Functional Medicine Approaches to Systemic Inflammation

Deep dive into Functional Medicine approaches to diagnosing, treating and reversing inflammatory conditions.

Our guest speaker will be Dr. Helen Messier PhD, MD Founder & CMO at Altum Medical. Helen is also an IFM Certified Practitioner and Educator.

We will deep dive into the following topics:

+ Understanding the root causes of inflammation
—> Nutritional
—> Environmental
—> Emotional
—> Genetic
+ Diagnostic testing to identify root cause
+ Designing a remote monitoring solution for ongoing treatment

And much more…

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How To Integrate Oura Rings & Health Coaches Into Functional Medicine Practices

Learn how to integrate the Oura ring and health coaches into your Functional Medicine practice.

Our guest speaker this month is Dr. Sachin Patel of The Living Proof Institute and Perfect Practice Mentorship Program.

In this webinar we will cover:

  • How to coach clients into more parasympathetic nervous system activity and measure results with the Oura ring
  • How to integrate a health coach into the practice to manage the remote monitoring with the Oura ring
  • How integrative practices can use Heart Rate Variability (HRV) as a biomarker to assess client health without the need for expensive lab testing. This is especially helpful in countries where integrative doctors cannot directly order lab tests for their clients.
  •  How HRV correlates to bone health, muscle health, brain health, immune system function, digestive function, and other systems in the body
  •  How to stock Oura sizing kits and quickly deploy rings to new clients
  • And much more!

If you want to use Heads Up in your practice, click here to set up an account

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Ep. 60 – Integrating the Oura Ring into your Functional Medicine Practice with Dr. Sachin Patel

Ep. 60 – Integrating the Oura Ring into your Functional Medicine Practice with Dr. Sachin Patel

About the Episode

Dr. Sachin Patel of The Living Proof Institute and Perfect Practice Mentorship sits down with Dave Korsunsky to discuss how Dr. Patel implements the Oura Ring into his practice. The pair dive into their favorite metrics to monitor, how to build a successful practice, and how each of them got into functional medicine.

“Getting people more parasympathetic heals and it helps restore the function of all of their organ systems. It also restores blood flow to those organ systems.”

– Dr. Sachin Patel

Heads Up

This podcast is brought to you by Heads Up, a web app designed to help both individuals and health practitioners centrally track the vital health data that matters. Instantly synchronize your (or your clients’) medical records, connect favorite health devices and apps, and use the data to optimize your health (and that of your clients).

Click on the button below to start your free 30-day trial. Or, read on for more information about our latest podcast episode!

START TRACKING!

Living Proof Institute

The Living Proof Institute offers personal and corporate health solutions. Our goal is to improve the health and wellness of our community by improving the health of its citizens. Our mission is accomplished by patient education, dietary and lifestyle consulting, exercise prescription, and advanced functional laboratory testing.

Perfect Practice Mentorship

Perfect Practice is a world-class personal, professional, and practice development mentorship. Our mission is to provide simple, practical and affordable growth tools to help functional medicine practitioners and coaches deliver transformational care for their clients.


Dr. Sachin Patel

Sachin is a father, husband, philanthropist, functional medicine practice success coach, international speaker, and best-selling author whose philosophy is that, “The doctor of the future is the patient.” 

He founded The Living Proof Institute and coaches practitioners all over the world on how to step into their power and profoundly serve their communities.

And, he has taught thousands of functional medicine professionals how to start, grow, and scale their practices.

Sign Up For The Future Webinar With Dr. Sachin Patel & The Heads Up Team.

Show Notes

(2:10) Dave talks about how practices can use wearable technology to benefit their patients. Practices can get rapid feedback, personalized programs, and more.

(3:15) Dr. Patel started as a chiropractor for sports, soft tissue, and repetitive strain injuries. He ended up on the news, which resulted in more than 50 people calling his practices. All of these people had chronic health issues, as opposed to soft tissue injuries. This led Dr. Patel to functional medicine.

(3:43) Dr. Patel started the Living Proof Institute in Cincinnati, Ohio. The institute helps people get to the root cause using functional medicine, lifestyle, medicine, and mindset to help them heal.

(3:56) He moved back to Toronto to start another clinic. Other practices started reaching out to him about how he built his own practice. This led Dr. Patel to coaching. His goal is to establish a movement to create and deploy an army of practitioners that are making the world a better place and using technology in a responsible way to enhance their clinical outcomes.

(5:37) Dave reflects on how a functional doctor helped him identify the root cause of his health issues. This led him to move off of the Western diet and ignited a series of personal health changes.

(7:04) Dr. Patel shares how he grew up eating a bunch of grains as a vegetarian. He started removing gluten and dairy from his diet. This included meat substitutes which were stitched together with gluten.

(8:07) He would wake up tired, stiff, and achy every morning. He had major digestive issues. After altering his diet, his skin cleared up and many of his issues disappeared. He has now been gluten free for over a decade.

(9:44) Dave discusses how he is also now an early morning person.

(10:22) Dave shares how understanding Oura Ring metrics on himself now helps him interpret the data of his loved one’s through Heads Up.

(11:45) Dr. Patel met Harpreet Rai (CEO of Oura Ring) at Genius Network. This led him to invite Oura to come to Dr. Patel’s in-person event, which resulted in dozens of practitioners ordering rings.

(12:22) In Ontario, Dr. Patel had to figure out what claims he could make regarding his messaging. He decided to focus on vitality and health optimization.

(13:13) Dr. Patel realized that boards would go after practitioners requesting testing. Dr. Patel wanted to create a program that doesn’t use testing. 

(14:44) Dr. Patel wants patients to become their own doctor by having data. People who were put on a lifestyle design program were getting amazing results in 3-6 weeks. They got off their meds, lost 20-60 pounds, and transformed their health before getting tests done.

(15:44) By improving lifestyle and environment, there’s collateral benefit to their entire family. They want to teach the figurehead in the household how to create an environment of health in the home.

(16:17) In one family, a woman lost 27 pounds, the husband lost 45 pounds, and the daughter lost 27 pounds. Dr. Patel doesn’t want skinnier versions of people, but healthier versions of people.

(17:12) Dr. Patel focuses on heart rate variability (HRV). HRV correlates to bone health, muscle health, brain health, immune system function, digestive function, and other systems in the body. He tracks HRV through the Oura Ring.

(18:01) Dr. Patel gets 50-100 Oura Ring sizing kits delivered directly to his practice at a time. He includes a sizing kit in each client’s welcome package.

(19:11) Dave discusses the limitations of working within the Canadian system. Dave’s sister is a naturopathic doctor in Winnipeg and she can’t order labs for her patients, even a simple Vitamin D test.

(21:38) Dave talks about why it’s a great idea for Dr. Patel to stock the sizing kits for his clients to reduce friction when ordering the Oura Ring.

(23:50) Dave believes combining metrics and using that for engagement opportunities is the best approach for practices.

(24:36) Dr. Patel discusses how they use a health coach. Their patients can do a daily check. They can submit a journal entry, log their weight, hydration, bowel movements, sleep scores, and any other questions they may have.

(25:24) Dr. Patel’s practice shares patient progress, oftentimes through Heads Up Health Reports, during follow up meetings. The practice focuses primarily on sleep and HRV. The patient shares information the ring can’t tell them and Heads Up gives them information that the patient can’t tell them.

(26:53) Practices don’t need to be perfect to get started. You learn things and make improvements along the way.

(28:19) Dr. Patel enjoys gamifying within his community. He can hold sleep score contests with his clients.

(28:52) Dave talks about how the Heads Up employees all have their Oura Rings connected and a Slack Channel to discuss their scores. 

(29:59) Dave goes over some of the best metrics to monitor using the Oura Ring. These metrics include resting heart rate, temperature deviation, HRV, the actual readiness score, the respiration rate, and the sleep score. Temperature deviation can be a precursor to pending illness. Respiration rate can indicate impending illness and level of cardiovascular health.

(32:11) You can’t cheat heart rate variability. It shows how somebody is handling a stressful situation. Dr. Patel uses HRV as a measure of resilience. HRV is a good measure of parasympathetic tone; a good indicator of how well we’re recovering, repairing, and regenerating.

(34:50) Sleep is one of the most important things that we do. It is the most parasympathetic thing that we do. The Oura Ring shows how well protocols and recommendations are working.

(36:10) Dr. Patel had a friend who couldn’t sleep and Dr. Patel recommended that he turn off all artificial lighting after the sun goes down. His friend felt better, but the Oura Ring showed him the value within the data.

(37:18) Dr. Patel also focuses on respiratory rate. He uses a nose strip, mouth tape, and proper positioning when he sleeps.

(37:45) Dave tries to think about the central nervous system when he prioritizes his help. He turns the lights down early before bed and views it as the goal of meditation.

(39:07) Changing how you consume alcohol or cannabis can help with sleep onset. Water can also be used as an excellent source of relaxation therapy.

(40:28) The key to Dr. Patel’s program is to pair your nervous system with the activity that you are trying to accomplish. 

(41:18) Bob Rakowski shared a study that measured blood flow in extreme athletes. A sprinter, in a very fight or flight state, is sending only 5% of his blood flow to his liver and kidneys when he’s in that state. At rest, they send 50% to those organs.

(41:46) If you want someone to detox better, the key is to increase blood flow and nutrients to the organ system so they can function properly. By healing your parasympathetic system, that helps restore function and blood flow to their organ systems.

Your digestive system works better when you’re parasympathetic. Instead of changing your diet, slow down, chew your meal, enjoy it, and be grateful for it. Western culture views food as an inconvenience.

Our digestive system is most effective in mid-day when the sun is in the highest position (not necessarily noon). That’s when you should have your biggest meal. The most parasympathetic thing you can do right after that is take a nap and digest that meal, instead of going to exercise immediately after.

(43:24) Dave noticed that he should eat his biggest meal around 3pm.

(46:26) Dr. Patel noticed that food choices, meal timing, and stress affect HRV. You can’t eliminate stress, but you can change how they interpret it. If somebody’s HRV is not responsive, he starts to look into trauma. There may be something that is keeping them in a sympathetic state despite the fact that their physical health is improving.

(48:36) There are many things that are easily modifiable in our day-to-day life; our environment, lighting before bedtime, ambient bedroom temperature, meal timing, and meal choices.

(49:06) When you want to move on to the next level, you look at things that are psychospiritual including stressors in relationships with others and yourself.

(49:36) Dave and Dr. Patel discuss the power of plant medicines. Dr. Patel had a patient who had a 30% permanent improvement in their HRV score after a psilocybin ceremony.

(50:55) In Dave’s personal experience, if his HRV numbers are in the 50s, he feels there is nothing that he can’t accomplish. He also makes sure that he doesn’t overtrain.

(53:04) Dr. Patel looks at how long it takes him to sink into resting heart rate and calibrates his day accordingly. Sometimes our body will tell us one thing, but our mind can always tell us something else. He gives himself permission to override the data and choose how he feels about the day.

(55:40) Dr. Patel gives insight into how patients respond to remote patient monitoring. When he tells people that they offer remote patient monitoring, it serves as a filtration process. People who don’t like to be measured won’t want to sign up.

(57:03) Dave likes wearable technology and biometric data in the clinical setting because it holds both the patient and the practitioner accountable.

(58:40) Remote patient monitoring validates practitioners’ processes. It is evidence that their program works. There are practitioners that make big claims, but don’t have evidence to back that up. There are patients who say they’re doing certain things that may not be.

(1:01:23) The top three metrics that Dr. Patel personally lives by are HRV, fasting insulin, and high sensitivity CRP. HRV is instant biofeedback. Insulin resistance is a major predictor of many issues in your body or longevity. Fasting insulin shows how someone’s managing their metabolism, blood sugar. High sensitivity CRP is an inflammation marker.

References

Living Proof Institute

Perfect Practice Mentorship Program

Harpreet Rai

Dr. Bob Rakowski

Mymetabolicreset.ca

Sign Up For The Future Webinar With Dr. Patel & The Heads Up Health Team

Ep. 59 – Integrative and Functional Nutrition with Dr. Sheila Dean from the IFNA

Ep. 59 – Integrative and Functional Nutrition with Dr. Sheila Dean from the IFNA

Dr. Sheila Dean of the Integrative and Functional Nutrition Academy dives into how she started IFNA, what the academy’s courses teach, functional nutrition, becoming a VA vendor,  and where conventional and integrative medicine differ. She covers all this and more with Heads Up founder Dave Korsunsky.

Heads Up

This podcast is brought to you by Heads Up, a web app designed to help both individuals and health practitioners centrally track the vital health data that matters. Instantly synchronize your (or your clients’) medical records, connect favorite health devices and apps, and use the data to optimize your health (and that of your clients).

Click on the start link below to start your free 30-day trial. Or, read on for more information about our latest podcast episode!

START TRACKING!

“It’s not just about Sheila Dean in private practice, but it’s about empowering and educating as many nutrition healthcare professionals as possible to get out there and to do this.” – Dr. Sheila Dean

Integrative and Functional Nutrition Academy

The Integrative and Functional Nutrition Academy (IFNA) is one of the most respected online functional nutrition training and mentoring programs in the industry. It was founded by two of the nation’s premier integrative medicine nutritionists, Dr. Dean and Kathie Swift MS.

Consisting of 5 tracks with 33 modules, the IFNA program teaches leading-edge, evidence-based, whole systems approaches to patient care.  This emerging medical nutrition model focuses on identifying root causes and imbalances to significantly improve health outcomes and combines the very best of modern science, clinical wisdom, and critical thinking.

Click to enroll in IFNA

 

Dr. Sheila Dean

Dr. Sheila Dean, DSc, RDN, LDN, IFMCP is a registered and licensed dietitian nutritionist, board certified integrative and functional medicine certified practitioner, clinical nutritionist, and exercise physiologist. She was a Certified Diabetes Educator with the NCDBE for 15 years.

She received her undergraduate training through Rutgers University, completed her internship and graduate training with University of Rhode Island and Brown University’s teaching hospitals, received doctoral training in nutritional genomics and pharmacology through the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ) and completed her Doctorate of Science degree through Hawthorn University. 

Dr. Dean has received advanced training in functional medicine and nutritional biochemistry through the Institute for Functional Medicine and is a board certified IFM practitioner. She has also worked with the Duke University Medical Center’s Endocrinology and Metabolism Disorders Clinic and the Joslin Center for Diabetes as a certified diabetes educator.

She’s served as the consulting sports nutritionist for the Philadelphia Phillies, has consulted for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, the Toronto Blue Jays and was the media spokesperson and columnist for the Ironman Institute and is the author of Nutrition & Endurance: Where Do I Begin? (Meyer & Meyer Publishing).

 

In this episode:

(2:13) Dr. Dean discusses her background being a dietician for 30 years. Around 2000, she became disillusioned with the field and was exposed to functional medicine. After her research, she concluded that this was a field she was excited to join.

(4:29) Dr. Dean started incorporating her functional medicine knowledge into her practice. The types of patients who went to see her began to expand.

(5:26) Dr. Dean and Kathie Swift were constantly being called and texted by people asking for training. IFNA launched in 2015.

(6:54) Dave reflects on Dr. Dean’s journey and how she created her functional nutrition business.

(8:04) Dr. Dean and Kathie felt that dieticians were pretty ignored. They wanted to create a program for dieticians.

(9:30) Dr. Dean dives into her functional nutrition program and what people will learn from it. IFNA teaches people a specialized area. There are 33 modules and it takes about a year to finish. There are nine components. Track 1 covers everything from food is medicine, conventional labs, functional blood chemistry interpretation, dietary supplements, the science, and the art. Track 2 gets into all the different systems areas. Track 3 is about the application and building your own private practice. There is a track dedicated to therapeutic elimination diets. The final track, Track 5, is dedicated to case studies.

(15:35) Dr. Dean says the ideal scenario for her students is for them to setup an integrative-based practice. IFNA are VA vendors, so they have a contract with the government that pays for the all the programs that their VA dieticians go through.

(17:59) Dr. Dean believes that asking questions about root cause analysis is the foundation of trying to understand how to restore health and function.

(19:20) Dave narrows in on the issues with the standard American diet and lack of education for children.

(21:01) Dr. Dean and Kathie are focused on empowering as many functional nutrition healthcare professionals as possible. Heads Up Health’s mission is to give certified professionals the remote ability to measure and analyze how patients are doing.

(25:19) Conventional and integrative communities agree that autoimmunity is a condition where the immune system is hyper vigilant and maybe attacking its own tissue. The difference in the communities lies in the way the issue is handled. Once the patient is stabilizied, Dr. Dean thinks the physician should figure out or outsource the patient to somebody who will figure out the underlying issue.

(29:39) Dr. Dean cautions practitioners not to replace a drug with a supplement.

(31:51) If you take a personalized approach, there isn’t one or two panels that you need take. But, a really good overall panel is a nutra eval. It looks at many different biomarkers related to nutritional status.

(34:05) STAIN is an acronym used by IFNA. Stress, Toxins, Adverse food reaction, Infection, and Nutritional deficiency. Dr. Dean gives examples for each type. 

(37:52) Dave shares how he discovered an infection in his microbiome that showed up in a test once he started working with a functional doctor.

(40:06) Medications can cause nutritional deficiencies. Magnesium and CoQ10 can typically be depleted by medications.

(43:48) Dr. Dean says it is key for functional nutrition practitioners to track data and stay organized.

References

IFNA

Dr. Sheila Dean: LinkedIn | IFNA 

Kathie Swift

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Ep. 57 – Simplify Functional Lab Testing with Rupa Health

Ep. 57 – Simplify Functional Lab Testing with Rupa Health

Are you a practitioner looking for an easier way to conduct functional medicine lab testing? 

Tara Viswanathan, Co-Founder and CEO of Rupa Health, discusses with Heads Up’s Dave Korsunsky how her company simplifies this process for medical professionals.

Dave and Tara also talk about why they believe root cause medicine will eventually become the standard of care, how Rupa Health and Heads Up are educating practitioners, and the origins of Rupa Health.

Rupa Health is a company that focuses on making the lab testing process easier for practitioners, so they have more time to focus on patient care.

Tara Viswanathan graduated with a Master’s Degree in Management Science and Engineering. She achieved her Bachelor’s Degree in Finance and Operations Management at Pennsylvania University. Tara previously did product consulting for consumer health startups.

Functional Medicine

Functional medicine focuses on the biological systems in the body. A single diagnosis can have multiple causes. Ultimately, the purpose of functional medicine is to identify and treat the root cause of the disease. 

Heads Up

This podcast is brought to you by Heads Up, a web app designed to help both individuals and health practitioners centrally track the vital health data that matters. Instantly synchronize your (or your clients’) medical records, connect favorite health devices and apps, and use the data to optimize your health (and that of your clients).

Click on the button below to start your free 30-day trial. Or, read on for more information about our latest podcast episode!

START TRACKING!

“I’ve had complete conviction in the fact that root cause medicine is going to become the standard of care.”

– Tara Viswanathan

Follow Tara:

Twitter @TaraViswanathan

LinkedIn Tara Viswanathan

 

 

In this podcast you’ll learn:

(2:25) How Dave and Tara became interested in health through their careers in technology. 

(3:57) How Rupa Health makes functional lab testing easier. The company has over 2,000 different tests that healthcare practitioners can order within minutes. Rupa Health manages the entire patient experience including support with phlebotomy, specialized instructions, and 24-hour customer support.

(5:40) Rupa Health supports everybody from solo, independent acupuncturists to small private practices to large hospital systems. Tara breaks down how a practitioner can enroll and ease the burden of ordering patient tests.

(7:33) Patients have access to 3-month payment plans through Rupa.

(9:13) The benefits of stool testing. Dave jokes about his experience presenting the Bristol Stool Chart at a conference.

(10:12) The information you can learn from checking your urine and stool.

(11:04) Rupa Health began in January 2020. Within months the company spread to clinics in 47 states. The company is continuously releasing new features.

(12:34) Tara believes root cause medicine is going to become the standard of care. Tara wants to enable all practitioners to be able to pursue root cause medicine. Rupa first built a matching service to help pair patients with practitioners. The company then built a clinic, discovered the issues with lab testing, and decided to shut down the clinic and focus solely on lab testing.

(14:50) One of the main issues with functional labs is that many of them do not have any web-based APIs (Application Programming Interface) to pull from. These labs and patients are stuck with a bunch of PDF files. Rupa Health has helped to build services around these facilities’ current systems.

(19:00) Rupa can help doctors process all of their lab tests without having to learn everything step-by-step.

(20:10) Root cause medicine can be the future of medicine. Root causes can be microbiome environment, heavy metal toxin exposure, and more.

(22:23) Remote patient monitoring is becoming widely accepted and there are now reimbursements from the payer system. Commercial insurance covers most microbiome testing.

(24:14) Rupa Health is working on helping educate practitioners through Rupa University. These courses teach practitioners how to understand and interpret lab testing. Heads Up Health has also launched Heads Up University, which aims to serve a similar purpose.

(25:49) Dave and Tara are super involved as patients when interacting with their doctors.

(26:43) Tara’s advice to practitioners is, “It’s not easy, but it’s worth it.” You can reach out to Tara at tarav@rupahealth.com where she can explain Rupa Health to you in more detail.

 

References

Rupa Health

Bristol Stool Chart

Rupa University

Electronic Medical Records (EMRs) for Functional Medical Practices