I’ve watched several presentations by Dr Dayspring but this one is the best.
@TheProofWithSimonHill2 ай бұрын
He’s a gem
@lauried44395 ай бұрын
Thank you, Simon. These videos on cholesterol have been extremely helpful.
@TheProofWithSimonHill5 ай бұрын
Glad you like them!
@abjkl2 ай бұрын
Great video - thank you!
@manumaster19904 ай бұрын
top content!
@Barbara-ch3qf9 күн бұрын
I don’t know if this is genetics or the body’s push for homeostasis, but my Apo B has remained in the 60s (60-66) forever. In that time I’ve been a lacto-vegetarian and a vegan, with the joy of menopause in between. No 😂appreciable changes in Apo B or LDL (80-89).
@monikakress38675 ай бұрын
I love this guy. what a mind. also, I love his accent. you can practically determine the zip code he grew up in based on it.
@zealous.y5 ай бұрын
When comparing this interview to the one with Dave Feldman and Bill Cromwell, Dr. Thomas Dayspring is precisely the guy not to listen to. While the former interview was full of context, nuance and doubt, as science should be, Dayspring offers none. He's got that "the science is settled" mentality that is behind everything he says. He's obviously completely shut off to new ideas that challenge his dogma.
@demonfedor37485 ай бұрын
@@zealous.yThis video is a small part of a bigger interview full of knowledge and nuance. Dave Feldman is a citizen scientist with a few years of experience, while this gentleman has decades upon decades of lipid research and knowledge behind him. And apoB is not a dogma,it is a consensus. To put it simply the amount of research and it's quality is so monumental there is simply no chance high apoB is benign. Dave Feldman's research is not capable of destroying that much evidence nor is it designed to do so. The best it can do is provide some nuance to lipid metabolism. Dave himself said he believes the totality of evidence on apoB being a significant risk factor for heart disease.
@zealous.y5 ай бұрын
@@demonfedor3748 you're simply appealing to authority. I know of Dayspring's resume and have listened to hours of his interviews. Fact of the matter is he is an old dinosaur, expert in the minutiae of the science of lipoproteins, but always operating within the established dogma. In contrast, Dr Cromwell is also an established expert, but with a lot more humility as to what we know and what we don't know. There is so much we don't know.
@demonfedor37485 ай бұрын
@@zealous.y I knew you would say about appeal to authority,and you are right. It's more about the amount of knowledge and experience dr. Dayspring has on the topic compared to Dave Feldman. That amount of knowledge ( and scientific evidence to back it up)significantly increases the amount of confidence behind claims dr. Dayspring makes. Personally I am a fan of more cautious claims dr. Cromwell makes, however the claims of these two gentlemen mostly match, the difference is the level of confidence embedded in these claims.
@ApoBeef3 ай бұрын
@@zealous.y A better question is what _do_ we know? We know that ApoB is necessary but not sufficient for ASCVD. We also currently know that having a low ApoB has no detriment to human health. So the ideal path at this point is to lower ApoB (along with healthy BP, metabolic health) as much as possible to prevent ASCVD from ever developing.
@dustinirwin15 ай бұрын
We should just be getting CT Angiograms and not rely on indicators. CVD correlates, very imperfectly, with APOb. FWIW I eat mainly plants, no dairy (or only fat free), no red meat, huge amounts of soluble fiber, exercise intensely 5 days per week, walk lots, 13% body fat, and I cannot get my APOb below 90.
@poersch865 ай бұрын
Same here.93 here but my ApoB/A1 is .64 so very good
@HakuCell4 ай бұрын
@dustinirwin1 you should ask your MD to give you a statin. rosuvastatin (5-10 mg a day) can lower LDL-C by 35-45% according to gpt 4.
@dustinirwin14 ай бұрын
@@HakuCell why would I want a statin? Just had a CT Angiogram and, despite decades of “high” cholesterol, I have 0 CAC and no detectable soft plaques.
@HakuCell4 ай бұрын
@@dustinirwin1 oh ok.
@ApoBeef3 ай бұрын
CT angiograms emit a non-zero amount of radiation and is very invasive. Just knock the ApoB with drugs if said drugs aren't causing you side effects.
@Ivana.0405Күн бұрын
It's a "game" of statistics. Most apparently healthy people with APOB of 80 may not get heart attacks, but some do. Certainly, fewer apparently healthy people with APOB of 60 get heart attacks vs. APOB of 80, so why not treat if you have therapies with low side effects like low-dose statins. For those people with money, why not also use PK inhibitors?
@stoenchu1225 ай бұрын
Mine is even below the normal range. Well, at least I know that i will not die from a heart failure lol
@deebrooks94885 ай бұрын
What about someone with a liprotein a of only 39 but apob of 127? Which do you defer to?
@Barbara-ch3qf9 күн бұрын
Separate issues. I’d address that Apo B. Good for you re the LPa, that’s close to normal! Mine’s much higher!
@deebrooks94889 күн бұрын
@Barbara-ch3qf Hi, do you have any tips for lowering the apob? I eat so healthy. Thank you
@brianlane95343 күн бұрын
I believe you little 'a' is high.
@duanefrench35002 күн бұрын
127, you better start eating clean and do zone 2 training.
@deebrooks94882 күн бұрын
@@duanefrench3500 hi, I don't eat any processed food, zero sugar and no alcohol.
@Julian.u72 ай бұрын
I am always amazed how medical doctors used flawed logic to justify al sort of nonsense. Saying that low ApoB in babies shows that low ApoB is adults is OK is similar to saying that not being able to walk is also ok because it is normal for babies.
@uchdrydishere371727 күн бұрын
The argument I get is that low cholesterol will prevent your brain and body development. But babies have very low cholesterol, and their brains and bodies are developing at a much faster rate.
@emastrovito2 күн бұрын
Agree. E.g., he never mentioned that babies rely heavily on keton bodies since they are in a permanent state of (mild) ketosis due to a high fat diet (breast milk). So if ketosis is good for babies it should be good for adults as well...
@duanefrench35002 күн бұрын
Your comment is ridiculous. It sounds like your carnivore or a ketogenic guy. The guy studied this all his life, but you know better. 😂
@duanefrench35002 күн бұрын
Our bodies produce our own cholesterol, our brains produce cholesterol independently, ot has it own system from what i have learned. And we do not need outside sources of saturated fat as some of these internet influencers claims, without scientific studies, they are the studies and we are watching.@uchdrydishere3717
@dennispo49985 ай бұрын
I would've thought Lp(a) would be the concern and not ApoB?
@TheProofWithSimonHill5 ай бұрын
Both are! Look out for a new episode with Dr Dayspring on LP(a) out on the next month here
@dennispo49985 ай бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHill Alirighty then! Looking forward to the Lp(a) episode. One more thing, since LDL (hence ApoB) goes around the entire loop, arterial and venous.. why is there only plaque on the high-pressure side (arteries), wouldn't it make sense that if it's indeed the LDL that's causing the high risk, then the return path should be "plaqued" as well?
@HakuCell5 ай бұрын
4:44+ Thomas Dayspring, world renowned lipidologist ~ "ideally apo-b should be 30-40 mg/dL, that's the physiologic level, and for LDL-C the physiologic level would be 10-30 mg/dL. if we could all have lipids at those levels, there couldn't possibly be atherosclerosis, Lp(a) aside".
@skyburger-b1t2 ай бұрын
Thank You!!
@maremacd5 ай бұрын
It would seem impossible for the vast majority of humans to reach the ideal ApoB and LDL levels recommended by your guests without pharmaceutical interventions. Should we all just be on statins? Sincere question.
@willbrink5 ай бұрын
Many an anti aging/longevity scientist type are on low dose statins. Some admit to it, some don't as they don't wanna deal with the BS. I have spoken with them in person on that issue. There's also now non statin drugs that work well with minimal to no side effects, which he mentions in the vid. Major drawback to them now is they're expensive, but for one he mentions. ApoB is key no doubt, addressing other known risk factors (e.g., inflammation, OS, BP, etc) are worthy of attention also. I find Dr Dayspring tends to be a bit dismissal about that aspect, but that's another topic...
@CharlieFader5 ай бұрын
How did you reach the conclusion that it would be impossible for the vast majority of humans? Due to lifestyle or genetics?
@maremacd5 ай бұрын
@@CharlieFader I don’t think most people are able to get their LDL below 70 even with the most stringent of plant-based diets. I do not have genetically high cholesterol, and my doctors have never worried about my numbers, but my LDL sits around 90, which most guests of this pod would say is problematic. Even when I was orthorexic and eating an obsessively clean diet I couldn’t get below low 80s. When I eat off plan, I don’t go much above 90. I have triglycerides in the 40s and 50s and normal HDL. I know I am only one person, but I have had discussions with many people, all health conscious and interested in this topic, and not one of them has ldl under 70. Do you? I wonder how many people in these comments can say they have while eating a Mediterranean or similar diet, for example. The thinking on this changes every decade. I would need more evidence before I started taking a statin to reduce my LDL below its current level.
@wfpbwfpb5 ай бұрын
It’s easy. EAT ONLY PLANTS!!!!!!!!!
@jamesalles1395 ай бұрын
@@wfpbwfpb plants are trying to kill us, tho
@williammyers93955 ай бұрын
Mine 1.056 well less than 10. So not being between 10-30 is bad?
@demonfedor37485 ай бұрын
Looks like the lab you did the test at used different units of measurement. Make sure it is in mg/dL if not use a conversion calculator. To me it looks more like g/L or mmol/L. 1 g/L apoB equals to 100 mg/dL.
@amueller5855 ай бұрын
The physiologic level of ApoB in adults is not 30-40…
@@TheProofWithSimonHill that is practically a flashing neon sign that says *MOAR STATINS!* I would like to see more focus on protecting our vascular endothelial glycocalyx. Running around with our shields down is a recipe for disaster.
@tarheelace5 ай бұрын
Can’t argue with a flat earther.
@amueller5855 ай бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHill why don’t we see these low levels of ApoB in even the healthiest of populations? Different countries? ‘Blue Zones’?
@ApoBeef3 ай бұрын
@@amueller585 Oh God, "Blue Zones"..
@roofustoofus95515 ай бұрын
Maybe I'm an idiot, but it seems this wonderful doctor actually thinks he's figured the whole answer to stop ASCVD. My counsel is take his advice until he's proven wrong by future science.
@duanefrench35002 күн бұрын
They have known for years what the causes are, where have you been.
@cynthiabroze2 ай бұрын
Simon you’re an excellent host, and maybe you know him personally, but don’t you think it’s more respectful to call him Dr. Dayspring than Tom? Just a point.
@TheProofWithSimonHill2 ай бұрын
He’s given me permission to call him either. I still generally use Dr as much as possible - especially if I was referring to him on another show/on social media.
@cynthiabroze2 ай бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHillok, but I wonder did he say that after you asked him…can I call you Tom or do you prefer Dr? Or did he say call me Tom? I’m a nurse practitioner, worked with MDs for 50 years. I certainly call (most of them) by their first name in private but not in front of patients. KZbin is exactly patients, but still its so public. He might allow it but it doesn’t mean he likes it. Not trying to shame anything thing here, just pointing out something I know from my many years. I’m almost as old as he is. 😂
@Fair-to-Middling5 ай бұрын
4:20 Um, the brain doesn't stop growing in size until the mid-late 20's, not when a person is 5 years old. Maybe he misspoke.
@arvidlystnur48275 ай бұрын
Good point. He might be referring to the concept that between birth and five years the growth is significantly more than between 5 and 25 but I could be wrong on that. I know this the physiological and other development before the age of five years, if stunted, mostly can never be rectified. Shame on parents who feed toddlers junk food.
@monikakress38675 ай бұрын
what he meant is that the brain is actively laying down new neurons up through age 5 or so, increasing in size very significantly. beyond age 5, there is relatively little increase in size. toddlers have big heads.
@arvidlystnur48275 ай бұрын
@@monikakress3867 , Thanks for the clarification.
@seascape354 ай бұрын
@@monikakress3867 Or maybe no increase in numbers of neurons? Any neurologist/neurosurgeon out there who can clarify?
@duanefrench35002 күн бұрын
I think it stops growing at 5, but developing until 25. If it kept growing we'd look pretty funny.
@kenmarriott57725 ай бұрын
High cholesterol has been correlated with longevity. Less stress, adequate sleep, active lifestyle important. Get a CT scan.
@TheProofWithSimonHill5 ай бұрын
That’s reverse causation and discussed in the full length lipid series I did with Dr Dayspring
@kenmarriott57725 ай бұрын
@@TheProofWithSimonHill Is high LDL of concern to lean mass hyper-responders or is the longevity data is not available at this time?
@SladkaPritomnost5 ай бұрын
Tsimane have the best hearts on the planet proven by modern medicine /CT scans. Their cholesterol levels are very low compare to us. It might be due to lots of fiber, physical activity, lean meats (wild animals are mostly lean) gut microbiome and also possibly due to worm parasites. Tsimane have LDL below 93mg/dL and total cholesterol below 143 mg/dL
@ApoBeef3 ай бұрын
@@kenmarriott5772 The data is not available.
@cypriano87633 ай бұрын
@@kenmarriott5772 he we go again the old high ldl/apo b loop hole comes out again. i would bet in a year everyone on keto is going to be calling themselves a lean mass hyper responder. lol. pretty soon someone will come out with a supplement called the lmrh brotien
@Barbara-ch3qf9 күн бұрын
I don’t know if this is genetics or the body’s push for homeostasis, but my Apo B has remained in the 60s (60-66) forever. In that time I’ve been a lacto-vegetarian and a vegan, with the joy of menopause in between. No 😂appreciable changes in Apo B or LDL (80-89).