William Davis's Blog: Dr. Davis Infinite Health Blog, page 13

December 29, 2020

Oxytocin Deficiency Syndrome

The post Oxytocin Deficiency Syndrome appeared first on Dr. William Davis.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 29, 2020 08:46

December 28, 2020

December 23, 2020

Happy Healthy Holidays 2020!

 



Dr. Davis and the Wheat Belly and Undoctored team want to thank you for making 2020 another rewarding and wonderful year!!   The mission to spread the Wheat Belly and Undoctored message of health is more important than ever. We have enjoyed hearing stories about how people have taken control of their health; lost weight, transformed their appearance, reversed inflammation, and regained health in so many ways.


2020 has been a year to remember.  Take time to acknowledge the efforts you have made to help restore your health.  If you have waivered, make your health a priority and get back on track today – we are here to support that journey!


Join us on January 6th for the New Year, New You: Wheat Belly 10 Day Grain Detox Challenge


Or if you are ready for a deep dive into your health journey join the Undoctored Inner Circle


With a focus on your health, 2021 will be an amazing year as we all aim to look, feel, and perform at our very best.


Happy Holidays to everyone and may 2021 be your best year ever!



The post Happy Healthy Holidays 2020! appeared first on Dr. William Davis.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 23, 2020 05:14

December 21, 2020

December 18, 2020

December 14, 2020

Nutritional lessons from the coronavirus pandemic

COVID-19 pandemic shopper


You’ve heard the headlines: Upon contracting COVID-19, people with various co-morbidities are at increased risk for becoming critically ill, such as developing acute respiratory distress syndrome necessitating mechanical ventilation. They are several-fold more likely to die of the disease, also.


Among the most common health conditions that put people at high risk for becoming severely ill include:



Obesity
Type 2 diabetes
Hypertension
Coronary disease and heart failure
Cerebrovascular disease

There are other conditions that also confer increased risk such as smoking, lung disease, and lung cancer. But the four conditions listed above are exceptionally widespread, including well over 150 million Americans. They also all share common threads: they all involve being insulin resistant and having higher levels of inflammation.


In people with coronary disease, for example, it is uncommon to not have substantial insulin resistance. Type 2 diabetes is, of course, defined as severe insulin resistance. Obese people are invariably insulin resistant, as are those with hypertension.


Insulin resistance and inflammation are virtually inseparable. They are indeed two distinct and separate processes, but insulin resistance increases inflammation and inflammation increases insulin resistance: they each amplify the other. Both processes are also known to impair the immune response that increases susceptibility to viral infections. Insulin resistance and inflammation, though largely asymptomatic, are serious conditions that put you at risk for numerous long-term complications such as neurodegenerative disorders, cancer, heart disease, and, of course, type 2 diabetes.


The increased susceptibility to critical illness with COVID-19 in people with insulin resistance and inflammation highlights just how serious these conditions can be. It is therefore very important to NOT be insulin resistant and to not have higher levels of inflammation.


Markers that suggest that insulin resistance is present to some degree include:



Fasting blood sugar >90 mg/dl, certainly any values >100 mg/dl
Fasting insulin >4.0 mIU/L
HbA1c >5.0%
Triglycerides >60 mg/dl
HDL <50 mg/dl

You may notice that my cutoffs are far stricter than conventional measures. But remember: Conventional guidelines are not about health, but are cutoffs used to justify prescription medication. You and I want to know when specific measures need to be addressed for optimal health, an entirely different perspective.


Follow a conventional diet that includes wheat and grains, sugars, excessive omega-6 oils, and additives, and blood sugar goes up, insulin goes up, HbA1c goes up, triglycerides go up, HDL comes down.


Reversing insulin resistance and inflammation is easy: We simply follow the strategies that reverse these phenomena. That is what the Wheat Belly and Undoctored programs accomplish. We follow a diet that no longer adds to insulin resistance/inflammation; address common nutrient deficiencies that develop with modern life that further reverse insulin resistance/inflammation; address bowel flora to reduce endotoxemia that pulls back insulin resistance and inflammation even further. The diet alone causes blood sugar to drop, insulin to drop, HbA1c to drop, triglycerides to drop, HDL to go up, with further improvements on the nutritional supplement program and with efforts to cultivate a healthy microbiome and reduce endotoxemia.


Unfortunately, even taking precautions such as maintaining social distance and frequent hand washing does not guarantee that you do not contract the virus. So do yourself a favor: Do not be insulin resistant and do not cultivate inflammation.


The post Nutritional lessons from the coronavirus pandemic appeared first on Dr. William Davis.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 14, 2020 13:11

December 11, 2020

December 8, 2020

December 6, 2020

Love: It’s in your bowels

The post Love: It’s in your bowels appeared first on Dr. William Davis.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 06, 2020 09:29

December 1, 2020

The End of Overeating

The post The End of Overeating appeared first on Dr. William Davis.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 01, 2020 12:46

Dr. Davis Infinite Health Blog

William  Davis
The insights and strategies you can learn about in Dr. Davis' Infinite Health Blog are those that you can put to work to regain magnificent health, slenderness, and youthfulness.

Recognize that this i
...more
Follow William  Davis's blog with rss.