Cardiologist Reveals the SHOCKING TRUTH About Cholesterol & Heart Disease! | Dr. William Davis

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  • Опубликовано: 16 сен 2024
  • Watch the full interview with Dr. William Davis on RUclips 👉 • Leading Cardiologist: ...
    Dr. William Davis is a cardiologist and the author of the #1 New York Times bestselling book, Wheat Belly.
    Subscribe to The Ultimate Health Podcast on RUclips: / @jessechappus
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    #drwilliamdavis #jessechappus #heartdisease
    About the Podcast
    Jesse Chappus has in-depth conversations with health and wellness leaders from around the world. Topics include lifestyle, nutrition, fitness, self-help, sleep, meditation, spirituality and so much more. Tune in weekly to take your health to the next level!

Комментарии • 128

  • @JesseChappus
    @JesseChappus  18 дней назад +14

    Watch the full interview with Dr. William Davis on RUclips 👉 ruclips.net/video/ZJkkyKrS-mA/видео.html
    Thanks for watching! If you're enjoying this clip, please click the LIKE button on the video and let me know. -Jesse 💙

    • @scotbarlow213
      @scotbarlow213 18 дней назад

      Vitamin D supplements or just maintaining a high level of you are exposed to a sunny climate year round ?

    • @gate-gate6863
      @gate-gate6863 18 дней назад

      ​@@scotbarlow213Watch Medcram the most recent episode😊

    • @joenabbi1214
      @joenabbi1214 15 дней назад

      Thanks Jesse for your work and finding this Dr and getting down to real causes and conditions. I was raised in an MD family and we were chasing tails for many years about this subject and yes I worked as an administrator in my fathers clinic for years also. I first heard the term VLDL out of naturopathic circles and to hear this cardiologist plainly stating his take on VLDL is in itself blowing my mind, I've been waiting to hear something on this for about 20 freaking years. And for me this is convincing that I am on the exact proper path and have been for quite a while and my health is excellent but the refreshing thing is now I have the science instead of wondering. Wow this is really great news!!! Yes I do avoid carbs, dangerous oils, low to moderate fat and high proteins, regular exercise, high Vit D/K and many other supplements and my Dr has been tried to push me to Statins a few years back and I didn't take the bait and I feel so good about it now.

  • @rmeohee
    @rmeohee 18 дней назад +19

    by far the best interviwer….fully engaged in the subject with veryy deep exploratory questions… excellence

  • @darvoid66
    @darvoid66 18 дней назад +39

    I wish there was a video about how to talk to your doctor when all he wants is to put you on a statin without ever testing particle sizes and depending on LDL-C alone. I would love to know that yogurt "recipe". Dr Davis talked so fast I didn't understand him. I love how excited he is about fixing this huge problem.

    • @vzenzaza
      @vzenzaza 18 дней назад +8

      Just say "No!"
      (Not to mention the fact that statins have major side effects which require taking other meds which cause other side effects -- which increase doctors' ability to prescribe more drugs and garner more perks from the pharmaceutical industry). But I digress...

    • @gate-gate6863
      @gate-gate6863 18 дней назад +5

      I just change the speed from setting😅

    • @yeahright2068
      @yeahright2068 18 дней назад +3

      You can slow down the speed of the video ya know?

    • @darvoid66
      @darvoid66 18 дней назад +2

      @@yeahright2068 Funny, I knew I could adjust the speed but didn't think to try that, thank you.

    • @jaymehatfield9540
      @jaymehatfield9540 18 дней назад +3

      There IS a way to respond to your doctor.
      By KNOWING these facts and being smart enough to realize you know more than him. He wont like it, but when you firmly present your case, he could realize he is working with an old paradigm. Watch videos, take notes.

  • @mrmover3521
    @mrmover3521 18 дней назад +13

    Love this guys channel. Deserves 10 times the subscribers. Better content, info than other guys on RUclips

    • @JesseChappus
      @JesseChappus  18 дней назад +2

      Thank you for the love! 🙏🏻💙

  • @spchua512
    @spchua512 18 дней назад +19

    Dr. William Davis mention small (dense) LDL are risk factor and he also mention avoid eating “fat” (not mention which type of Fat!) but normal fat or non-oxidated fat are mostly contributes to non-small (dense) LDL in serum. This point definitely needs to be clear clarification!

    • @Kjuken69
      @Kjuken69 18 дней назад +11

      This has nothing to do with fat what so ever! Transe fats are unhealty because the body can't break it down. Cholesterol has nothing to do with fat!

    • @jamesalles139
      @jamesalles139 18 дней назад +17

      avoid the industrially processed seed oils (PUFAs). Margarine is not food.

  • @hopepantazis4508
    @hopepantazis4508 18 дней назад +11

    Fascinating and makes great sense. Thank you.

  • @UnknownUser-sc6jx
    @UnknownUser-sc6jx 15 дней назад +12

    My total cholesterol is about 400. HDL 113. Triglycerides 46. Zero CAC. Blood pressure 100/60

    • @saren6538
      @saren6538 6 дней назад +2

      Brilliant just get that cholesterol up more 😀

    • @UnknownUser-sc6jx
      @UnknownUser-sc6jx 5 дней назад

      @@saren6538 exercise and fasting increased my total from 143 upto 425. Healthy fit lean people that are not consuming seed oils or junk food will all see a massive spike in cholesterol if they exercise and fast. If they do not it is because they're metaboliclly damaged in some way and should have a Kraft or ogtt maybe even screened for cancer to find out what is going on with them unless they have genetically low total cholesterol.

    • @giessenundgeniessen
      @giessenundgeniessen 4 дня назад

      C-High-Responder? Carnivore? Triathlet?
      Keep up the good work!

  • @joenabbi1214
    @joenabbi1214 15 дней назад +10

    Finally some excellent believable information on Cardiovascular Lipid Disease!!! Dr Davis, I'm thoroughly impressed about your honesty and courage to not go with the Big Pharma tide. What a refreshing relief it is to hear you.

  • @1charlastar886
    @1charlastar886 17 дней назад +6

    DR. DAVIS: I just read a paper from Oxford University implicating calcium oxalate in plaquing of arteries. Most doctors only think of kidney stones as calcium oxalate. Do you know of any research on this?

  • @LiseBarrett
    @LiseBarrett 18 дней назад +4

    This is mindblowing! I will definitely begin making this yogurt recipe. And we will remain committed to a low carb now grain lifestyle. It makes sense-of course it's all connected! Thank You Jesse & Dr. Davis for this valuable information. My family and I truly appreciate this conversation and the information included. 🙏💜🙏

    • @BillyBoy66
      @BillyBoy66 17 дней назад +3

      What is the recipe?

    • @barrittstephen2169
      @barrittstephen2169 17 дней назад +1

      Hi, do you know the recipe? I'm having trouble even spelling the ingredients. Please share if you can.

    • @nebojsa1976
      @nebojsa1976 13 дней назад

      @@barrittstephen2169 It's easy. You take yogurt and then you add

    • @BB-jn4dh
      @BB-jn4dh 4 дня назад

      What is the complete recipe?

  • @condoguy710
    @condoguy710 2 дня назад

    I had an NMR awhile back and my small ldl was off the charts . When I did my ct calcium score I was scared of the results , but my total score was 62 at age 62. I’ve had SIBO for years after undiagnosed celiac disease and heavy antibiotic use all my life . The cardiologist wants me on repatha and I’m freaking out he’d take such a drastic approach to get my ldl down from 193

  • @bobdec6665
    @bobdec6665 16 дней назад +5

    carbs are causing it.

  • @lauriea999
    @lauriea999 17 дней назад +2

    Jesse is the best spread the word peeps real news, real facts with good old fashioned hard earned work and grit Love you xoxox

  • @lukelacey101
    @lukelacey101 18 дней назад +5

    Dave Feldman et al.'s new paper seemed to show no correlation between sdLDL and plaque progression in their cohort

    • @Kjuken69
      @Kjuken69 18 дней назад +1

      A plaque build up happens because of damage to the artreries, this can't be difficult to understand, LDL or any other lipid particles don't have anything to do with the root cause why damage happensI am so tired of reading this idiotic LDL disqution. Please stop, use your brains!
      IF YOU HAVE THIS OR THAT NR IS IRRELEVANT! IF YOU HAVE LOW CHOLESTEROL OF CAUSE YOU GONNA HAVE A PROBLEM. BECAUSE IT'S SO DAMN IMPORTANT FOR ALL THE CELLS IN THE BODY!

    • @jamesalles139
      @jamesalles139 18 дней назад +2

      *No.*
      from the paper, p7:
      "It is plausible, if not likely, that LMHR-type subjects exhibit high LDL-C primarily from large buoyant LDL rather than _small, dense LDL, which is more atherogenic."_
      _emphasis is mine_
      change your sdLDL to *LDL-C* and I would agree with you.

    • @Damudean
      @Damudean 17 дней назад +2

      Your lipids don’t predict heart attack. It’s used so the pharmaceutical industry can give you statins to keep you in the system.
      This may not have been the case at the beginning but it definitely is now.

  • @sallymorgan6453
    @sallymorgan6453 13 дней назад +2

    I've been keto for 3 months. I'm Hashimoto's., 60 yo female. No gluten, grains, sugar, lectins, dairy. Lost 20 pounds, arthritis pain greatly diminished. BUT. My ldl has shot up to 400. My inflammation markers look great. WTH? I just made an appointment to get a Coronary Calcium Scan.

    • @sharfalor4244
      @sharfalor4244 9 дней назад +2

      Sounds like you may be a lean mass hyper responder.

    • @TempleOvBlackLight
      @TempleOvBlackLight 5 дней назад +2

      Watch David Feldman videos here in RUclips. You are possibly a lean mass hyper responder. His videos should give you some peace of mind.

  • @nonidiotman
    @nonidiotman 16 дней назад +1

    Dear Jesse,
    Can you advise me please.
    I am a type one diabetic of 47 years.
    I have stopped my statins. Is this ok for me ?
    In other words, am I putting myself at greater risk ?
    Mario.

  • @franzbuchel7295
    @franzbuchel7295 10 дней назад

    Excellent statements of Dr. William Davis!

  • @Klunge
    @Klunge 18 дней назад +4

    How do sdldl traverse a healthy endothelium? All the LDL guys talk about arterial wall penetration with out explaining how it gets there. There is no known mechanism. Transcytosis is a deliberate act, unlikely to be pathogenic. If it's just the size bursting through then smaller denser HDL should do the same thing. You first need endothelial damage, which would in itself therefore be the cause of atherosclerosis. 60 years to work out a mechanism and they can't.

  • @richardparis8738
    @richardparis8738 17 дней назад +1

    Amazing information

  • @jeffhausmann2365
    @jeffhausmann2365 12 дней назад +2

    How can I reverse my CAC score. Its very high

    • @lamarodom
      @lamarodom 7 дней назад

      Go on keto diet. No sugar no carbs. Take vitamin k2 which removed calcium from your arteries.

    • @betterplacetobe7896
      @betterplacetobe7896 2 дня назад

      High dose K2 & D3 plus 4000mg quality Omega 3 per day

  • @richardparis8738
    @richardparis8738 17 дней назад +2

    Mine was 91😮

  • @jon0604
    @jon0604 18 дней назад +2

    Explain why even with sdldl that plaque doesn’t evenly line the arteries and only develops in predictable areas

    • @jamesalles139
      @jamesalles139 18 дней назад

      because in those high-flow high-velocity locations the glycocalyx is washed out sooner and more often,

    • @m33265
      @m33265 18 дней назад +2

      Exactly. Plaque is not made in arteries (on low pressure side of blood system) only on bifurcations of arteries, for example on arteries going into brain. This place is source of 90 pct of cerebral strokes. And more frequently on vein side (high presure side) of blood system in curves or some places where blood is whirling. These particles are not passively stored in endothelium, injured endothelium by for example high blood pressure or big changes in this pressure actively calls this particles to come for repairs. Often place for this to happend are small curly veins on heart. If cholesterol is doing overall blood system problems, why is not stored almost never in arteries.

    • @jon0604
      @jon0604 18 дней назад

      @@m33265 the arterial side is the high pressure side; that’s why plaque doesn’t form in veins ( low pressure) except when a vein is used for a bypass on the arterial side. But that doesn’t explain why the entire lumen of the arteries are not affected by LDL. What seems to be the case is that at bifurcations, with high blood pressure, the swirling of the blood creates low shear stress ( pooling) and physical, mechanical damage occurs and LDL carries cholesterol there as part of the immune response. Also, some of the SNPs associated with FH also have related uptick in both clotting factors and macrophage production; but not all FH which is why about half of FH individuals don’t develop cardiovascular issues and why Mendelian randomization is not useful.

  • @bolo1263
    @bolo1263 2 дня назад

    So for my understanding talking to all the physicians that I work with, and info on line of course, calcium scores are good but they can't detect soft plaque. You state that it can? Now I'm confused

  • @oisteinthomassen
    @oisteinthomassen 11 дней назад +1

    A bit confused about his statement that the CAC score indicates the «total plaque» burden in the coronary arteries. CAC score measures the amount of *calcified* plaque, i.e. hard plaque. Soft plaque is unnoticed. Only CT angiography will identify soft plaque (unstable plaque). Hence a CAC score does not tell the whole story.

    • @allenterry8614
      @allenterry8614 8 дней назад

      That's my understanding as well ? 🤔

  • @MartinVejarano
    @MartinVejarano 17 дней назад +1

    Fantastic!

  • @ArgoBeats
    @ArgoBeats 16 дней назад +1

    Which are the 2 lactos he mentions at 13:05 for the Sibo Yogurt?

    • @miszesh
      @miszesh 3 дня назад +2

      @ArgoBeats Lactobacillus reuteri and lactobacillus gasseri

    • @ArgoBeats
      @ArgoBeats 3 дня назад +2

      @@miszesh thank you so much

  • @erikd6124
    @erikd6124 13 дней назад

    What bacteria am I supposed to eat ? Can I take a pill?

  • @bleondavis1756
    @bleondavis1756 День назад

    You need to explain/talk in Layman's term.

  • @Starchaser63
    @Starchaser63 11 дней назад

    My understanding is carbohydrates ( potatoes, rice, fruit etc ) is only a problem if taken with fat, so basically Sugar and Fat should always be separated ..

  • @BillyBoy66
    @BillyBoy66 17 дней назад +2

    Jesse, what is the yogurt recipe he talked about?

    • @JesseChappus
      @JesseChappus  17 дней назад +1

      Here is the recipe from a previous chat we had: ruclips.net/video/6zUPAHFzvPw/видео.html Enjoy!!

    • @BillyBoy66
      @BillyBoy66 17 дней назад

      @@JesseChappus Jesse, I was hoping to not watch an hour long video, just wanted the recipe.

    • @alexanderkeber4257
      @alexanderkeber4257 16 дней назад

      What’s the names of the two gut bacteria he mentioned? It’s hard to hear.

    • @nebojsa1976
      @nebojsa1976 12 дней назад

      @@BillyBoy66 Well, you can't do that Billy Boy. You have to watch video and click on one ad so I can make some money from youtube, ok. Don't be mad but that's how life works. You give me something, I give you something.

  • @alysiaandjohnglass
    @alysiaandjohnglass 8 дней назад +1

    The answer to all of this debate about what gums up our arteries in America is not complicated , stop putting carbohydrates down your throat hole and the glycation and systemwide toxicity vanish

  • @richardparis8738
    @richardparis8738 17 дней назад +1

    Vitamin K2 beef liver

  • @kaweka260
    @kaweka260 13 дней назад

    How is SIBO an indication of plaque build up?

  • @andrerousselsapet5219
    @andrerousselsapet5219 8 дней назад

    Is it KEFIR

  • @JamesBond-zd5jx
    @JamesBond-zd5jx 7 дней назад

    Read research mega-superstar Arne Astrup’s paper on saturated fats in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2020. Quashes the idea that dietary saturated fat contributes to CVD. Also, statins decrease fluffy cholesterol which isn’t harmful. It doesn’t do anything to decrease the small dense particles.

  • @DebbieBennett-p5v
    @DebbieBennett-p5v 18 дней назад +6

    Cant understand the two items to make the yogurt...the 2 probiotics..

    • @paulianos9746
      @paulianos9746 18 дней назад +3

      Lactobacillus gasseri, the second one...but first one is still undercover..

    • @hermannschmidt9788
      @hermannschmidt9788 18 дней назад +5

      Bacillus Reuteri

    • @gif24gt60
      @gif24gt60 17 дней назад +2

      Are those bacteria found in homemade kefir?

    • @hermannschmidt9788
      @hermannschmidt9788 17 дней назад

      @@gif24gt60 No. You have to deliberately cultivate them.

    • @erikd6124
      @erikd6124 13 дней назад

      ​@@hermannschmidt9788 What about taking a pill with some bacteria?

  • @pablocohen
    @pablocohen 14 дней назад

    Does Adderall affect your calcium score? Since it’s in the family of methamphetamine?

  • @Damudean
    @Damudean 17 дней назад

    The biggest problem I heard in the opening was the meaning/usage of cause. Is ldl a factor in developing plaques? Yes but does that mean it’s a cause? If it was why don’t veins get damaged? Oh this is too simple isn’t it? Because the ldl isn’t the “cause”!!!!!

  • @richardparis8738
    @richardparis8738 17 дней назад

    How about red rice East

    • @jeffj318
      @jeffj318 17 дней назад

      How about it? Another science denier making comments.

  • @tomahawkskipper
    @tomahawkskipper 18 дней назад +1

    Why would you need CT scan if you are already on a strict keto or carnivore diet?

    • @BillyBoy66
      @BillyBoy66 17 дней назад +3

      I was carnivore for 5 months and decided to get a CAC score done. I just wanted to know because I had smoked for 35 years, ate anything I wanted, and hadn't exercised in 20 years. Well, the score came back very high at 600.
      That's why...

    • @tomahawkskipper
      @tomahawkskipper 14 дней назад

      @@BillyBoy66 and what changes in your diet will you make after finding your score?

    • @BillyBoy66
      @BillyBoy66 14 дней назад +1

      @@tomahawkskipper Well, I cut out all processed food, sugar, and most carbohydrates. I'm down 50+ lbs, my blood work (labs) are ALL improving. All I'm trying to do is stop the progression of my heart disease. I also spend an hour a day in the gym, 30 mins of the treadmill and 30+ mins of weightlifting (resistance training). I'm 58 yrs old and feel 20 yrs younger. The low-carb diet has changed my life.

  • @bobdec6665
    @bobdec6665 16 дней назад +1

    keep triyglycerides low , hdl high

  • @ArgoBeats
    @ArgoBeats 16 дней назад +1

    6:12

  • @Brickzar86
    @Brickzar86 18 дней назад +5

    If vitamin D is stored in fat, and reducing grains, increasing omega 3, etc etc causes you to reduce body fat; wouldn't an increase vitamin D just be a consequential byproduct of your body using up some of your body fat as energy? obese people tend to have lower vitamin D levels than healthy people for the same reason, and obese people have a much higher risk of having a heart attack than healthy people. what biochemical role does vitamin D play in reducing cardiac calcium? I think vitamin D is just a bystander and not a factor is heart disease risk.

    • @solox5853
      @solox5853 18 дней назад +1

      doesnt vitamin D remove calcium concentration in the blood into the bones? isn't that one of it's function?

    • @Brickzar86
      @Brickzar86 18 дней назад

      @@solox5853 The only thing I've heard of that removes cardiac calcium is primarily vitamin K2, which works with vitamin D. The difference is our bodies can make vitamin D and is happy to make as much as we need, whereas K2 usually comes from the food we eat. It's just odd that vitamin D is singled out and no mention of K2. Given that our bodies will make the vitamin D, and the K2 comes from our food; it seems more likely that eating more K2 containing foods would be more productive.

    • @solox5853
      @solox5853 18 дней назад +1

      @@Brickzar86 oh yeah of course your right, vitamin D has to be taken with vitamin K2, or just taking vitamin K2 if your vitamin D is normal, but a lot of people living in cold countries like England lack in vitamin D.
      also to note is why people buy just random vitamin D tablet, isnt it better to buy vitamin D mixed with Vitamin k2.

    • @Brickzar86
      @Brickzar86 17 дней назад

      @@solox5853 But again, your body makes all of the vitamin D you need, freely, as long is you don't have low cholesterol. If your body needed more vitamin D, it would simply make it. over millions of years of evolution has conditioned the human body to do this naturally. Just like glucose; when we don't eat sugar, our body simply makes the right amount of glucose we need to function. We DO however need to take in exogenous vitamin K2, especially if we have a plaque buildup.
      The reason why people in climates with less sun exposure have less vitamin D is because vitamin D assists in skin pigmentation. Otherwise the Inuit (darker skinned community that lives in northern canada) would show symptoms of vitamin D deficiency, which they don't. You should check out Paul Mason's talks about vitamin D.
      There doesn't seem to be a biochemical explanation as to why we need to take in extra vitamin D.

    • @nebojsa1976
      @nebojsa1976 12 дней назад

      @@Brickzar86 No, you don't understand. Sun and kidneys convert vitamin d, inactive form to active form. If we don't get enough sun, there is not enough conversion. That's why you need supplements.

  • @ang1783
    @ang1783 14 дней назад

    so this is also a hypothesis not an actual cause and effect explanation

  • @Roberto-cg2gr
    @Roberto-cg2gr 17 дней назад

    LDL will be small if you have inflammation. Small particles is an injured firemen trying to cure inflammation

  • @m33265
    @m33265 18 дней назад +6

    Total nonsense. See some videos on this topic - prof Bart Kay. One question - what makes this glycation of everything in blood ? Excessive carbs. Stop eating carbs. Simple. Body have gluconeogenesis, strictly managed level of glucose in your blood, approx 4 grams in every single moment of your life. People need zero exogenous carbs. The only question is if they are as highly addicted persons able to not giving carbs into their necks. Much more damage in overall body health is made by insulin resistance. Vivat breakfast ful of carbs. And carnivore diet.

    • @kathleenking47
      @kathleenking47 18 дней назад +1

      It IS CARBS...
      They're only great, if you use early chores, to burn off
      Or, work out early

    • @Damudean
      @Damudean 16 дней назад

      Carbs are never “great” for your body unless for some reason you have damaged it so badly you can’t produce the glucose you need through gluconeogenesis

    • @m33265
      @m33265 16 дней назад +1

      @@kathleenking47 If your cells are very hungry, OK, your cells will eat carbs immediately. But high glucose staying longer time in your blood stream is nothing good damaging your blood system especially micro veins. All carbs are telling your body to prepare for storing excess energy into fat. Bartle Cycle. But dont think that cardio is healthy in any way. Is not, its only stress for your heart making his walls thicker in time. All these ultra marathon runners / ultra cyclist, often dead after fifty years of their life, bodybuilders often before fifty years, if they use steroids even sooner. People have genetic ability to live into 120 years. So die in 55 years is very soon.

    • @m33265
      @m33265 16 дней назад

      @@Damudean Do carbs and exercise, you can overexercise everything. Exercise is another stress for your body, nothing else. Body must repair above normal situation. Or you can go keto and you have all benefits of doing it for free. Body can change proportions (muscle / fat) of itself by itself. Enough animal fat and animal protein. No carbs or some cheating sometimes. Its hard go keto in todays sweet world, change carbs as fast unstable energy source (changing for example moods very fast) to fats as very stable and 3 times more concentrated energy source of energy, very stable, full of nutrients (no empty or almost empty as carbs), but who will made it, is winner. And its recipe for loosing weight, one part of obesity is nutrient malnutrition.

    • @saren6538
      @saren6538 6 дней назад +1

      Go away, you little 90s child

  • @PaulRyan-x4f
    @PaulRyan-x4f 14 дней назад

    But tight junctions?

  • @yosefsugi1808
    @yosefsugi1808 13 дней назад +1

    ❤❤❤❤

  • @andrerousselsapet5219
    @andrerousselsapet5219 8 дней назад

    Wow 👏👏👏✅❤️

  • @pjcdm
    @pjcdm 17 дней назад +1

    Oral sex might have a few other advantages!