Explaining inflammation and some action steps you can take to fight it on KTLA.
06:00 min
CLEAR ALL
Listen in to a chat with our Communications Director, Kayla Barnes and Dr. Will Cole to learn more about the root cause of inflammation, how emerging diets like Keto and techniques like intermittent fasting affect inflammation, how to measure your levels of inflammation and more!
Simple habits can foster healthy gut and brain bacteria, which can help you live longer and age more slowly. Eat mostly vegetables, take fiber and prebiotics, and practice intermittent fasting, says Dave Asprey.
1
Genetics loads the gun, but environment pulls the trigger. The way you eat, how much you exercise, how you manage stress, and your exposure to environmental toxins all contribute to things like high cholesterol, high blood pressure, high blood sugar, and of course, heart disease.
2
Functional medicine aims to uncover the laws of biology, treats the human body as an ecosystem, and is about creating health, not just curing illness. Mark Hyman is one of the foremost practitioners of functional medicine, one of its earliest advocates, and is certainly one of its best spokesmen.
LIVE Q&A with Mark Hyman, MD, Director, Center for Functional Medicine answering your questions about sugar.
There are a lot of myths when it comes to food. CBS News' Anne-Marie Green sits down with Dr. Mark Hyman, the author of "Food: What the heck should I eat?" in the Toyota Green Room to debunk some of them.
“Dr. Hyman, I took a quick glance at your Eat Fat, Get Thin plan and saw that you recommend potato starch as part of the diet,” writes this week’s house call. “I thought we were supposed to avoid carbs?“
Learn how to use functional nutrition to nourish your mind, so that you can experience greater mental clarity, less brain fog, and better moods in this video. Searching for more?
In this video, Dr. Mark Hyman dives into Functional Medicine, gene expression, how greatly not just food, but our social spheres, affect our overall health and biology, and much more.
We know sugar is biologically addictive and can wreak havoc with your hormones and your metabolism and can lead to diabetes. But you CAN break your sweet tooth habit.