What Causes Cardiovascular Disease? | Lipid Series Part 1 | Dr. Thomas Dayspring | The Proof Ep 251

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The Proof with Simon Hill

The Proof with Simon Hill

Күн бұрын

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@pnkrckmom
@pnkrckmom 15 күн бұрын
Dr. Dayspring is an amazing educator.
@sallywolfe535
@sallywolfe535 Жыл бұрын
I’m a retired internist who was motivated by Tom to become certified in lipidology through the National Lipid Association. Tom is a national treasure, who as Simon indicated has a selfless passion to educate and the skill to communicate a very complex molecular mechanism. I’m also plant based as is Simon - interestingly without rosuvastatin and ezetamibe my apo B is at the 75th percentile for Americans. This interview series is one of Simon’s best (which is saying a lot. I sat at the feet of Tom through high free website updates and podcasts. This is Tom at his expert fluid best. I love you man (both of you) - as you are both examples of a mensch par excellence.
@jasonsmith8651
@jasonsmith8651 Жыл бұрын
I agree. These interviews were amazing. I learned so much. I’ve been transitioning to a Whole Foods plant based diet over the last 7 years or so. I’ve had my lipids checked every couple years over this transition period. My total cholesterol started at 230 and has dropped to 165. However, by LDL started at 35 and is now 113. I’m not sure how this can be going in the opposite direction. I have always exercised regularly.
@RamasamyArumugam1927
@RamasamyArumugam1927 Жыл бұрын
Yes, indeed, he is brilliant
@rf9612
@rf9612 Жыл бұрын
⁠@@jasonsmith8651 I heard with of the same doctor I believe that if we get the HDL cholesterol(the good one) TOO HIGH is eventually rise the LDL too The question is how high is HDL good helper??
@jopannell9839
@jopannell9839 Жыл бұрын
I listened to the podcast first. I've now watched the whole interview again, written 6 pages of notes, and am astonished at the brilliance of both of you taking a complex subject and making it so accessible to us non-medical folk. Simon, what can I say? Am so grateful for you and your podcast.
@martinabernstein2912
@martinabernstein2912 Жыл бұрын
Agree wholeheartedly!!!
@SET12DSP
@SET12DSP Жыл бұрын
I wish I was impressed but I was not. More or less he said only the progression of heart disease could be stopped and that it would always be there. He should look at me. As a 200 point 30% reversal of my CAC isn't likely an error. I did like the talk of what happens when Doctors go against the grain and their careers go flat. The people that speak out I have a lot of respect for. Like Dr. Linus Pauling and Dr Thomas Levy.
@RamasamyArumugam1927
@RamasamyArumugam1927 Жыл бұрын
​@@SET12DSP I do have very high respect for Dr. Linus Pauling not only for his scientific work, but also for his contribution to peace. Please tell me how did you manage to reverse Coronary artery calcium (CAC). I am 53 years old, and I have been diagnosed with CHD advanced stage. All the main corona arteries of my left heart, 70 % and the arteries of my right heart 80 % are clogged and my CAC is above 1000. I am a born vegetarian, Non-smoker, BMI of 22.7. My physician should have advised me long ago and put me on a statin, but now I am so worried. I am scared even to go to bed because I have a heart attack or stroke. I have a family history (my mum died at the age of 39 as a result of a stroke) and I think I carry the gene 9P21. Now I am taking ASS 100 mg and statin along with Omega-3, Vitamins D3, K2 and magnesium
@ronniekirby5406
@ronniekirby5406 Жыл бұрын
@@SET12DSPplease tell me how you achieved that 30% decrease in CAC
@SET12DSP
@SET12DSP Жыл бұрын
@@ronniekirby5406 I'll get back to you after I get to the person above you that I somehow missed..
@sierraread1443
@sierraread1443 Жыл бұрын
What a darling man-an expert and yet so loving; clearly hanging on every word of the story of Simon’s father.
@TheWarriorprincess09
@TheWarriorprincess09 Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely fantastic. I've been on a mission to understand LDL and my risk. I think Dr. Dayspring is a ROCK STAR. Thank you for asking really great questions. Well done!
@catarinaroseta
@catarinaroseta Жыл бұрын
I’m almost half-way through this and just wanted to say it’s BRILLIANT. I had zero knowledge of the lipid mechanisms in the body. Will definitely watch all the rest of their conversation. Just want to understand why my cholesterol is high for the first time ever and whether I need to do something about it! Thank you so much, Simon!
@starrynight3363
@starrynight3363 Жыл бұрын
Do NOT take Statins toxic & cause cancer, FDA warns of confusion & memory problems, permanent muscle damage. 👉All for what = a 1% absolute risk reduction. Risks higher than any meager benefit. ✅Solution = Magnesium acts as a natural statin Without destroying everything down the Mevalonate pathway. 👉 Read "Poisoned" by Hannah Yosephs MD
@niceadz6164
@niceadz6164 Жыл бұрын
If you want the actual mechanism, look up Dr Malcolm Kendrick. He has it nailed. This guy is a Dinosaur!!
@Steve-nb9kg
@Steve-nb9kg 4 ай бұрын
Fantastic discussion. Key points: - ApoB is most important biomarker and should be less than 80 mg/dL assuming there are no other risk factors. For risk factors it needs to be even lower. Below 40-50 mg/dL no atherosclerosis occurs. - ApoB levels of 40-50 mg/dL are not harmful to overall health, despite what some may claim. Babies and children have these levels and have healthy development. - Inflammation is not necessary for the ApoB particles to enter the endothelium. The keto/carnivore crowd incorrectly believes inflammation (mainly caused by insulin resistance) is the driving factor in atherosclerosis whereas it is actually ApoB concentration. Inflammation from a wide number of causes does exacerbate the problem though. - ApoB particles entering the endothelium do not cause plaque by themselves, they must be absorbed by a macrophage such as a monocyte. It is not known what causes this to happen and what can be done to reduce it. - There is a plethora of studies to support elevated ApoB levels causing atherosclerosis. No serious person believes otherwise, but genetics can affect this as some people with high ApoB never develop athersclerosis. - Saturated fats are harmful, but mono and polyunsaturated fats are not. - ApoB can be lowered with medication or diet, but trying to lower with only medication may be difficult but worth a try. - In general dietary cholesterol does not affect ApoB or atherosclerosis unless you are a cholesterol hyperabsorber.
@reynolds753
@reynolds753 3 ай бұрын
@@Steve-nb9kg great summary, thank you
@doddgarger6806
@doddgarger6806 2 ай бұрын
And yet it's not
@jamesk5369
@jamesk5369 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Dayspring is a living legend.
@jessicaz.1901
@jessicaz.1901 3 ай бұрын
Since Dr. Dayspring is known for his illustrations , it would have been wonderful to include them during his talk for those watching on KZbin. It would make these complex concepts much easier to understand.
@marcjacobson757
@marcjacobson757 Жыл бұрын
This is the clearest, simplest explanation of the lipid transport system and atherogenesis I've ever heard. The idea that the purpose of LDL is to return cholesterol to the liver, not deliver it, is amazing.
@KirkVidrine
@KirkVidrine Жыл бұрын
Wow, what an amazing interview. Yes a bit high level, but wow to have this level of expertise in an interview anyone can watch on KZbin. That’s a true public service. Thank you Simon.
@chipsmith7459
@chipsmith7459 Жыл бұрын
I was going to the same thing... wow, what a great video. Thank you Simon, and thank you Dr. Thomas Dayspring.
@allisonfalin8854
@allisonfalin8854 Жыл бұрын
I've heard Dr. Dayspring before and he's always entertaining and so knowledgeable. My Dad has 3 stents from a lucky duck finding with some anginal pain and while he didn't infarct, he had a 99% Left Main, 95% LAD and 75% LCx. He had borderline lipids for years that went untreated. His Dad died at the age of 47 with MI in bed while my father and my Grandmother stood by helpless. I am passionate about my risk reduction and have pushed hard for ApoB and Lp(a) labs much to the dismay of my PCP. I am a nurse practitioner and have the labs drawn regardless. Thank you for your education and willingness to share.
@AnthonyL0401
@AnthonyL0401 Жыл бұрын
1:47:00 Why do saturated fats down regulate LDL receptor but polyunsaturated fats up regulate it?
@nozika84
@nozika84 Жыл бұрын
It was a true masterclass.! I think this info will outweight knowledge of many "qualified" doctors in my country :) Cant wait to see remaining 2 episodes. Simon thanks a Ton
@Threebridgecastle
@Threebridgecastle Жыл бұрын
This guy is amazing. I could listen to him all day. He is very skilful at explaining the anatomy and physiology of the subject matter without bamboozling you or boring you. He's one of the best I've heard so far. Outstanding.
@TheSavior888
@TheSavior888 Жыл бұрын
Simon, I have worked out 6 days a week my whole life and have always stayed between 12 to 14% body fat. Thought I was in incredible shape until I had a coronary calcium score of 550 and my Apob was off the charts of 189. Found out I was a walking time bomb. So crazy. I am now on an extremely low fat whole foods plant based diet with a small does statin and dropped my cholesterol and Apob dramatically. So happy I had my Apob tested. Thanks for all the great content you create.
@Mimulus2717
@Mimulus2717 Жыл бұрын
@TheSavior888 Patrick, you should get your Lp(a) level tested....if elevated, it could explain in part your CAC score. It would not change your treatment (although with high Lp(a) you might want to be more aggressvie with ApoB lowering talk to your cardiologist) but more importantly, since it is genetic, you should have siblings/cousins/children tested too so they can see if they are at increased risk too. The sooner you know and treat, the better.
@Amshatelia88
@Amshatelia88 Жыл бұрын
I'm so glad you got this information and were able to avoid a bad health outcome. Thanks for sharing your story!
@craigcrawford6749
@craigcrawford6749 Жыл бұрын
Why statins? They have nothing to do with your calcium score being high
@sallywolfe535
@sallywolfe535 Жыл бұрын
Good for you, man. Your example fits the nuances Tom spoke to.
@TheSavior888
@TheSavior888 Жыл бұрын
@joek9339 I was on the SAD diet, but I never over ate and worked out a lot to stay in shape. I never took PEDs. Feel so much better now that cleaned up my diet. Less aches and pains and a lot more energy. I'm 55 now so I'm getting up there. A good whole foods diet is so important
@toddhostetler6552
@toddhostetler6552 8 ай бұрын
Simon, this is a great podcast. I’m a physiology professor to undergraduates in nursing and allied health students. This information is invaluable. It is such convoluted topic with much misunderstanding and misinformation. I like how you accurately and succinctly summarize what Tom states. I don’t have the time to go into the details like your discussion brings. I’m going to link this podcast. Thanks!
@MoriahBoyle-b6v
@MoriahBoyle-b6v Жыл бұрын
Dr. Dayspring is a living legend.. Dr. Dayspring is a living legend..
@azdhan
@azdhan Жыл бұрын
This was so informative and educational. Many thanks to you and your host for this, much appreciated!
@eagleeye9549
@eagleeye9549 Жыл бұрын
I love how this gentleman delivers his knowledge! I would have enjoyed his lectures/ transfer of knowledge!! Awesome video.
@TheProofWithSimonHill
@TheProofWithSimonHill Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@lucvandermeeren
@lucvandermeeren Жыл бұрын
Brilliant episode - WOW! It's rare to find an expert who can distill his decades of experience with such clarity while being so personable and humorous. I loved Dr. Lipid. He cut through all the popular misconceptions and made me smile in the process.
@menarussell
@menarussell Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your content. I subscribed. I'm extremely interested in your guests and all that they share. ❤
@acke26
@acke26 Жыл бұрын
Very informative video, thanks! I had elevated cholesterol levels but changed my diet towards a more plant-based diet or pescatarian-diet avoiding saturated fats from meat and dairy products. I decreased my cholesterol levels just within the reference intervals. But my HDL-levels was very low, 0,5 mmol/ L = 30 mg/dl, so I tried the LCHF-diet. My cholesterol skyrocketed, but my HDL. After this I wanted to lower my cholesterol levels to the same levels as before with the Pescatarian-diet. But now I can't reach the same low levels. It that because of the fewer LDL-receptors caused by the LCHF-diet? And if so, how long does it take for the liver to start producing these LDL-receptors?
@rf9612
@rf9612 Жыл бұрын
What an enthusiast doctor ,,,and nice person sharing his great knowledge Thanks a lot !!
@mozit6
@mozit6 11 ай бұрын
@rf9612.......Sorry, but enthusiasm does not always equate into scientific accuracy. Please investigate into alternate theories which scientifically and biologically challenge the current lipid theory of CVD. This mainstream theory only makes sense on the surface, but looking critically you see the pathways embraced do not actually exist in the body. Cell wall integrity and tight junctions between cells will not allow LDL in unless it has provided receptors for entry. Also, cholesterol found within plaques is pure cholesterol crystals, found abundantly only in red blood cell membranes. The other type of LDL found in circulating blood cannot form such crystals. But supposing LDL could enter why not also the entry of most everything else in circulation, many of which are way smaller than LDL. And, being that same blood supply but with less oxygen also flows in veins why does the LDL not cause plaque and arteriosclerosis within veins? It does rarely happen in a few places but not common except in veins grafted in the position of a bypass (CABG). Higher BP, and higher levels of mechanical damage is the main reason for that,.......but if LDL were actual cause of CVD it would happen in both arteries and veins and would be occurring uniformly the same on all surfaces, not just in selected spots. For more info please view You Tube videos of Malcomb Kendrick interviews. Specifically view this video around the 1 hr mark. kzbin.info/www/bejne/rYPNgnZ9abOIY7s
@Mimulus2717
@Mimulus2717 Жыл бұрын
So ApoB particle and a macrophage walk into a bar and meet a gang of aggreggated LDLs.... What a wonderful discussion with great slides. Those aggregated LDLs the coolest thing I learned about. Looking forward to his coverage of lp(a) , my personal risk factor. Thanks Simon and your team, great work.
@TheProofWithSimonHill
@TheProofWithSimonHill Жыл бұрын
Hello Friends, I'm keen to find out which part of our chat you found most enlightening. Should you have any further questions on this topic, do please post them beneath this comment. I shall endeavour to include them in our next discussion.
@TheAstonGuy
@TheAstonGuy Жыл бұрын
It would be great to debunk or confirm the LMHR hypothesis.
@megavegan5791
@megavegan5791 Жыл бұрын
I’ve been searching 5+ years for the answer at 1:10:49. Thank you both! ❤
@andreinikiforov2671
@andreinikiforov2671 Жыл бұрын
Wow, this video is a game-changer! 🌟 The life-saving information you've shared is invaluable and has the potential to make a significant impact on so many lives. The content of the conversation is top-notch, meticulously presented, and easily digestible. Kudos to Simon for compiling such high-quality questions and visuals! 👏 And let's not forget the speaker - absolutely phenomenal! 🎤 Dr. Dayspring's eloquence, enthusiasm, and ability to convey complex ideas with clarity and passion are truly impressive. It's evident that he cares deeply about the subject matter, and that energy is contagious. Bravo! 👌 This interview is a masterpiece that deserves all the praise and recognition! Keep up the fantastic work! 🙌🎉
@stellasternchen
@stellasternchen Жыл бұрын
I would ha ve needed this video for my biochem 2 I think exam. This is such a understandable way to explain lipid transport. He sounds like he has lots of knowlege and expertice. A true expert, unlike so many self proclaimed experts on social media. It is so great that you put out such quality content and find those experts in their field.
@emilybarry9410
@emilybarry9410 Жыл бұрын
This was SUPER informative and DENSE!!! Will definitely be re-listening and eagerly anticipating the rest of this series!
@oliverleslie7382
@oliverleslie7382 Жыл бұрын
A lousy conversation. Simon can ask a generic question here and there but simon lacks the biochemistry acumen to really challenge anything Dayspring says - and so we let the lipid doctor ramble on. Dietary cholesterol or any kind of dietary fat has zero impact on what is going on in the body. All this talk or pathways and Chylomicrons etc. is moot null and void due to the psychical fact (fact of physics, laws of physics) that these exogenous molecules were already broke down prior to eating. Decay of cow, begins this process, then exposure to light and oxygen, heat, cooking (do you really think there is an intact cholesterol molecule post frying pan?).
@dwights1464
@dwights1464 Жыл бұрын
@@oliverleslie7382 Do you have any links you can provide to support your assertions?
@yoso585
@yoso585 11 ай бұрын
Can’t be denied: I’m impressed!
@rosalindmckinnon9679
@rosalindmckinnon9679 Жыл бұрын
This was fantastic. Thank you both so, so much. I am currently having "discussions" with my doctors regarding my LDL and am undergoing investigations as we speak and this has helped me immensely.. plus as an ex clinical chemist/biochemist I found it excellent and stimulating. Really can't thank you both enough.
@jorgemontane8359
@jorgemontane8359 Ай бұрын
Great podcast!!!
@KevinSmith-4Liberty
@KevinSmith-4Liberty Жыл бұрын
Enjoyed this....thank you to both of you. Learned so much. From a Pattern B small dense LDL guy.
@StephenMarkTurner
@StephenMarkTurner Жыл бұрын
Thanks to you Simon and Dr Dayspring.
@jeff.howard
@jeff.howard Жыл бұрын
This is so well done and provides so much more (visual) information to support the episode...it makes me regret that most of the time I have to listen is via audio only podcast! I will definitely be checking out the video versions more often when I can!
@TheProofWithSimonHill
@TheProofWithSimonHill Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! Love to have you watch more of our episodes here on KZbin
@pspratheesh
@pspratheesh Жыл бұрын
I haven't understood half of these but still appreciates the podcast as it is wonderful to know about the World of Lipids.
@dwights1464
@dwights1464 Жыл бұрын
The experts don't get any more expert than Dr. Thomas Dayspring. There's so much misinformation available online by people trying to either simplify complex problems or villainize certain groups that it is refreshing to see highly intelligent people like Mr Dayspring having their ideas represented. He was certainly correct at the end of the video that you really have to be your own health care advocate. Simon, your role in helping us do that is invaluable. Thank you so much for bringing his message to us.
@tycobrahe7663
@tycobrahe7663 11 ай бұрын
1:46:48 Good coverage of a complex topic. Qs: levels of LDL particle number, LDL-C, Apo-B are all normed on a primarily sugar-burning population (small % of Intermittent Fasters/High fat-adequate protein-slow carb’ers). So why should the the lab numbers be “adjusted” with “therapies” - provided there is no evidence of atherogenesis (clean carotids on Doppler, large sized LDLs, low Ca score, low CRP etc). Aren’t we then chasing numbers normed on a different population? Thank you so much for this 3 part series. Learned a lot!
@leandroaristide4565
@leandroaristide4565 Жыл бұрын
Excellent! He's so entertaining to watch. One thing that I don't get: SF inhibits LDL-R through these transcription factors, as he says, because "the liver doesn't want more lipids". But, aren't LDLs made by the liver in the first place (directly or through VLDLs)? So the lipids (which ones? Triglicerides?) in these LDLs are coming from the liver itself? Are the lipids/TG secreted by the liver in VLDLs coming from dietary fats or from de novo lipogenesis? As far as I understand, fatty acids (TG) from diet would mostly be packed into chylomicrons and be directly absorbed by others cells (eg muscle), am I right? So overall I don't see how SF from the diet would end up in the liver inhibiting LDL-R, whose function is to capture LDLs that served their purpose (according to Dr. Dayspring) of "bringing back cholesterol to the liver". Of course it's impossible to summarize lipid metabolism in a 2h podcast, but I'm confused and it's hard see how all these pieces fit. Thanks for a great podcast!
@3Unique
@3Unique 5 ай бұрын
Hi Quick request. I subscribe to your Podcast on Spotify but often come across podcasts on KZbin of yours that I want to listen to on Spotify while driving/running etc. It would be great if on your videos you could add a link to the specific Spotify podcast (and other podcast providers that you are on) rather than just to the channel. It would make it easier to find a particular podcast. Thank you. Kind regards Michael. BTW can’t wait to listen to this one in full and the subsequent ones in the series.
@martinabernstein2912
@martinabernstein2912 Жыл бұрын
This is SO fascinating. Thank you for this.
@krisfarrugia6490
@krisfarrugia6490 Жыл бұрын
Wow, super-loaded, informative conversation. Gotta listen to it a few times. I don't mind though, Dr. Dayspring is a gem :).
@rodneysmith1624
@rodneysmith1624 Жыл бұрын
Extremely informative podcast regarding cholesterol flux. It would be great for you to interview Malcolm Kendrick who is also a luminar in this field. His opinion debunks some of Tom's theories. By the way your interview was brilliant, you covered some areas of lipidology which help me fill in some of the missing pieces of the puzzle.
@Angel283
@Angel283 Жыл бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHill Care to elaborate on why you weren't? I'm doing the best a lay person can in trying to figure thus all out but it is SO difficult as there are many "experts" and many conflicting information. I have lost nearly 100lbs, now have no hbp, no pre diabetes but have extraordinarily high cholesterol. Like 618 total, 492 ldl, 86 hdl, 86 triglyceride.
@dwights1464
@dwights1464 Жыл бұрын
​@@TheProofWithSimonHillI've read Kendrick's book also and one of only two people who've given it 2 stars on Amazon. I'm with you.
@doddsalfa
@doddsalfa Жыл бұрын
Why doesn’t anyone talk to Robert C Williams has been the leading researcher in cholesterol and the heart for over 60 years,he’s now 90 and still going strong?
@hikedayley9309
@hikedayley9309 Жыл бұрын
Dr Dayspring is the best!
@margaretaskew5937
@margaretaskew5937 Жыл бұрын
This is the first time I have heard this doctor. I have been following Dr Robert Lustig, Dr Ali, Dr M Kendrick, Dr Paul Mason and others who say cholesterol is not the culprit of atherosclerosis but sugar is I am confused now.
@eileenmcgovern9193
@eileenmcgovern9193 Жыл бұрын
Both are bad.
@Man-u-flex
@Man-u-flex Жыл бұрын
They all are experts but they all have opposite ideas what’s ideal go figure
@ruud4508
@ruud4508 9 ай бұрын
Simple and/or excess Carbs , sugar, seed oils. Avoid those. Done. You're good.
@ruud4508
@ruud4508 9 ай бұрын
And lose weight/visceral fat with diet/lifestyle, exercise, build some muscles, rest. No stress.
@andreac5152
@andreac5152 Жыл бұрын
I think that in a past life Dr Dayspring was a macrophage who died becoming a foam cell and now he redeemed himself by helping people and macrophages avoid the common enemy. Ahah. Love him, great masterclass.
@susaaklilu7536
@susaaklilu7536 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Simon and dr Daysping for sharing your mind blowing knowledge
@dodgeball693
@dodgeball693 Жыл бұрын
I probably missed it, but I have a question. What determines how many LDL and VLDL particles the liver produces?
@pashabederov
@pashabederov Жыл бұрын
Very intresting talk, but what I want to know, is the health of the ldl particles and the sise of them matter ? and that about lean hyper responders with extremely hi level of ldl and hdl, but low triglycerides, being healthy with 0 plack
@dic2504
@dic2504 Жыл бұрын
Loved this podcast! So important. Please,I hope you will ask about dietary saturated fat. I've eaten a vegan diet for years and was shocked to find out my TC was rising and my ApoB was slightly above optimal. I've had zero dietary cholesterol for over 10 years BUT plenty of vegan foods that have coconut and palm oil. Currently trying to turn this around with a WFPB diet.
@veniqe
@veniqe Жыл бұрын
Perhaps the plants were the issue. Cut it out or reduce it aggressively and I can almost guarantee you that all your health markers will improve. Just be sure to eat lots of fatty meat.
@UnclGee
@UnclGee Жыл бұрын
I also wondered why saturated fat was not discussed- but on a second viewing I heard him say at about 1:47:00, in response to Ketogenic promoters, that high (saturated) fat is detrimental because it shuts down the liver's LDL receptors needed to capture and then metabolize LDL-c
@bryant475
@bryant475 9 ай бұрын
Yep, WFPB for the win! Not only are you avoiding sat fat/cholesteroI, but the detrimental animal protein itself, plus Arachidonic acid, Endotoxins, Carnitine - > TMAO, Neu5GC, Heme Iron, PAH'S/HCA's, Hormones, Antibiotics, etc.
@Test-eb9bj
@Test-eb9bj Жыл бұрын
What a great Interview! I think I listened to Dayspring first on Peter Attia’ Podcast and it was fascinating and very educational! The illustrations you inserted in yours helped a lot ( I watched it on my big TV-screen) to follow his great explanations. (And who else would think of cholesterol molecules having sex and change their type/identity by that😂 other than TD). Thank you again very much for this video and please never be afraid of long episodes to explain certain topics!
@oliverleslie7382
@oliverleslie7382 Жыл бұрын
A lousy conversation. Simon can ask a generic question here and there but simon lacks the biochemistry acumen to really challenge anything Dayspring says - and so we let the lipid doctor ramble on. Dietary cholesterol or any kind of dietary fat has zero impact on what is going on in the body. All this talk or pathways and Chylomicrons etc. is moot null and void due to the psychical fact (fact of physics, laws of physics) that these exogenous molecules were already broke down prior to eating. Decay of cow, begins this process, then exposure to light and oxygen, heat, cooking (do you really think there is an intact cholesterol molecule post frying pan?).
@jeffj318
@jeffj318 6 ай бұрын
Great video and information! God bless you. ❤
@juliemaggs-ow6ib
@juliemaggs-ow6ib Жыл бұрын
Really interesting. Both my parents had high cholesterol and so do I despite being plant based vegan and this helped explain things. I would have thought diet would have played a greater role but seems not. Thank you so much.
@juliemaggs-ow6ib
@juliemaggs-ow6ib Жыл бұрын
I was basing this on the ‘eat your eggs if you want to ‘ comment. Good to know diet can help.
@murraypooley9199
@murraypooley9199 Жыл бұрын
Diet does play a massive role, namely carbohydrates, sugar, not fat. I study this subject and beleive his guys way outdated views and advice are highly influential in causing the huge rise in hart events. The interviewer askes the right questions but he ducks around them. Why is this guys decades long approach not working? Because it is wrong. Doctors Cywes, Diamond, Paul Mason, Ken Berry, Anthony Chaffee, Bikman, Huberman, Sayfried, Ekburg, Shawn Baker. All these doctors and many more would strongly disagree on many of the points he makes.
@Greg-kz3cf
@Greg-kz3cf Жыл бұрын
Thank you Simon. A lot of it went over my head, but I’m so glad I stayed with it. So very detailed and interesting. Greg - Australia
@BrunoSpellanzon
@BrunoSpellanzon Жыл бұрын
extremely helpful.... congratz Simon and Dr Dayspring... been listening to your podcasts since the beginning, and they are never disappointing!
@firelight-vitality
@firelight-vitality 3 ай бұрын
I'm convinced that constantly monitoring so-called 'important biomarkers' only adds unnecessary stress. The truth is, no one fully understands what truly causes cardiovascular diseases!
@HeibesHealth
@HeibesHealth Жыл бұрын
I love his energy. It makes it even easier to learn. 😀
@lindac6147
@lindac6147 Жыл бұрын
@theproof was there a summary done of key points ? I seem to remember you mentioning it .🙏🙏
@xuananluong3197
@xuananluong3197 11 ай бұрын
1:00:31 I think the unit of measurement here should be nmol/L instead of mg/dL
@imhassane
@imhassane Жыл бұрын
This is a masterclass on the lipids
@gabriellewilliamson5810
@gabriellewilliamson5810 9 ай бұрын
So grateful so great a man Doctor Dayspring and Simon
@aquie4d999
@aquie4d999 Жыл бұрын
Man, REALLY GOOD 🎉
@espinosalexis
@espinosalexis Жыл бұрын
Does accumulation of fat in the liver is started by high blood LDL levels? Does accumulation of fat in pancreas, kidney and visceral region in general is started by high blood LDL levels? Does accumulation of fat in muscle is started by high blood LDL levels? Does accumulation of fat in the rest of the body is started by high blood LDL levels? From the little I have learnt, the answer seems to the be: No. What I know is that all this fat accumulation in the many organs mentioned is a consequence of metabolic syndrome. And all these are signs of metabolic problems in different tissues. Then why accumulation of fat in arteries and heart is assumed to be started by high blood LDL levels and not by metabolic syndrome? (I understand that many many years ago the plumber hypothesis of pipe clogging made sense, but it is already 2023! And we all know this is an alive biology system!) For me, clogging from blood content makes no sense. It makes much more sense that metabolic syndrome expresses itself in the cardiovascular system as accumulation of fat in arteries and heart. Health status of US population does not help to elucidate the root problem, as 95% of their population lives with metabolic syndrome. Then doctors correlate high LDL with cardiovascular disease, but the root of CVD is in the metabolic illness and not in the high LDL. And even worse are their solutions of using statins instead of stopping the nasty plan of the Food & Beverage Industry sickening humans (and dogs).
@espinosalexis
@espinosalexis Жыл бұрын
​@@TheProofWithSimonHill thanks a lot. I really appreciate your passion and honesty. But there are other theories (with scientific publications) out there and a lot more to say from other points of view. Please bring on to the discussion Norwitz & Feldman to have a chat about the Lipid Energy model. And Dr. Subbotin, with whom I agree about sick arteries expressing their metabolic syndrome by getting fat themselves. Dr. Volek, D'agostino & Paul Mason also have a lot to say in this topic. Healthy discussion about the topic would be much more nurturing than turning your channel into an echo-chamber.
@taracraig6101
@taracraig6101 Жыл бұрын
This episode is brilliant 👌👏. Thank you . I have learnt so much more and feel way more informed to help clients I see.
@tonybailey4058
@tonybailey4058 Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with us. Tony 🇬🇧
@mcusta
@mcusta Жыл бұрын
This is such a great talk, really looking forward to the other two. Thank you!
@donquixote453
@donquixote453 Жыл бұрын
does niacin lower apob??
@lena_c2956
@lena_c2956 Жыл бұрын
Wow- this is so interesting and I love the passion he is explaining everything. Great and exciting!
@RamasamyArumugam1927
@RamasamyArumugam1927 Жыл бұрын
What great information on APO-Lipoprotein B. I love the way Dr Thomas Dayspring makes the so complex medical subject that most doctors even some cardologists nocht aware of it so simple and comprehensive for laymen. Thank You, Simon for sharing such a valuble information for the humanity. I am fron India and have subscribed to your channell.
@albertcamus1979
@albertcamus1979 Жыл бұрын
Can you post few of the studies linking Apo B or saturated fat or LDL -C to atherosclerosis in metabolic healthy people?
@megavegan5791
@megavegan5791 Жыл бұрын
Do omega-3 supplements raise LDL, regardless of the source (fish/algae)?
@elmeric7086
@elmeric7086 Жыл бұрын
Soooo awesome. Thanks for this great interview.
@kiril1
@kiril1 Жыл бұрын
The issue is not with dietary cholesterol, but with saturated fat, which really can affect the LdL levels, as far as I understand it.
@Joy80JJ
@Joy80JJ Жыл бұрын
Great info on lipids. Thank you Simon
@anthonychanning3954
@anthonychanning3954 Жыл бұрын
So what foods are good ? Diet?
@Michael-hk7eh
@Michael-hk7eh Жыл бұрын
Loving the level of detail here, I was surprised to hear him say in general the level of dietary cholesterol has little to do with systemic level of apoB and cardiac outcomes (except for genetics), therefore would the main benefit of lowering dietary cholesterol be that in eliminating those foods you are usually also eliminating saturated fat which is the real issue (at least in terms of dietary input)? Can’t wait for the next one, thanks Simon
@reason3581
@reason3581 Жыл бұрын
It’s a hyperbolic curve. If your ApoB is already low and you consume zero cholesterol and then add a few eggs to your diet you will see a significant increase in blood ApoB. They should have clarified this. Nutrition Made Simple has a video about this.
@Michael-hk7eh
@Michael-hk7eh Жыл бұрын
That makes sense, thanks
@carinaekstrom1
@carinaekstrom1 Жыл бұрын
@@reason3581 Yes, I was surprised this was not mentioned. It must be an advantage to not have this rise happen?
@megavegan5791
@megavegan5791 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, cholesterol aside, eggs are 28% saturated fat...well above the 8-10% recommended range.
@carinaekstrom1
@carinaekstrom1 Жыл бұрын
@@megavegan5791 Yes, most people probably don't limit the rest of their daily saturated fat intake enough to make room for eggs.
@sabby123456789
@sabby123456789 Жыл бұрын
1:46:28 - I've got the ApoE4 allele and sterol hyperabsorption, and maybe it's just easier to keep eating saturated fat but take cholesterol lowering medications. How am I going to eat a low-saturated fat, low-cholesterol, and low-carbohydrate diet if all of the foods low in saturated, cholesterol, and carbohydrates all do not taste good? I do not like vegetables, avocados, olive oil, lean meat, fish, egg whites, and low-fat dairy. Herbs and spices only taste good when mixed with animal fat. The only exceptions are sashimi and olives without acid, but sashimi is too costly and olives still have a lot of oxalates.
@barryth
@barryth Жыл бұрын
“The alternative hypothesis is that blood clots, and blood clotting, are the key players in cardiovascular disease. “ Dr Malcolm Kendrick, author of the Clot Thickens. Can you get a representative of this school of thought. It’s becoming confusing to me as a sufferer. This hypothesis explains why such things as smoking are far more causal than cholesterol. Dr Kendrick also seems as humorous as Dr Dayspring.😊
@masher1042
@masher1042 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating conversation. Thanks! I was wondering if Nitric Oxide play a part in being protective of the endothelial cells?
@margaretaskew5937
@margaretaskew5937 Жыл бұрын
Why don't people answer?
@HAL-1984
@HAL-1984 Жыл бұрын
100% it does. It's a vaso dilator and immensely important. Insulin resistance in the endothelial cell will down regulate it's ability to produce it
@valerieassar8263
@valerieassar8263 6 ай бұрын
Where does nitric oxide come from
@gregsandifer2398
@gregsandifer2398 Жыл бұрын
best expert info out here! keep up the good work
@keithwrightnh
@keithwrightnh Жыл бұрын
Great episode! I've been on the fence with regards to taking a statin. The only time my cholesterol numbers ever came into alignment was back in 2019 when I was living in Florida and I had just the prior year had gotten into running. In 2019 I ran over 1,600 miles. I had my cholesterol levels checked many times that year and my levels have dropped by about 40% . I have since moved to Maine in 2020 and my numbers climb back up again. So the only difference is that I haven't been doing any running and of course without all that outside running I'm not in as much sun. So I'm wondering how the Sun may play into cholesterol levels and also wondering how cardio and body fat levels may play into the cholesterol picture. Something lowered my cholesterol significantly and I'm thinking it may be all that cardio that I did or that I was a few pounds lighter? Or being out in the sun so much? Or a combination of everything?
@waynetrenton2310
@waynetrenton2310 Жыл бұрын
Check out dr Stephanie Seneff on KZbin, could be the sun exposure is processing the body to produce cholesterol sulfate, resulting in cholesterol results.
@yengsabio5315
@yengsabio5315 Жыл бұрын
Does drinking MCT & extra-virgin olive oil increase triglycerides in the blood? Thanks in advance!
@pattihy
@pattihy Жыл бұрын
I'm trying to learn everything I can about health. Trying to put together all I'm learning. If dietary cholesterol does not cross the blood brain barrier but statins drugs do, taking statins can't be a good thing for our brain's cholesterol needs???
@pattihy
@pattihy Жыл бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHill Thank you.
@beepbeepnj2658
@beepbeepnj2658 Жыл бұрын
You have the answer here in this 2015 article title: "Statins stimulate atherosclerosis and heart failure: pharmacological mechanisms." Written by Japanese scientists living in a no profit healthcare system so no reason to mislead their own people who already have the highest life expectancy in the world.
@davidzip8841
@davidzip8841 11 ай бұрын
The brain makes its own cholesterol, and instead of lasting for weeks it lasts for years. This has been extensively studied, and statins do not affect the brain’s cholesterol production or brain health.
@Man-u-flex
@Man-u-flex Жыл бұрын
But if you have familial cholesterol diet ain’t going to be significant enough so does one use PSk69?
@Gaborekoe
@Gaborekoe Жыл бұрын
A track playing in the background in your Intro ❤ What's it?
@kennethh4904
@kennethh4904 Жыл бұрын
I get it modified the LDL , obviously with Statins. My question is, I personally know people, because I am old, that been on Statins for decades, lower their LDL , yet still have bypass surgeries. . Lowering LDL for decades,, didn't stop thier arteries from getting plague.
@margaretaskew5937
@margaretaskew5937 Жыл бұрын
Maybe that's because sugar damages the endothelial and the repair mechanisms inadvertently cause the plaque to begin.
@HEARTANDSOULOFMINE
@HEARTANDSOULOFMINE Жыл бұрын
That is why an OGTT test is the only test to determine if you have IR, which is common once you reach 65 and older. Go find the root cause that is creating soft plaque thereby its potential danger for causing thrombosis.
@SET12DSP
@SET12DSP Жыл бұрын
Try looking through the eyes of a 2-time Nobel Prize winner Dr. Linus Pauling and Dr Thomas Levy who expanded on Pauling 's work. The real issue is arterial scurvy. I have lowered my CAC said to be not reversible from 660 to 458. Sam is very right here!
@darrendigiacomo6889
@darrendigiacomo6889 Жыл бұрын
Statins don’t reduce heart disease in primary prevention
@SET12DSP
@SET12DSP Жыл бұрын
@@darrendigiacomo6889 I agree, not only that they narrow the arteries even further all in the name of stabilization of Plaque but after the stabilization and a much narrower artery a piece of Plaque comes along and boom heart attack. I prefer Linus Paulings approach and belief that the problem is localized vitamin C deficiency which Lp-a arrives first on the scene to start the Plaque and calcium process of shoring up the arteries holes and cracks from the mechanical stress of the arteries close to the heart depleting vitamin C. The RDA of C is not enough. Standard medicines approach to calcium and plaque build-up is a backwards approach IMO as well as others such as Dr. Thomas Levy Cardiologist. How do I know because I am using Paulings and Levy's solution and my heart disease is reversing with a CAC of 458 down from 660.
@DonaldTingle-k4r
@DonaldTingle-k4r Жыл бұрын
Love your show and especially this episode - except in the section near the end (1:53) when he states that dietary intake of cholesterol has "nothing to do with coronary outcome..." Dr Gregor's video posted today (Apr 5) reiterates that dietary cholesterol raises blood levels and increases CVD risks, including a statement to that effect by Kim Williams What gives? Your guests assertion that it "has nothing to do with" seems to undercut his credibility.
@austinbeals
@austinbeals 11 ай бұрын
Such a fascinating topic and great explanation of it. The only thing that I don't think I quite understand is the claim that dietary cholesterol has little or no effect on cholesterol levels except for hyperabsorbers. It seems like there is such a strong correlation between people with high dietary cholesterol intake and blood cholesterol and inversely people who, like Simon, do not consume cholesterol in their diets and much lower levels. It's hard to believe this is all genetic and not influenced by diet.
@amycaruthers7858
@amycaruthers7858 Жыл бұрын
Wouldn’t the treament be the same for either elevated LDL or APOb?
@hankhardisty9433
@hankhardisty9433 Жыл бұрын
Great episode!
@daviddubois2476
@daviddubois2476 Жыл бұрын
I've seen more and more studies correlating inflammation and CVD, but this is the first time I've seen the mechanism spelled out. Awesome stuff.
@StangspringDK
@StangspringDK Жыл бұрын
At 1:53:30 he mentions phytosterols, and states the body would NOT want to see that. On my low carb diet, the plants of choice are all on the top in regards to phytosterols. Various nuts, flax seed, broccoli, brusselsprouts, spinach. If the normal range is to absorb 55%, then maybe these preferred foods are not that good anyway? Pretty sure I eat more of these, than eggs or even beef and butter. Could it be, that the "lean mass hyper responders" he dismisses so fast, might be hyper-absorbers? That despite doing what is often referred to as clean keto, still have LDL that is drastically elevated? Despite a lot of research being done here in Denmark, the only lipid panel that is routinely offered, is HDL, LDL-C and trigs. Not unless you fork out a buttload of money on a private hospital, can you get a detailed panel.
@gerardklauner902
@gerardklauner902 Жыл бұрын
Isn't it possible to control the number of macrophage cells ?
@esvedra2419
@esvedra2419 Жыл бұрын
I will have to come back to this probably several times to fully understand the pathways. Till now I was thinking its less of a macronutrient consumption that matters but rather importance of staying in nutritional balance. Overeating on simple carbs rather than fats may do more damage to system. Although if overeating on either saturated fat or sugar weightgain would be expected as outcome - becoming a risk factor for various diseases, excess simple carbs I believe, would create more damage in a process (through cells becoming insulin resistant over time). Conversely, if all macronutrients are metabolised well (nutritional balance is preserved through active lifestyle) no damage is created by neither sugar or fat.
@gtm5650
@gtm5650 Жыл бұрын
What is the normal range for ApoB in grams per litre?
@willbrink
@willbrink Жыл бұрын
Good stuff!
@roybatty8366
@roybatty8366 Жыл бұрын
Watched it all. Fascinating stuff. I've become semi-obsessed after getting a less than ideal lipid panel and wondering what the best approach to it is. Btw Simon, the standard pronunciation for H in HDL for example is Aitch, not Haitch. It drives me nuts, sorry to be petty.
@roybatty8366
@roybatty8366 Жыл бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHill I told Brian Tyler Cohen to stop saying "second of all" and he did for a while, but he's doing it again.
@sO_RoNerY
@sO_RoNerY Жыл бұрын
Doesn’t matter how H is pronounced. Ugh.
@roybatty8366
@roybatty8366 Жыл бұрын
@@sO_RoNerY standards need to be maintained. Pronunciation is important, otherwise you get people saying mumf instead of month, aks instead of ask, expresso instead of espresso, and haitch instead of aitch. Haitch is my pet hate, which is why I mentioned it. Anyway Dr Tom Dayspring and Simon are wonderful people doing a great job, which is more important of course.
@zhilahaghbin4766
@zhilahaghbin4766 Жыл бұрын
Thanks you both, amazing style of interview bring the excitement of the Dr. about the subject. I sure love to own/read the books with chapter of Dr. TD, in it please mention names of the books or where to find the chapters otherwise.
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