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What can 3 trillion gut bacteria do to your heart? - Part 2

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Manage episode 372990214 series 3352599
Content provided by Columbus Prevent and Reverse and Columbus Prevent. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Columbus Prevent and Reverse and Columbus Prevent or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

World expert cardiologist Dr. Tang of the Cleveland Clinic, takes us into the universe of the gut microbiome and describes the little-known ways that food impacts the heart.

Find out how you can make meaningful, tangible, durable improvements to your health at cprhealthclinic.com

(Below is a portion of the AI-generated transcript, if you want the whole thing sign up for the newsletter at cprhealthclinic.com)

Dr. Tang: Nowadays there is a lot of option for us to actually get people to live their full lives and even for some of the sickest patients , who, had a really rough time after a heart attack,

Dr. Sagar: We're back with Dr. Tang. Renowned cardiologist and researcher to continue the conversation on the effect of the gut on the heart.

We left off talking about nutritionally deprived populations.

Dr. Sagar: When you say nutritionally deprived populations, I think a lot of people are gonna be thinking of areas where there is no food at all. But are you talking about that or are you talking about our modern day world where all the food is coming from a gas station?

Dr. Tang: Well, I think that that is an evolving trend. But for example I'm talking about in the 1930s, forties, fifties, that there are some people that have some nutritional deficiency that we actually fortified many of the foods and all that. So we actually did put in a lot of nutrients for the assumption of , benefit.

But I think it is okay if we know what we put in. The problem is there's a lot of things that we don't know is in the food right now. Particularly things that are, highly processed and , and there are studies out there, we don't know what they are, but I think we know that some of them may not be.

So there are people who have isocaloric food with crossover study that look at processed foods versus not processed food, and they have certainly see, you know, problems with, metabolic or weight change or whatnot. So that's actually, , puzzling because if you have the same type of food, but yeah, it's processed versus not, , why would they be different?

Certainly something made them different. And so that's why I'm trying to say , it's, we still have a lot to learn because I think it would guide us in our public health efforts to try and, you know, at least advise our patients what to do. Right now we as clinicians are not very good at understanding what they are eating and even.

Explaining to them what they should eat. Many people are very motivated to actually change their diet. There are many very excellent organizations and many very vocal clinicians and many pathways, but the research on this is challenging. It's very challenging to study diet because it's such a complex intervention.

And, and there's a lot of really strong cultural beliefs in, in food, , if I actually ask all these people, ask everybody, how is your diet, , even quantifying the amount is difficult, let alone qualifying what they are eating. And there's a lot of strong beliefs out there about whether some things are good or bad.

  continue reading

51 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 372990214 series 3352599
Content provided by Columbus Prevent and Reverse and Columbus Prevent. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Columbus Prevent and Reverse and Columbus Prevent or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

World expert cardiologist Dr. Tang of the Cleveland Clinic, takes us into the universe of the gut microbiome and describes the little-known ways that food impacts the heart.

Find out how you can make meaningful, tangible, durable improvements to your health at cprhealthclinic.com

(Below is a portion of the AI-generated transcript, if you want the whole thing sign up for the newsletter at cprhealthclinic.com)

Dr. Tang: Nowadays there is a lot of option for us to actually get people to live their full lives and even for some of the sickest patients , who, had a really rough time after a heart attack,

Dr. Sagar: We're back with Dr. Tang. Renowned cardiologist and researcher to continue the conversation on the effect of the gut on the heart.

We left off talking about nutritionally deprived populations.

Dr. Sagar: When you say nutritionally deprived populations, I think a lot of people are gonna be thinking of areas where there is no food at all. But are you talking about that or are you talking about our modern day world where all the food is coming from a gas station?

Dr. Tang: Well, I think that that is an evolving trend. But for example I'm talking about in the 1930s, forties, fifties, that there are some people that have some nutritional deficiency that we actually fortified many of the foods and all that. So we actually did put in a lot of nutrients for the assumption of , benefit.

But I think it is okay if we know what we put in. The problem is there's a lot of things that we don't know is in the food right now. Particularly things that are, highly processed and , and there are studies out there, we don't know what they are, but I think we know that some of them may not be.

So there are people who have isocaloric food with crossover study that look at processed foods versus not processed food, and they have certainly see, you know, problems with, metabolic or weight change or whatnot. So that's actually, , puzzling because if you have the same type of food, but yeah, it's processed versus not, , why would they be different?

Certainly something made them different. And so that's why I'm trying to say , it's, we still have a lot to learn because I think it would guide us in our public health efforts to try and, you know, at least advise our patients what to do. Right now we as clinicians are not very good at understanding what they are eating and even.

Explaining to them what they should eat. Many people are very motivated to actually change their diet. There are many very excellent organizations and many very vocal clinicians and many pathways, but the research on this is challenging. It's very challenging to study diet because it's such a complex intervention.

And, and there's a lot of really strong cultural beliefs in, in food, , if I actually ask all these people, ask everybody, how is your diet, , even quantifying the amount is difficult, let alone qualifying what they are eating. And there's a lot of strong beliefs out there about whether some things are good or bad.

  continue reading

51 episodes

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