him to share the letter with his staff. There are doctors that you can trust to practice to the benefit of you and his office both. Being proactive is not difficult you just have to do it. Don’t wait for someone to magically do it for you. It won’t happen.

    • @Jana-pm3nj
      @Jana-pm3nj Год назад +1

      ​@@barrysmith8193Bravo!! I must try this!

  • @tuppercareyd
    @tuppercareyd Год назад +13

    This is a very important video that really does give a tremendous insight into metabolic health. Thank you so much

    • @TheFarmersWife1
      @TheFarmersWife1 Год назад +3

      This is beyond incredible! I wish there was a program for Senior citizens or make Medicare pay for this! Please! It would save millions in the long run!

  • @pregapillay5326
    @pregapillay5326 10 месяцев назад +1

    Many many Thanks Drs.Lustig & D^Agostino for a Wonderful Dissertation on the metabolic syndrome. from a long-retired physician.

  • @colinchappell4973
    @colinchappell4973 Год назад

    Dr. Lustig is LEGEND his call out on the link between processed sugars and MDS is blueprint for acting upon integrity regardless of popularity and conventional wisdom. Thank you for the excellent conversation. I salute you gentleman. Science, truth and doing the right thing for the right reasons. Word!

  • @SharoPeikof
    @SharoPeikof Год назад +1

    So very grateful you are talking about all this on the internet and not just in meetings.... :)

  • @SantiagoPerez-np4ep
    @SantiagoPerez-np4ep Год назад +30

    You know I was diagnosed with pre diabetes and completely changed my diet . I went back six months later and had my a1c checked and it dropped out of the pre diabetes range . So on my recent visit I asked my doctor if we could check my fasting insulin as he was typing up documenting our visit and he turns around and asked me “ why do you want that, that won’t tell us anything “ the other thing is when I looked at his notes I didn’t see the documentation of me asking or requesting that test hmm. I was disappointed coming from a ucla medical center but driven by the pharmaceutical industry . I am now looking for another doctor but they are so hard to find !

    • @AnneAlready
      @AnneAlready Год назад +4

      I feel your frustration. I'm in NZ and I just ordered a fasting insulin test myself. One day docs might catch up but I'm not holding my breath!
      Great work on the a1c by the way.

    • @NadeemAhmed-nv2br
      @NadeemAhmed-nv2br Год назад +1

      I mean he is kind of right, blood sugar levels and insulin tell you the exact same story but if you asked him for an insulin sensitivity test, that would make more sense for him to do

    • @annettesilva2120
      @annettesilva2120 Год назад

      Very interesting and suspicious right? Doctors don't document anything.

    • @annettesilva2120
      @annettesilva2120 Год назад

      ​@@NadeemAhmed-nv2brwhat is an insulin sensitivity test called? Is that a blood test?

  • @qaisermajid
    @qaisermajid Год назад +5

    What a wonderful dialogue, the information provided here is the most important information for Human kind for the next 100 years. I listened it once will do it several times & will read books written by both of you.

  • @DM_Slider
    @DM_Slider Год назад +4

    I was an athlete 20 years ago and I didn’t eat well and had HTN and dyslipidemia back then. After cutting out UPF and sugar, I reversed all my chronic diseases. Dr. Lustig is the way, but you gotta know the biochemistry and medicine to know what to do. 21:07

  • @daveeeed
    @daveeeed Год назад +5

    It's amazing how much we know now about all the different types of dysfunction now. How they're able to work out the specific problem

  • @KevinSzabow
    @KevinSzabow Год назад +15

    Just last year was 310Lb at 20 years old Pre Diabetic. Today weighing in at 210Lb in 10 months about to turn 21 with a body fat Percentage of 17%. Diabetes risk free and seeing Dr lustwigs Ted Talk is what introduced me to the “real food” diet, I have never felt better and I have started a boxing career.

    • @lindajones4849
      @lindajones4849 Год назад +1

      Congratulations on reversing prediabetes and basically saving your own life.

    • @jaymehatfield9540
      @jaymehatfield9540 Год назад

      Congratulations for dialing in your best self with discipline and knowledge at 21. I wish every young man with your abilities would apply themselves to useful job skills that require creativity and originality. Playing childrens ball games competitively or beating the crap out of someone is a poor use of proven aptitudes.

  • @lkuty
    @lkuty Год назад +27

    Great to see another video from Dr Lustig. I watched the old ones with great interest. Thank you for the content and the discussion. Quite technical and not always easy to follow but interesting nonetheless

  • @250txc
    @250txc Год назад +2

    Mr. Lustig knows his stuff and Dom was all ears taking it all in .. Same as me ...

  • @HappyHabits
    @HappyHabits Год назад +2

    Dr. Lustig....a pleasure to listen to.

  • @jovoorheescollinsmphbsnbch6245
    @jovoorheescollinsmphbsnbch6245 Год назад +38

    I love how you get all frustrated Dr. L. 😅😂
    I get angry too.
    In my diabetes support group, when we started in 2018 we had 150 people. By Feb 2020, we had about 5,000 members. Since the pandemic, we have increased to 10,000 members. No one is talking about this in the legacy media or major medical associations.

  • @chadpritchard1905
    @chadpritchard1905 Год назад +4

    You sir with your information has totally changed my life / mind and body . Thanks for saving me

  • @loutes66
    @loutes66 Год назад +14

    Prof. Robert Lustig is Nickola Tesla of the Century In Medicine , THANK YOU

    • @user-ob5nk3ss1p
      @user-ob5nk3ss1p Год назад

      Nickola Tesla is a fraud!!!! He is a trickster!

  • @ygillham
    @ygillham Год назад +4

    Brilliant, Thank you. Love listening to Robert Lustig, he has the most brilliant mind!

  • @jovoorheescollinsmphbsnbch6245
    @jovoorheescollinsmphbsnbch6245 Год назад +8

    Beautiful discussion Gentlemen!!!
    I am a diabetes management coach and i belong to 2 support groups on Facebook. I will be sharing this content with them.
    My husband appears to be LADA probably post Hep A infection. Both of my identical twin girls have epilepsy and were both generically positive for predisposition to hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia and Schindlers Type 3 🙄

  • @alessianala
    @alessianala Год назад +1

    Interviewer is all over the place. The doc, is incredible

  • @rbalschun9624
    @rbalschun9624 Год назад +8

    Excellent discussion! Thank you gentlemen!

  • @ruthfrye9181
    @ruthfrye9181 Год назад +3

    although some of the scientific details hurts my brain a little, THIS INFO FROM THE DOC HAS GIVEN ME HOPE!...Thank u!!!

  • @pip5461
    @pip5461 Год назад +4

    This was a gold mine of information...

  • @jonthomas9708
    @jonthomas9708 Год назад +1

    Enjoyed this excellent and informative conversation around the nebulous term "insulin resistance". To learn that it can originate in different tissues and environments, that the types have specificity and are linked with different health problems I found very helpful. As someone who practiced time restricted feeding and was careful around carbs for 5 years before finding out I was on the first rung of pre-diabetes in spite of looking and feeling healthy this is a mystifying issue for me. As someone who took the information serously, immediately went from carb cautious to keto, bought a CGM and found 6 months later that my A1C was one degree WORSE this information helps me with the feelings of disempowerment and apathy in the face of this health challenge. As someone exasperated by being unable to get insulin tested it is encouraging to know that there are people more interested in these issues than my GP

  • @danadams6477
    @danadams6477 Год назад +5

    I enjoy listening to and watching Dr. Lustigs numerous lectures, RUclips discussions, and occasional cameos on health documentaries. I would love for my son and I to meet him someday.
    Perhaps Dr. Lustig would consider making a lecture tour around the CSU campuses in California. Is that possible?

    • @stevestevenss5193
      @stevestevenss5193 Год назад +1

      Yes let’s have him do an entire tour just for you lol smh

  • @irynaskorobogach7483
    @irynaskorobogach7483 Год назад +5

    Amazing... Thanks for letting us learn crucial things!

  • @samaa4622
    @samaa4622 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for such detailed content. Really sheds light on how body works with insulin and deep dives into it's function.

  • @williamdennis1256
    @williamdennis1256 Год назад +4

    That was great, Doc’s. Well worth the price of admission.

  • @Lunggirl
    @Lunggirl Год назад +8

    Dr Lustig continues to be my hero for educating us (great teacher!!) and for continuing to fight the big corps regarding sugar!! There's insulin resistance but also resistance to understand the truth about sugar!!! Keep up the fight!

  • @cynthiasivak5689
    @cynthiasivak5689 Год назад +2

    I've learned so much from following Dr. Lustig.

  • @DieKellerei
    @DieKellerei Год назад +2

    I simply love your content! This is one of the most reliable sources for people who are interested in nutrition and are tired of being lied to. What always confuses me though, is that some of the video covers look a lot like AG1 advertising. In my eyes AG1 is the exact opposite of Levels: a massive advertising with dubious statements (there are no 79 vitamins, for instance) to market a bad product that can even harm people.

  • @greenbroke6923
    @greenbroke6923 Год назад +4

    Sooo helpful. Appreciate your
    knowledge and time!

  • @monicagordon602
    @monicagordon602 Год назад +2

    I wish you were in NYC and could be my doctor. Thank you for making these videos. I have learned so much from them.

  • @maryswanson7146
    @maryswanson7146 Год назад +4

    At 60 years I started a low carb diet now 2.5 years later I have dropped close to 80 lbs today I talked to my Dr at my annual visit and asked her if she follows any of the low carb USA or Low Carb down under podcasts and she said to me.” I don’t think carbohydrates diet plays any roll in fat gain or loss” I told her I lost 80 lbs myself on low carb, but she just brushed it aside. 😳
    But she is really one of the good Drs who really cars for her patients.But low carb really is not yet that popular concept among Drs who are older than 50 years old

  • @kiutpi
    @kiutpi Год назад +5

    This podcast is wisdom! Thank you 🙏

  • @TheBrucepix
    @TheBrucepix Год назад +13

    I have osteoarthritis, and based on your comments I looked into the idea that it may also be caused by or correlated to insulin resistance. Apparently the mechanisms are very similar between osteoarthritis and type two diabetes - in other words, insulin resistance is at least a factor.

    • @T-aka-T
      @T-aka-T Год назад +3

      N=1 here - my osteoarthritis disappeared on a carnivore diet after persisting/worsening on keto. I blame the oxalates etc in all the "healthy" veg I was eating. (Spinach and nightshades being the worst offenders.)

    • @TheBrucepix
      @TheBrucepix Год назад +5

      @@T-aka-T Been transitioning to carnivore. Was on strict for about a month with good results. Ate some potatoes, nuts, chocolate and a few alcoholic drinks out of politeness on vacation and can barely walk now!

    • @Jana-pm3nj
      @Jana-pm3nj Год назад +2

      ​@user-we7ue5de1t I have the same problem, osteoarthritis, from eating too many processed carbs. I try my best to eat a carnavore diet but I do eat small amounts of cruciferous vegs. I think that's the best of both worlds. I hope eating this way will reverse my t2 diabetes and osteoarthritis in my hands.

  • @l.s.754
    @l.s.754 Год назад +1

    Dr lusting is one of the doctors whom i trust.
    He's a real deal.
    I read his book Fat Chance.
    This lecture is a medical school type of content.
    I will have to watch it few more times, to conceptualize content.
    I didn't know, that there are many types of type 2 biabitice. That's certain organs are malfunction.
    That's an eye opening statement.

  • @theobonaparte94
    @theobonaparte94 Год назад +7

    Absolutely brilliant!

  • @ScienceAppliedForGood
    @ScienceAppliedForGood Год назад +2

    It was a very informative and important talk. I liked it a lot. A kind of must watch for good understanding of what Insulin Resistance is and what to do about it.

  • @livincincy4498
    @livincincy4498 Год назад +4

    I really liked this presentation

  • @paigeharmon6354
    @paigeharmon6354 Год назад +3

    I worked for a health insurance company in 1987 and as part of my job, I read a lot of Underwriting journals. I remember reading an article that said the rate of T2D was rising so fast, the researchers expected half of all Americans to have it by 2025. 1987 was 5 years or so after the food industry started pushing the lowfat narrative. People were developing T2D just 5 years after adopting high carb/low fat diets. And look where we are now - where the researcher predicted we'd be.
    Even as a very young underwriter, I told my coworkers that T2D would bankrupt our country.

  • @bikeman9899
    @bikeman9899 Год назад +1

    Can't help noticing not only lay people like me benefit from this expert knowledge, but there are lots of docs in the comments being educated as well.

  • @vaivavaliene942
    @vaivavaliene942 Год назад +3

    Excellent interview!
    :) Thank you!

  • @deanjericevic8912
    @deanjericevic8912 Год назад +1

    An insightful & interesting video, Dr Robert Lustig ; extremely well explained, cogent, I leant a lot. "To ask the right question is already half of the solution of the problem", thank you Dr Dom D'Agostino. I not only obtained a better understanding of Insulin Resistance & all its ramifications but also came away with an understanding of "leaky gut", fascinating.

  • @brigittefregault6411
    @brigittefregault6411 11 месяцев назад +2

    He’s brilliant! I love dr. Lustig!

  • @DietetykGrzegorzKlonek
    @DietetykGrzegorzKlonek Год назад +4

    Thx for this movie - i observe Insulin Resistance on huge population in Poland . Very often people have insulin level after fasting less team 10, but the problem is after drink glucose - sometimes is growing to 300 and after 2 hours growing more

  • @robertoingenitoiseppato6177
    @robertoingenitoiseppato6177 Год назад +2

    thank you so much for this info, this channell and all the knowlegde you share

  • @sb9442
    @sb9442 Год назад +2

    ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC INTERVIEW… stands alone apart from all others …THANK YOU BOTH SO MUCH for asking all the right questions of the absolute BEST resource of information available… DR LUSTIG IS ONE OF A KIND …. With all the qualities of a true humanitarian..not afraid to STAND TALL & PROUD OF the knowledge he is sharing with us & actually breaking the glass …THIS MAN ALONE WILL CHANGE THIS WORLD 🌎….IF …WE ALL… LISTEN 👂….THANK YOU

  • @garzascreek
    @garzascreek Год назад +3

    I really appreciate such a high-level discussion between two of the leading thinkers on metabolic heath and nutrition. I second Dr. D'Agostino's suggestion to get Dr. Lustig's book _Metabolical._ It is the consolidation of his life' s work. If some of this went over your head that book is the perfect introduction without dumbing down concepts for us lay readers.

  • @ftmrivas3043
    @ftmrivas3043 Год назад +1

    ❤❤❤Dr Lustig-he is certainly a treasure to Americans trying to get rid of fatty liver

  • @מרקויין
    @מרקויין 9 месяцев назад +2

    How do you messure IR ? What is your idea about HOMA-IR ? And what about LP-IR ?

  • @nikosidis
    @nikosidis Год назад +3

    Thanks, great content. I stopped to add sugar or eat things with added sugar 3 months ago and went down 9 kg. I been overweight for around 25 years so good to feel normal again at the age of 51. My diet is just as Dr. Lustig say. Do not eat, drink food with added sugar and eat very moderate of things like bread, rice, potato and pasta. Before I might eat 3 potatoes for dinner now I eat 1 etc. A diet where you go hungry will never work. I actually feel less hungry even if I eat less but I eat a lot of vegetables and fruit. Not all fruit and vegetabes are good though. Green Salad, Broccoli, tomato and Avocado are favorites. I still drink alcohol but that does not seam to do much regarding weight. Not that I drink every day though. Just sometimes in the weekends.

  • @ynmamflm
    @ynmamflm Год назад +4

    I've been sugar free for 4 months. Thanks Dr. Lustig

    • @hokeywolf3416
      @hokeywolf3416 Год назад

      I bet you are feeling great.

    • @ynmamflm
      @ynmamflm Год назад

      @@hokeywolf3416 feeling better in my 50’s than I have my whole life.

  • @kareli1143
    @kareli1143 4 месяца назад

    The best Doctor in the world ❤

  • @mathewmathew08
    @mathewmathew08 Год назад +2

    Thank you both. It is very helpful.

  • @WatchingPlanesnbirds
    @WatchingPlanesnbirds Год назад +1

    Love the way he explains things

  • @monicahwilliams
    @monicahwilliams Год назад +4

    You both are amazing!