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July 8, 2016 By Dr. Kurt, DC

The Bachelor Diet

For 2 weeks, I lived the bachelor life (not the TV show).  While my wife and kids were visiting family for 2 weeks, I was to fend for myself in the eating department.  I have an amazing wife that does all the meal planning and cooking for our family.  At the beginning of each month, she pulls off the dry erase calendar on our kitchen wall and plans out every single dinner for the month.  She even plans out a few days to eat out or super easy meals that I can prepare.

Sadly, this wasn’t my reality for the 2 weeks home alone.  I had to actually make dinners for myself.  The agony.  Seriously, I hate cooking.

About 4-5 days per week, I make breakfast to help out.  EVERY single morning, it’s the same thing.  I crack 7 eggs into a bowl, whisk them and scramble them in a pan with butter.  I divide the finished product between the four out of five of us that are eating solid food and add some fruit to the plate.  That’s breakfast, every morning, 7 days/week in the Perkins house.  Our kids have never had cereal, toast, or a glass of milk or OJ.

As simple as that is to make and with a routine of doing it, I only made eggs for myself ONCE in two weeks of living the bachelor life.  That’s how inherently lazy I am and how much I avoid the agony of cooking.

What was I supposed to eat and make for myself?  I ate what I liked and what was convenient to make.  I call this the bachelor diet and I want you to experiment with this.  I’ll give you the reasons why I think eating this way could create some big changes in your health, especially if you’re looking to shed some weight.  I have no proof that it will cause you to lose weight or gain health but I have a theory behind it and if you’re game, I would love to hear your experience with it…if you choose to accept the challenge.

Rule #1:  This is a NO JUDGEMENT zone.  I wasn’t worried about nutrient content.  I placed no limits on portions.  Out of the standard 42 meals in a 2 week period, 10% did not include the list below.  I was invited out a couple times and I also planned to grab a meal out after delivering a couple workshops.

These were my primary foods for 2 weeks:

  • Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwiches.  This was actually almond butter and organic strawberry preserves on gluten free bread, most often right after my workouts.
  • Ground beef.
  • Chicken wings.
  • Watermelon.
  • pureWOD Build (protein supplement) mixed in almond milk.
  • Kohana Cold Brew Coffee Concentrate.

All items were purchased at Costco except the gluten free bread and pureWOD Build.

Why do I think this could help your weight loss journey (not that I have any proof since I neither gained nor lost weight doing this)?  I hypothesize that it comes down to calming your nervous system.  The less decision making, the less mental stress.  I think variety has good intentions but it creates paralysis by analysis for many people.

As a result, the nervous system shifts into protection mode, taxing the adrenals, with a resultant sugar and insulin fight inside your body.  You could eat a nutritious meal but because there was so much mental anguish before that meal was prepared, your body won’t digest and absorb those nutrients as efficiently as hoped.

Your nervous system likes routine.  The more you have to adapt to life, the greater the potential that your nervous system defaults to that protection side of life, which chronically puts you into a state of tissue break down.  The more tissues break down, the more inflammation is created.  It’s not just your meal choice that has your nervous system on edge, it could just be the tipping point.  If your meal choice IS your only stress in life, you’re either a toddler reading this, which is amazing.  Or you’ve given up on trying to change the status quo in your life and need to re-establish your purpose in life.

Seriously, when it comes to meal planning and eating, we cycle through the same meals multiple times in a month.  If it were up to me, I would eat the same 2 to 3 things each week.  What I suggest that you try is pick 5-6 meals that you like and repeat those for a month.  Since it’s a longer time frame that my 2 week experiment, and if you’re actually doing it with intention of losing weight, ditch the wheat products and ditch the milk products.  Wheat spikes your blood sugar, which spikes insulin and milk just spikes insulin.

What our typical month looks like:

  • Breakfast:  Eggs and fruit
  • Lunch:  For me, it’s snacking on some nuts and a protein shake.  The family often eats leftovers from the previous dinner.
  • Dinner:  Meat and veggies.

It may seem boring but boring brings rest, especially at the end of the day.  Dinner is never boring when you’re eating with a hot wife and 3 kids.  Boring is eating chicken wings alone. Boring is actually being a bachelor.  Need help on how to be boring?  You know how to find me.

The Bachelor Diet

Filed Under: Weight Loss Tagged With: Costco, Insulin, Kohana cold brew, pureWOD, The Bachelor Diet

March 4, 2016 By Dr. Kurt, DC

Magnifying Magnesium

The past 2 months, I feel like I have had more and more people indicate on their intake forms that they are taking magnesium.  It’s not taking magnesium for general health.  It’s often the consumption of magnesium for symptoms like headaches, constipation, hypertension, poor energy, sleep, and restless leg.  Magnesium is being used and consumed like a medicine.

Functional Medicine Colorado Springs

I know you’ve seen the Hippocrates quote of “Let food by thy medicine and medicine by they food” but I think with a little understanding of magnesium’s role in the body in addition to my favorite hormone, insulin, you will start magnifying magnesium.

Magnesium:

Searching the the criteria “magnesium deficiency”[MeSH Terms] OR “magnesium deficiency”[All Fields] in Pubmed elicits over 4,000 references.  Although it’s the least abundant blood electrolyte, it plays critical roles in regulating other processes in the body.  It is extremely important for the metabolism of Calcium, Potassium, Phosphorus, Zinc, Copper, Iron, Sodium, Lead, Cadmium, Hydrogen chloride, acetylcholine, and nitric oxide (NO).  Magnesium is essential in the production of ATP.  It’s necessary for your methylation processes.

Why are so many deficient?  Other than our poor soil quality, magnesium levels are decreased by excess alcohol, salt, phosphoric acid (sodas) and coffee intake, by profuse sweating, by intense, prolonged stress, by excessive menstruation and vaginal flux, by diuretics and other drugs and by certain parasites (pinworms).

Therefore the range of ailments associated with magnesium deficiency is staggering: hypertension (cardiovascular disease, kidney and liver damage, etc.), peroxynitrite damage (migraine, multiple sclerosis, glaucoma, Alzheimer’s disease, etc.), recurrent bacterial infection due to low levels of nitric oxide in the cavities (sinuses, vagina, middle ear, lungs, throat, etc.), fungal infections due to a depressed immune system, thiamine deactivation (low gastric acid, behavioral disorders, etc.), premenstrual syndrome, calcium deficiency (osteoporosis, hypertension, mood swings, etc.), tooth cavities, hearing loss, diabetes type II, cramps, muscle weakness, impotence (lack of NO), aggression (lack of NO), fibromas, potassium deficiency (arrhythmia, hypertension, some forms of cancer), iron accumulation, etc.

What do many people do to treat these ailments that don’t want to to use pharmaceuticals?  They take more magnesium.  This isn’t necessarily a bad thing.  But if you want to magnify magnesium, there’s one physiological process that may have the most impact on how your body utilizes this key nutrient.

I'm exhausted, but I just can't seem to relax. Maybe it's more of an insulin problem than adrenals. Click To Tweet

Insulin Sensitivity:

Many are confused on the concept of insulin sensitivity.  Let me try and put it in context.

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Functional Medicine Tagged With: Dr. Kurt Perkins DC CCWP, Functional Medicine Colorado Springs, Insulin, Magnesium

January 18, 2016 By Dr. Kurt, DC

Biomarkers That Mean Something

Bio Markers Your Doctor Likes Because It Can Be Managed.

Many of my patients are calling up as it’s the new year and asking to have a biometric screening at the request of their employer’s insurance company and ‘corporate wellness program.’  The request often includes: Total Cholesterol, HDL, LDL, Triglycerides, Blood Glucose, BMI Composition, and Blood Pressure.  I’m happy to satisfy the request to help them satisfy requirements for work.

The problem is that those biometric markers are poor at best at predicting quality and quantity of life.  For decades insurance companies and traditional healthcare practices have put cholesterol and its counterparts as king of the priority list to ‘manage.’  The result is that as a nation, we’re at historically low cholesterol levels, yet record high heart disease rates.  We’re not that Heart Smart so before trying to lower cholesterol, read this first.

Blood pressure is no different.  It is something good to check but they look it as a cause of heart disease when it’s more an effect of a deficient and toxic lifestyle, physically, chemically, emotionally, socially, and spiritually.

Functional Medicine Colorado SpringsWhat’s wrong with tracking blood glucose?  Nothing, except that it’s too variable. There are too many factors that can influence that value, even when you do fast.  BMI composition is ok, but just because someone is skinny, it doesn’t make them healthy.  They can still be inflamed and ignorant.  Or if someone is ultra muscular and short, they may show as obese on the measurement.

In traditional healthcare, these values are great because there are drugs and surgeries to control them all.  If you haven’t figured it out by now, Big Pharma, Big Insurance, and Healthcare Policy makers have a symbiotic relationship.  You would think that insurance companies would want to limit non-effective healthcare practices but they get a kickback when the system is used.  I don’t understand how those economics work.

And because insurers generally earn a profit by charging a premium on claims they pay, they don’t necessarily have an incentive to crack down on excess spending.

The government insurance program is legally barred from considering a treatment’s benefits when deciding how much to pay doctors for doing a certain procedure. – Wall Street Journal

With that said, I’m happy to satisfy your employer’s request for the standard biometric screening.  Just remember, there are better biomarkers that will quantify your quality and quantity of health more appropriately.

Bio Markers You Should Track That Your Doctor Often Doesn’t

If I were an insurance company assessing your risk for disease and how much I would have to pay out for your usage of the system, I would make sure these 5 factors were tested.

Homocysteine:

I have already written on homocysteine.  Homocysteine has been called the single best indicator of your longevity and quality of life.  It’s not just an indicator of many disease processes like cardio-vascular disease, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Auto-Immune disease, diabetes, Hypothyroid, Osteoporosis, liver disease, hormone imbalance, autism, and anemia, but a massive contributor to disease.

One of the biggest reasons it contributes to virtually any chronic illness is that elevations can indicate a defect in a process called methylation.  Methylation is one of the top biochemical reactions in the body.  The roles of methylation aid in protecting DNA translation, hormonal control, neurotransmitter regulation, liver detoxification, and nutrient activation.

I like to see a range between 4-8 umol/L.  Your traditional lab value don’t usually flag it until over 15.   Elevations for too long contribute to the diseases I mentioned above.  Ranges too low have some implications and indications of malnourishment or malabsorption problems (especially in the sulfur containing amino acids), glutathione deficiency (a massively powerful antioxidant that you produce), hyperthyroidism, medication use (antibiotics, birth control, and tamoxifen to name a few), liver disease, and kidney disease.

CRP (C-reactive Protein):

CRP is a protein produced in the liver in response to inflammatory cytokine production in the body.  Cytokines are messengers used by the immune system to trigger for help.  Inflammation is a helper.  The problem is that when we make poor decisions, we are constantly pulling the fire alarm.  If it’s good to have 3 fire trucks to put out a fire, let’s have a lot more…just in case. Inflammation likes to party.

CRP is very sensitive but not very specific as to what the cause of inflammation.  With that said, it doesn’t necessarily rise in all causes of inflammation.  It is synthesized from stimulation of antigen-immune complexes (autoimmune conditions), bacteria, fungi, injury, and tissue damage such as heart attacks and stroke.

Persistent, mild elevations of CRP have been clearly linked to cardio vascular disease risk.  Since vascular compromise to tissues in heart and brain lead to chronic low levels of inflammation, CRP is a great tool to detect and monitor health improvement.  Idealistically, there is no safe limit in the body.  If it’s elevated, then there is something happening.  Realistically, in today’s toxic and deficient world, I expect to see it elevated in lab work.  If 0 mg/L is ideal, I will give it some buffer until 0.5 mg/L.  Then I want to investigate deeper.

Vitamin D:

Although most often categorized as a vitamin, vitamin D is actually a hormone. Vitamins cannot be produced by the cells in your body and thus must be obtained via consumption from dietary sources. Vitamin D, however, can be made by the cells in your body in a process that involves the conversion of cholesterol derivatives into vitamin D using sunlight.  See, cholesterol is not a bad thing.

Vitamin D3 is produced in the skin of humans (and other vertebrates) after exposure to ultraviolet B light (uVB). Vitamin D3 only becomes biologically active after two conversions; one in the liver (primarily) to 25-hydroxyvitamin D(25 OHD), the circulating form of vitamin D, and then in the kidney to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (1,25 (OH)2D), the biologically active hormone form which is also known as calcitriol. Calcitriol or biologically active vitamin D is often considered the most potent steroid hormone in human physiology.

Many cells have Vitamin D receptors and many genes are influenced by the action of Vitamin D.  In fact, it has been estimated that the human genome has over 2700 binding sites for Vitamin D.  This is why being deficient in Vitamin D can lead to increased risk of many diseases, and, conversely why being sufficient in Vitamin D is essential for wellness and prevention.

Typical lab ranges will have an ocean of normal between 30-100 ng/ml.  The Vitamin D council suggests a level of 50 ng/ml.

Something to think about is that if you are deficient, it doesn’t always mean that you have a lack of consumption or a lack of sun exposure.  Those Vitamin D compounds have to be chemically altered through the liver and kidneys to become active.  Deficiencies could mean that you have to look deeper at a dysfunctional liver or kidney.  The fastest way to trash your liver and kidneys is creating an internal environment of insulin resistance.

Hemoglobin A1C (HA1C or A1C):

A1C is known as Glycosolated Hemoglobin.  Glycosolation is when a sugar attaches to another molecule.  In this case, a sugar has attached to the protein hemoglobin from your red blood cells. The more sugar is available, the more it will bind to proteins.  This test serves as a couple red flags.

The first is that your red blood cells live approximately 120 days.  This test serves as a good indication of your blood sugar levels over the past 120 days.  Your body will store excess sugar in a number of places before it requires the storage capacity of proteins like hemoglobin.  If your body is having a hard time storing in other areas, it means you either have a massive influx of sugar or you have used up the usually storage areas.

The other red flag is that once glycosylation happens, it’s irreversible.  It’s like toasting bread.  Once you create toast, you can’t reverse it back to normal bread.  In the body this becomes damaging in itself.  Since it’s not reversible, the body has to attack it to remove the body of it.  This will spark the immune system, which will spark the need for inflammatory factors like CRP and homocysteine and the system is on 5 alarm fire.

“Normal” lab ranges will be 4.8 – 5.6% as healthy, 5.7 – 6.4% as pre-diabetic, and >6.4% as diabetic.  I get nervous over 5.4%.  The labels mean nothing to me.  In fact, obtaining a label of pre-diabetic or diabetic is often times worse for 2 reasons.  The first, is that you are then referred to a Registered Dietician that has an education sponsored by the people that make the food pyramid.  What nutritional science went into composing the plate or pyramid?  Not much, just the lobby money from the grain and dairy association.  What are the US’s two largest food subsidiary?  The grain and dairy industries.

Now you’re getting nutritional advice (low fat foods, no-low calorie foods, or artificially sweetened foods) that will make your blood sugar and insulin response worse.  All those no-low calorie foods are made of carbs or chemicals.  All those low fat foods like dairy have a high insulin response.  The artificially sweetened stuff?  Your body has no idea what that is.

The second reason you may be worse off is that your drug of choice is insulin.  You already have an insulin problem, your pancreas is pumping out as much as possible so your cells will listen.  The solution is to give you more?  Insulin acts as both a growth and a mitogenic hormone.  You get bigger and cells divide more rapidly.  You just got fatter and set yourself up for cancer.

If you’re in the low ranges, under 4.7%, you may have other issues going on like: hypoglycemia (low blood sugars), adrenal insufficiency (Cortisol’s main action is to regulate blood sugar levels); anemia (if anemic, hemoglobin A levels can be low in addition to the red blood cell life span shorter and not having enough opportunity for glycosylation to occur); antioxidant insufficiency (if glutathione is deficient, red blood cell life span is shortened, creating less hemoglobin A to be glycosylated, giving low false values).

Fasting Insulin:

If you can control insulin, you can control lifespan and quality of life.  There isn’t an illness that doesn’t have roots in poor insulin regulation.  Anything from obesity, diabetes, heart disease, Alzheimer’s, autism, degenerative disc disease, chronic pain, PCOS, breast cancer, restless leg syndrome, chronic fatigue, osteoporosis, fatty liver disease, thyroid disorders, high cholesterol, and hypertension.

Why would you want a fasting insulin if you already have good levels of A1C and glucose?  It’s because your pancreas may be working overtime to make sure those other values (A1C and Glucose) are fine.  Your pancreas can only keep up for so long before burnout.  A fasting insulin gives context to how hard your body is working to maintain your sugar load.

Some labs report that “you’re all good” when your levels are lower than 25 mIU/L.  Waiting until your fasting insulin is 25 before taking action is like waiting until you’re 84 years old to start saving for retirement.  You need to start praying for miracles.  Healthy decision making is putting yourself in a position where you don’t need the miracle.

Other labs report 8 mIU/L is at the high range.  In the book Grain Brain by Dr. David Perlmutter, being able to top out at 3 mIU/L is ideal but a decent range is 2 – 5.  Remember, you don’t want it too low or that means you have burned out your pancreas or have an auto-immune condition that doesn’t allow your pancreas to produce enough insulin.

The bigger question is, will your doctor order these for you?  I have no idea.  It’s your health, don’t settle for the standard of care panel that does little but shift you into being a life long customer for Lipitor.  If you want to know your CRP, Homocysteine, A1C, Vitamin D, and Fasting Insulin and ways to optimize those values to optimize your health expression, you know how to find me.

Filed Under: Functional Medicine, Lab Values Tagged With: CRP, Dr. Kurt Perkins, Functional Medicine Colorado Springs, homocysteine, Insulin, Vitamin D

May 19, 2015 By Dr. Kurt, DC

Incredible Insulin

Pure and simple, the better you are at regulating insulin, the better life you will live.  I’m not talking about destroying your body to the point where you have to check your blood sugar 3x/day and regulate the spikes with an extra injection of insulin.  Even if you’re a type 1 diabetic with an insulin pump, your choices can have a dramatic effect on the amount and frequency of usage.

If I’m speaking at an event and the topic of insulin arises, which it most likely will, people are quick to blurt out, ‘it regulates sugar.’  Yes, you are correct but this just scratches the surface to how insulin will impact your life, for better or worse, in sickness and in health.

Weightloss Rollercoaster

Yes, it is true that insulin reacts to elevations in blood sugar. As blood sugar levels rise, this is a signal to your nervous system that you have more energy than is needed at this point in time.  You can either drastically increase your energy demands by sprinting and doing box jumps or you can rely on insulin to store it for later.

Your body will first store it in the liver and muscles in the form of glycogen.  If you added up all the stored energy in your liver and muscles, it may last you 24 hours.  This is why exercise alone, though fantastic for brain development and nervous system regulation, often fails as a weight loss strategy for many people.  Someone is looking to burn off that spare tire.  Unless you plan on exercising non-stop for 24 hours, you may not get past the stored energy in your liver and muscles to touch the stuff around your midsection.

Female Athlete Is Performing Box Jumps At Gym

What kills your 6 pack dreams even more is that you reward yourself for all that hard work you just accomplished.  You know better than to eat garbage.  Instead you go for the ‘healthy’ low fat, low calorie goods.  In reality, you just ate a 1/2 cup of sugar, which gets redeposited back into your liver and muscles.  Since you didn’t use ALL your stored liver and muscle glycogen during exercise and just consumed more sugar than you burned off, you added another layer of insulation for the winter.

The stored energy that targets the butt, gut, and thighs isn’t glycogen, it’s stored in the form triglycerides.  You’ve seen these on your lab work.  Because it’s fat, I’m sure your well intentioned cardiologist told you to eat a diet high in complex carbohydrates and low fat.  “If we need to eliminate fat, than we have to lower our fat intake.”  The only thing that cardiologist did was keep himself in business with advice that resembles assisted suicide.  Since ‘diet and exercise’ didn’t work for you, then you have no hope other than taking drugs.  Sound familiar?

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Filed Under: Hormones Tagged With: 5 Pillars of Illness, Chiropractor Colorado Springs, Dr. Kurt DC, HbA1C, Insulin, kalus method, Paleo

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