Podcast

Why Should You Care About Your Metabolic Health? Empowering a Deep Understanding of Our Bodies with Dr. Casey Means

Episode introduction

In this episode of the Everyday Wellness podcast, Dr. Casey Means shares her insights with host Cynthia Thurlow, a nurse practitioner. Dr. Means breaks down the issues with the current American diet, the latest science behind trends like fasting, and why metabolism is unique to both your gender and your individual physical characteristics.

Key Takeaways

A wake-up call to chronic inflammation

In her work as a surgeon, Dr. Means’ eyes were opened to the fact that there was a link between chronic inflammation, chronic illness, and metabolism.

I was about five years into my head and neck surgery training when I really had this wake-up call, where I kind of looked at everything that was going on around me and noticed these themes. One of the big themes was that so many of the patients were dealing with chronic inflammation. A lot of the conditions I was treating were based in that. It was sinusitis, thyroiditis, laryngitis and all these itises. That’s the suffix in medicine that means inflammation. I kind of thought, “Huh, inflammation is the immune system being triggered because it senses a threat, so what is that threat? Why is everyone’s body in threat mode?” Then stepping back and thinking about a lot of the other chronic illnesses that we’re facing in the country.

The problem with processed food

Today, the average American eats 150x the sugar humans ate just 200 years ago.

We are exposed to just such foreign things in our modern life that we kind of take for granted because they seem normal. Basically the majority of our calories as Americans are coming from factory-made, ultra-processed, ultra-refined foods, different chemical structure of food than our body was ever meant to see or witness and in quantities that are just astronomical. The average American is eating 152 pounds of sugar, refined sugar, per year. 200 years ago, we probably were eating less than a pound, so it’s like 150 times what our body probably could process. Our cells are totally overloaded, and that is a threat signal. That can make the body rear up and get inflamed.

Metabolism is a centralizing force

Metabolism works to keep our bodies in balance. But when our diet sends our system into overdrive, this can’t happen properly.

What happens with metabolism and metabolic dysfunction and why it’s one of these centralizing forces that leads to inflammation is because when you overload the body’s cells and the energy production mechanism in the cells like the mitochondria that make them dysfunctional. For instance, extremely high blood sugar over and over, you’re taxing the cell with doing much more than it was supposed to do. You’re driving many more cellular reactions through these processes…The body was really meant to be in homeostasis and to turn on and off these really nuanced systems when needed, and we’ve just gone way past that to where we’ve thrown everything off and a lot of these systems are now just on total, total overdrive.

Let go of your 1990s education

The science of today disproves much of what we were taught about food 20-30 years ago.

We lived through the ’90s, where there was this dogma of eat six small meals a day to boost your metabolism. Eat breakfast to boost your metabolism for the day. A lot of what we’re learning now in the research is that it’s honestly kind of the opposite of that, that actually training our bodies to function well in a fasted state is a key part of maintaining metabolic flexibility which is really what we want for health. This really comes down to what’s going on hormonally when we eat.

Fasting glucose lags behind insulin

Don’t wait for your glucose levels to skyrocket before making the right dietary choices.

There was a study in the Lancet that was done a couple of years ago that showed that that process of insulin elevating may happen 10-15 years before you start seeing that fasting glucose go up. Really interesting stuff happening there just as a result of us really eating far too frequently, stimulating that insulin way too much and eating foods that are causing such high glucose spikes in the blood stream that our bodies are having to release these huge amounts of insulin. Continuing that logic, things that we can do to keep our blood sugar more stable at a lower and healthy level can take a little bit of the pressure off the insulin constantly being secreted and elevated and help ourselves perk up again to the insulin signal, improve insulin sensitivity. That’s really this concept behind a lot of what people are talking about in the low-carb community, the keto community, the continuous glucose monitoring community.

Fasting provides a needed reset

There are benefits to fasting, such as giving your body a break and allowing you to tap into your stored reserves.

One of the beautiful things about fasting, which is the ante over nutrition, is that it gives our body just a complete break from this process. There’s step one, which is figuring out how foods affect your blood sugar and keeping that more controlled, keeping that more stable. Then there’s step two, which is actually just not eating for longer periods of time, that’s fasting. That gives your pancreas a break. It gives your cells a break from doing all this process and basically forces you to move through your stored energy in the body because you’re not getting it from your mouth during those times of fasting.

Fat burning = metabolic flexibility

Your body is working properly when you are burning fat reserves, not just storing them.

The average American never gets to that phase of where they need to actually burn the fat because we’re eating so frequently. We’ve always got something on board. The beauty of fasting and keeping glucose lower by how we eat is that we will start actually using what we have stored and getting into fat burning. That’s great. That’s metabolic flexibility. That’s our bodies learning how to burn fat again. I think most Americans are rarely ever getting there, and we’re seeing this show up in our overweight and obesity statistics, 72% of the country, overweight or obese. That is a function of high insulin levels and not burning fat.

Beware of dairy protein

Dairy is not unhealthy, but it can stimulate insulin compared to other sources of healthy protein.

Dairy protein seems to have the highest insulinogenic effect compared to other forms of protein like plant-based protein. This is thought to be just the nature of the proteins in dairy. Casein is one of them, but they actually found that these can really stimulate insulin three to five times more than other forms of protein. Sometimes to consider when you’re eating a lot of dairy is that it may actually be stimulating that insulin which is again what we don’t want if people are having trouble with weight loss or something like that, just something to think about.

Woman and metabolism

There is a complex relationship between women and metabolic health. Infertility and other issues can often be linked to diet and insulin.

I think there’s huge opportunities for women to really take control of their health by understanding their glucose levels, by understanding their insulin levels and understanding where they are in terms of metabolism, which I say that women need to take control because the system is not sharing this information. I have so many OB/GYN friends, who I’ve talked to who really tell me that this is not taught in their programs, that we should be treating people with infertility with dietary education about carbohydrates and insulin. It’s just not a part of the standard really paradigm. We are often reaching for our prescription pads.

Metabolism is individual

The reason technology like Levels is so valuable is because at the end of the day, every person’s body and metabolism are unique.

Each person probably has their own glycemic index for each food. A piece of white bread for you is going to look different in your bloodstream than it does for me. When they dialed into why that was, it was multifactorial. I think they found 137 things that they studied that were in some way impacting blood sugar, but a really big one was microbiome composition, what bacteria make up your gut, which is very much dictated by what we eat, but the way the bacteria are processing the food seems to have a big impact on how glucose is released from the food and is absorbed into the body. The bottom line is it’s complex and it’s individual.

Episode Transcript

Narrator: This is Everyday Wellness, a podcast dedicated to helping you achieve your health and wellness goals and provide practical strategies that you can use in your real life. Now, here is your host, Nurse Practitioner Cynthia Thurlow.

Cynthia Thurlow: Today, I’m delighted and so excited to interview Dr. Casey Means. She’s a Stanford-trained physician, chief medical officer and co-founder of metabolic health company, Levels, and associate editor of the International Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention and a lecturer at Stanford University. Her mission is to maximize human potential and reverse the epidemic of preventable chronic disease by empowering individuals with tools that can help facilitate deep understanding of our bodies and inform personalized and sustainable dietary and lifestyle choices. She’s been featured in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, etc. Welcome Dr. Means. It’s a pleasure to connect with you.

Casey Means: Thank you so much for having me. Thrilled to be here.

Cynthia Thurlow: Yeah. I know your story, but I think your story is really impactful and I know that it will resonate with the listeners. So you’re trained as a surgeon. You’re an ears, nose and throat doctor, but how did you go from practicing as an ENT to kind of evolving into this biomedicine, biohacking, entrepreneurial physician? How did that process and journey start? Because you’re still obviously quite youthful so you must have gotten this together in terms of the direction and trajectory of your career fairly quickly. I would imagine the amount of chronic disease and inflammation that you were seeing probably shifted your perspectives quite significantly.

Casey Means: Definitely. It did start young for me, this interest in diet and lifestyle and nutrition and how this impacts our foundational health. Even as an undergrad, when I was at Stanford, I was really focused on neutrogenomics. It was an exciting time there with the Human Genome Project happening and 23andMe was coming out online. I loved learning about the impact between nutritional compounds and gene expression and realizing that genes are not our destiny. Genes are a blueprint and really the interaction between the external world and those genes is what produces health or produces disease.

Casey Means: That was a really empowering thing to learn at 18 years old in my early biology classes because it gives us hope that the choices that we’re making every single day, what we put in our mouths, how much sleep we’re getting, how much movement we’re getting, the stress, how we’re managing our stress. These things actually change the expression of our genes. That kind of carried with me throughout my subsequent training.

Casey Means: Then flash forward to I’m a ears, nose and throat surgery resident. I would say to to really answer your question, how did this shift happen, it was really based on observations and patterns I was seeing in my training. I was about five years into my head and neck surgery training when I really had this wake-up call, where I kind of looked at everything that was going on around me and noticed these themes. One of the big themes was that so many of the patients were dealing with chronic inflammation. A lot of the conditions I was treating were based in that. It was sinusitis, thyroiditis, laryngitis and all these itises. That’s the suffix in medicine that means inflammation.

Casey Means: I kind of thought, “Huh, inflammation is the immune system being triggered because it senses a threat, so what is that threat? Why is everyone’s body in threat mode?” Then stepping back and thinking about a lot of the other chronic illnesses that we’re facing in the country. ENT is kind of a niche part of the body. It’s a very narrow part of the body, but obviously we’re one whole integrated system. You start seeing all the papers coming out of like, “Okay, obesity is an inflammatory condition and Alzheimer’s is an inflammatory condition and heart disease is an inflammatory condition.”

Casey Means: These things shared this link and it gets you to step back and say, “What is the body reacting to? What is it fighting and why is it leading to all these different things?” When you get into even the deeper cellular biology of it, a lot of these different conditions like depression, Alzheimer’s, osteoarthritis, diabetes, obesity. They share some of the exact same even inflammatory mediators like TNF alpha and Interleukin six and these cellular mediators, so is it possible that there’s something beneath all this that is leading to many seemingly disparate conditions that actually have a similar root.

Casey Means: When I started digging more into that, it lead me down this journey of what I would call functional medicine or really it’s systems and network biology is what I would say is the more technical term for it, which is this idea that these aren’t actually isolated silos as we conventionally think of them. They are part of a system. When you actually study the physiology of these, you realize that there’s a web between them. We’re not treating the connections of that web right now in our current medical system. We’re treating the downstream symptoms. That’s why when we treat these things, all the treatments are different for each disease.

Casey Means: It might be non-steroidal anti inflammatories for arthritis and an antidepressant for depression and a statin for heart disease and insulin for diabetes. None of those get at that underlying core physiology that may be leading to all of them. As you can imagine, that would be a much more efficient place to focus our clinical energy, the links between disease, not just reacting to the seemingly different symptoms. Really conventional practice of medicine has not caught up to our research understanding of systems and network biology. We’re still in this pattern recognition system.

Casey Means: Putting that all together and looking at the Venn diagram between all of these different conditions, what I was treating in the operating room and with tons of steroids and antibiotics and surgery for ENT conditions and then looking at all the other chronic morbidity happening in the country with 88% of American adults having metabolic dysfunction, 72% of the country being overweight or obese, 128 million Americans having prediabetes or type two diabetes. These massive, massive amounts of people with these chronic illnesses. The center of that Venn diagram was really that chronic inflammation.

Casey Means: Then the next step was, “Well, what’s causing that?” A huge driver of that we know is diet and lifestyle. We are exposed to just such foreign things in our modern life that we kind of take for granted because they seem normal, the fact that we’re eating… Just basically the majority of our calories as American are coming from factory-made, ultra-processed, ultra-refined foods, different chemical structure of food than our body was ever meant to see or witness and in quantities that are just astronomical. The average American is eating 152 pounds of sugar, refined sugar, per year. 200 years ago, we probably were eating less than a pound, so it’s like 150 times what our body probably could process.

Casey Means: Our cells are totally overloaded, and that is a threat signal. That can make the body rear up and get inflamed. We know that high blood sugar can lead to inflammation, many other things as well. Chronic low-grade stress from all the beeping and the honking and the text messages and the emails and all this stuff. This low-grade just insidious chronic stress, that’s a threat to the body constantly. The immune system’s going to see that as a threat and react to it.

Casey Means: Our chronic sleep deprivation, the fact that we’re just not getting enough sleep on average. On average, an hour less than we were several decades ago, that’s a threat signal to the body. “Why is this happening? Why aren’t you sleeping?” All these things can trigger the immune system and create that low-grade chronic inflammation that we’re seeing show up in so many chronic illnesses and these ENT conditions.

Casey Means: The one I really got very passionate about was the blood sugar issue and realizing how much metabolic dysfunction and our metabolism, how we produce energy from food, how that process, which is core and fundamental to every cell working in our body. Every cell needs a properly functioning metabolism to work, and the way that refined sugars, refined grains are totally co opting that process and creating these just wide ranging effects in the body, problems, different symptoms is just something I became really passionate about because I don’t think people are thinking about their metabolic health every day.

Casey Means: We think about wellness and whatnot, but mental health was not a term I was hearing constantly and yet metabolic dysfunction is the core epidemic plaguing Americans today. It became really something for me that I was very personally passionate about, getting that message out there and then empowering people on how to improve their metabolic health. One of the easiest things we can do to improve our metabolic health is manage our blood sugar, understand how our diets and our lifestyles are affecting our blood sugar and keep it in a stable and healthy range so that we can really free up those metabolic processes to do what they’re supposed to do and effectively producing energy for ourselves.

Casey Means: Long story short, it was this journey of really being deep in my field five years in in a training program. In your training, you’re told what to do. You’re not really there to think for yourself, but kind of stepping back and saying, “Huh, this doesn’t really fully make sense. I’m not really understanding what’s causing these diseases. I sure know how to treat them, but I’m not really sure what’s causing them.” Then looking at the bigger picture of what’s happening in America right now and the fact that we have $4 trillion healthcare costs that’s going up each year and people aren’t getting better because we’re dealing with chronic illnesses and we’re not treating them in a root cause approach.

Casey Means: Putting all together and saying, “This isn’t working. I’m in the hospital 80 hours a week doing my craft. Patients aren’t getting better. What am I doing? Americans are getting sicker every year. I’m a doctor. We’ve got to fix this.” Then having a reckoning and thinking about how to approach that at scale. That’s what led me to starting my company, Levels, which is focused on metabolic health. I’m really trying to scream that message from the rooftops.

Cynthia Thurlow: I’m so very grateful that your career has been on that trajectory. For myself, I feel like it took a little bit longer, but obviously in cardiology, much to your point about ears, nose and throat, it’s like chronic inflammation every…. I kept saying to myself, “Why… We’re using this evidence-based medicine. People are on anti platelets. They’re on anti inflammatories. They’re on statins. They’re on blood pressure. They’re on diabetes medication.”

Cynthia Thurlow: My patient population… because the NP service in our cardiology group saw all the hospital follow ups. It was like a revolving door of the same things. People were coming in and it was like over and over and over again. I got to a tipping point. I remember saying to my husband. My kids were still little so I didn’t really have the bandwidth. I remember I was looking at doctoral programs and I tried that out and hated it. I did a wellness coaching program and that was kind of, “Meh.”

Cynthia Thurlow: Then I really dove into the nutrition piece and I finally like… The light bulb went on. I was like, “It all starts with food, but do we get an opportunity to really talk to our patients?” None of us are trained in the nutrition piece or if we are, we’re given a very cursory kind of explanation. For me, on so many levels, the whole metabolic health piece really started with the foods that we’re using in our bodies and I have been someone that’s been really outspoken, for example, about seed oils.

Cynthia Thurlow: I love Ben Bikman’s work, as I know you’re very familiar with his work as well. I think the recent statistic that he talked about was that the number one oil/fat that’s being utilized in the United States is soybean oil because we consume so much processed foods and these oxidized seed oils and what they’re doing for driving inflammation and how this is hugely impactful on our health.

Cynthia Thurlow: For the benefit of the listeners… because obviously acute inflammation is good. You break a bone, you stub your toe, etc. There is benefit to acute inflammation, but it’s the chronic inflammation that you’re referring to that can be so negative for our health. Can we talk a little bit about what chronic inflammation is, what it actually does at the cellular level and why this is so detrimental, why we need to be more focused and concerned about… You mentioned the lifestyle piece, but what this actually does in our body that we need to know so that we can make changes to impact our health beneficially.

Casey Means: Yeah, absolutely. I think you drew the really important distinction, which is this difference between acute inflammation and chronic inflammation. Again, inflammation is just the immune system in the body getting revved up. Our immune cells are some of our blood cells. They fight infection and they help mobilize this coordinate response in the body to address some sort of threat, attack it, fight it, neutralize it and then coordinate the repair that happens from that damage.

Casey Means: It’s just an amazing system, this little army, but then also these little construction workers that help fix stuff. It’s amazing. When you have a cut or you get a big injury and your body is exposed to bacteria or what not, you want that to just immediately go into action. This goes into action within seconds. Send those immune cells to that part of the body to assess the threat, clean up the threat, etc, start the healing process. That’s amazing.

Casey Means: Then you want that once it’s healed to stop. You want that huge mobilization to stop. What happens with chronic inflammation is that somehow the body’s continuing to see a threat. It sees a cut all the time, so the body’s immune system is always in that assess monitor, vigilance and repair mode. What that does is you end up creating a lot of imbalance in the body, where this system that was really just meant for just this quick fix is now on all the time. That can really gum up our systems. In the blood vessels, that can lead to thickening of the arterial walls amongst so many other issues.

Casey Means: You really just want that whole system to settle down in between these acute little threats, but again, like we were talking about in the beginning, we now have these unnatural new triggers in our life that are perceived by the body as threat. It’s not allowing that system to settle down. What happens with metabolism and metabolic dysfunction in part is that a lot… and why it’s one of these centralizing forces that leads to inflammation is because when you overload the body’s cells and the energy production mechanism in the cells like the mitochondria that make them dysfunctional.

Casey Means: For instance, extremely high blood sugar over and over, you’re taxing the cell with doing much more than it was supposed to do. You’re driving many more cellular reactions through these processes. One thing that can do in the cell is generate what’s called mitochondrial oxidative stress, which is essentially too many chemical reactions happening in the energy-producing part of the cell and you leak these reactive molecules called reactive oxygen species. Normally, the body is able to clean those up. You have antioxidant systems in the body that neutralize those pro-oxidant molecules that are produced from all these chemical reactions, but when you have dysfunction in the mitochondria from all of these excess substrates that the body has to process, you get too many of those reactive molecules.

Casey Means: That can be a trigger of inflammation, so that’s one of the ways that there’s this link between essentially overburdening our energy-producing systems of the cell and how that then leads to a threat signal. The body was really meant to be in homeostasis and to turn on and off these really nuanced systems when needed, and we’ve just gone way past that to where we’ve thrown everything off and a lot of these systems are now just on total, total overdrive.

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Cynthia Thurlow: This is Cynthia Thurlow. Are you ready to conquer intermittent fasting. My intermittent fasting master class, affectionately known as IF45, is a 45-day online program designed to teach you everything you need to adapt intermittent fasting as a permanent lifestyle. This is an education-based, science backed program, taught by a leading intermittent fasting expert, which would be me. This intermittent fasting master class delivers the why, what, how and when once and for all so that you do not have to spend hours scouring the internet only to find contradictory advice from under-qualified influencers.

Cynthia Thurlow: If you’re ready to invest, you want to head to www.cynthiathurlow.com/if45. That’s www.cynthiathurlow.com/if45. I’d love to have you join us in our next class. I think it’s this kind of chronic overfed state, where we have conditioned our patients to believe that they’re just to have mini meals and snacks and boost our metabolism, keep our metabolism up. In fact, ironically, we’re in a new city and my children both needed to have physicals prior to starting middle and high school. They were fasting when they went in for these appointments, and the pediatrician, who was wonderful says to them, “We’re going to give you some… You’re due for a meningitis vaccine, but I’m concerned that you haven’t eaten anything this morning so I’m going to give you some Gatorade, and my kids eyes light up because they know exactly how I feel about Gatorade.”

Cynthia Thurlow: I was like, “They’re fine. They’re both mature young men. They’re not going to pass out from the shot.” He was fairly insistent that they needed to be… I said, “If you want to give them water, I’m all for that, but they don’t need Gatorade in order to boost their metabolism in order to give them a vaccine.” I find it interesting that a lot of the rhetoric and the dogma that we as clinicians pass along to our patients is that we need meals and we need them frequently. We need to keep our blood sugar stable. I think both of us would argue that one of the worst things we can do is meal frequency.

Cynthia Thurlow: Let’s kind of unpack what happens in our bodies when we’re overfed, when our blood sugar is elevated over time, when we keep insulin high because all of these things are really important for people to understand. Then we’ll weave in the CGM, which of course I think continuous glucose monitors are probably one of the most important devices metabolically healthy individuals can utilize to empower them to make better choices.

Casey Means: Yeah, absolutely, that story about the pediatrician is…

Cynthia Thurlow: It was like, “Do you know what I’m known for? I’m really cringing right now.”

Casey Means: I hope in about 10 years we will not be living in a world where doctors are every recommending high-fructose corn syrup and refined sugar and yellow number five and red number three and all these things in their offices, but we’re working towards it. The chronic over-fed, chronic, over-nutrition state is really what we’re dealing with right now. Like you said, we lived through the ’90s, where there was this dogma of eat six small meals a day to boost your metabolism. Eat breakfast to boost your metabolism for the day.

Casey Means: A lot of what we’re learning now in the research is that it’s honestly kind of the opposite of that, that actually training our bodies to function well in a fasted state is a key part of maintaining metabolic flexibility which is really what we want for health. This really comes down to what’s going on hormonally when we eat. When we do eat, which for the average American, for most people, includes carbohydrates, those carbohydrates are broken down and turned into sugar in the blood and that raises our blood glucose.

Casey Means: As that blood glucose travels around, it stimulates the pancreas to produce insulin, which is the hormone that helps us take that glucose out of the blood stream, put it into the cells to either use it, have the mitochondria process it, turn it into energy or store it if there’s excess, which there often is. That process when there’s a little bit of carbohydrates around and you bring them into the cell, process it or store it, that’s fine, but in our modern world, since we’re eating such an excess of refined carbohydrates and refined sugar, what happens is the body has to produce so much insulin to drive all that sugar into the cells.

Casey Means: It’s repeatedly stimulating the pancreas to produce that insulin and so you start getting this over-stimulatory environment and the cells actually, as you know, but just to go over it just briefly for the listeners, who probably have heard about this a lot, but that excess insulin that’s circulating because of constantly being stimulated by these snacks and these high-carb foods that we’re eating, the cells become numb to that insulin. They say, “We can’t take any more glucose in. There’s too much. Stop.” So they become resistant.

Casey Means: Then the body says, “Well, we got to get this glucose in. We got to bring it back down to normal, and it over produces that insulin. You get this process, this spectrum of insulin resistance, where now you are producing more insulin at baseline trying to drive that glucose into the cells. Over time, the cells become so insulin resistant, they can’t get it in. You can’t overcompensate and the glucose in the blood just starts rising at baseline.

Casey Means: That’s when you start seeing… You go to the doctor and they say, “Hey your fasting insulin is going up,” or your average glucose is going up based up on your hemoglobin A1c.” When that happens, when your glucose is starting to go up on your fasting glucose test or your A1c is going up, you’re far down that road of this insulin resistant process because your body’s been compensating probably for years, trying to drive that glucose in and starting to really see instability.

Casey Means: What’s interesting is that many doctors are now checking fasting insulin levels as a way to pick up a lot earlier early insulin resistance because as you can imagine, that is going to be showing up and compensating long before. There are some studies… There was a study in the Lancet that was done a couple of years ago that showed that that process of insulin elevating may happen 10 to 15 years before you start seeing that fasting glucose go up.

Casey Means: Really interesting stuff happening there just as a result of us really eating far too frequently, stimulating that insulin way too much and eating foods that are causing such high glucose spikes in the blood stream that our bodies are having to release these huge amounts of insulin. Continuing that logic, things that we can do to keep our blood sugar more stable at a lower and healthy level can take a little bit of the pressure off the insulin constantly being secreted and elevated and help ourselves perk up again to the insulin signal, improve insulin sensitivity.

Casey Means: That’s really this concept behind a lot of what people are talking about in the low-carb community, the keto community, the continuous glucose monitoring community, “How do we learn about how food is affecting our blood sugar levels so that we can have some control over this process?” These days, the vast majority of American calories come from ultra-processed foods. It just seems normal to eat that stuff and we don’t really have a sense of what it’s actually doing in our bodies and how we can potentially do better, but a lot of this is in our control.

Casey Means: One of the beautiful things about fasting, which is the anti over nutrition is that it gives our body just a complete break from this process. There’s step one, which is figuring out how foods affect your blood sugar and keeping that more controlled, keeping that more stable. Then there’s step two, which is actually just not eating for longer periods of time, that’s fasting. That gives your pancreas a break. It gives your cells a break from doing all this process and basically forces you to move through your stored energy in the body because you’re not getting it from your mouth during those times of fasting.

Casey Means: We have several hours of stored glucose in the body that’s stored in our liver that we can work through if we’re not eating food while we’re fasting. Then we have weeks worth of fat that we can break down and turn into energy if we’re not eating, not that we shouldn’t eat for weeks, but people have done it and they survived. We’ve got a lot of stored energy. The issue is that we’re always going to use the glucose first. The first thing we’re going to use is the glucose in our blood stream. Then we’re going to go to the glucose stored in our liver and then we’re going to fat.

Casey Means: The average American never gets to that phase of where they need to actually burn the fat because we’re eating so frequently. We’ve always got something on board. The beauty of fasting and keeping glucose lower by how we eat is that we will start actually using what we have stored and getting into fat burning. That’s great. That’s metabolic flexibility. That’s our bodies learning how to burn fat again. I think most Americans are rarely ever getting there, and we’re seeing this show up in our overweight and obesity statistics, 72% of the country, overweight or obese. That is a function of high insulin levels and not burning fat.

Casey Means: A key piece here is that one of insulin’s functions is to help get glucose out of the blood stream, into the cells. Another function it has is to block fat burning. It’s a signal to the body, “We’ve got glucose onboard. We don’t need to burn fat.” If we keep that signal high, we’re going to struggle with burning fat, which means we’re going to struggle with weight loss, so metabolic flexibility is what we want and we can get there by understanding what’s happening with our blood sugar and keeping those levels more stable through how we eat and how we fast and then of course other things as well like exercise, which of course is also going to move through some of our stored glucose and help with our insulin sensitivity and several other diet and lifestyle factors, but really food comes first. That’s I think where a lot of us need to focus to get on top of some of these metabolic pathways and get them back on track.

Cynthia Thurlow: I think it’s really interesting that for many people… It’s not a byproduct of anything other than some people just don’t know. I always loved Jason Fung’s analogy about the way to break into the freezer and to get into fat storage, you have to work through what’s in the refrigerator first, but I think for so many people, they’re familiar with the fasting blood sugar and they’re familiar with the hemoglobin A1c, which is that 90-day snapshot.

Cynthia Thurlow: The fasting insulin piece is one that I feel like when people start utilizing that and asking for it… It’s not an unusual test. I remind people that it’s a very standard test. I had a woman who was desperate to lose weight, was trying to intermittent fast. Her blood sugars were borderline like higher 90s, not ideally where I wanted them to see, same thing with her hemoglobin A1c. When we drew her fasting insulin, it was 23. For anyone that’s listening, we want low, two to five or six depending on who you’re speaking to. I said, “This is why you’re not losing weight. This explains why you have these chronic cravings.” She had some degree of leptin resistance which is another satiety hormone.

Cynthia Thurlow: I think it’s really important if you’re listening and you feel like you’re stuck, you need to be asking your doctor or your healthcare professional for some of these tests to dig a little bit deeper because it can be incredibly invaluable. Now, when we’re talking about monitoring our blood sugar, I think it’s also helpful for people to understand that different macronutrients, so protein, fat and carbs have different net impact on our blood sugar. Obviously, carb has the largest impact on our blood sugar, but in terms of protein… This is sometimes where the nuance, where people are like, “Oh, animal-based protein is bad or plant-based protein is bad because it’s going to spike your blood sugar.”

Cynthia Thurlow: I’m like, “No, no, no, no, there’s all sorts of nuances that we want to look at. We know fat has the most potentially negligible impact on blood sugar fluctuations, but what is your standard when you’re working with people and trying to explain to them the nuances? I know you did a beautiful job talking about blueberries that if I sit down and have a carton of blueberry, this is the net effect on my blood sugar, but if I add these other components, then it blunts some of that insulin and glucose response.

Casey Means: Protein is a really interesting macro for a couple of reasons. One is that it can blunt glucose spikes. It can actually serve to, if you pair it with carbohydrates, decrease the amount of carbohydrates that get into the blood stream and/or just slow down how fast they get in so create more of a gentle rise, not this huge spike that can then trigger a huge spike in insulin. Protein can really be helpful that way, and there’s several studies showing that eating protein with carbohydrates or pre loading a meal with protein beforehand can help reduce the actual glycemic impact of the meal.

Casey Means: Protein’s also interesting though because it can be turned into glucose. The body can actually convert protein into glucose through a process called gluconeogenesis. Excess protein can sometimes look like elevated blood sugar in a mild way, but that’s something to be cognizant of if you are someone who’s eating really high levels of protein. Then the third interesting thing about protein is that it can actually stimulate insulin, even though it’s not a carbohydrate, in high amounts and it actually depends on what type of protein you’re eating.

Casey Means: Dairy protein seems to have the highest insulinogenic effect compared to other forms of protein like plant-based protein. This is thought to be just the nature of the proteins in dairy. Casein is one of them, but they actually found that these can really stimulate insulin three to five times more than other forms of protein. Sometimes to consider when you’re eating a lot of dairy is that it may actually be stimulating that insulin which is again what we don’t want if people are having trouble with weight loss or something like that, just something to think about.

Casey Means: We sometimes will see in our data sets with our Levels members that people will eat something like ice cream and they will have very little glucose response even though there’s quite a bit of sugar in it, and part of that is because ice cream is in a strange way sort of like a balanced macronutrient meal. I wouldn’t recommend it for really any health goals, but it’s got protein, it’s got fat and it’s got carbohydrates, so you’re not just getting this carbohydrate alone load like naked carbohydrates just going straight into the blood stream.

Casey Means: The fat and the protein both can blunt that glucose spike, but another thing to remember with ice cream is that because it’s dairy, it may be very insulinogenic meaning that it’s actually causing your body to produce more insulin than the carbs alone would do normally and therefore artificially make your blood sugar look like it’s lower than it would be otherwise, but at the expense of potentially a high insulin spike. Unfortunately, right now we cannot test for insulin in a real-time way like we can with glucose, but that would be a really interesting thing to look at is what’s happening with the insulin when eating those carbohydrates in the context of dairy.

Casey Means: There’s a lot of nuance to it, but I think the top line things that I think are the takeaway most practical things here are pairing some healthy moderate source of protein with carbohydrates is generally a really good idea. That is going to slow the amount of carbohydrates that are getting into the blood stream and will likely decrease the glycemic impact of that meal. Don’t want to overdo it and also want to be thoughtful about dairy, but big picture, pairing protein with carbs is a good idea.

Cynthia Thurlow: No, and I love that because I come to find… This is really… As women north of 35, north of 40, all of a sudden foods they’ve been able to tolerate are not tolerated as well. For myself, I haven’t had dairy in three years, knowingly had dairy… I’m sure when I go out to dinner at a restaurant, I might get some passive exposure, but for me, dairy was a huge thing. I’d love to talk a little bit about the net impact of sex hormones on blood sugar control because this is something that I found really, really interesting and I think we were talking before we started recording that even though I trained at a big research hospital, I never recall having conversations about how fluctuations in estrogen and progesterone really have this impact on insulin sensitivity or insulin resistance.

Cynthia Thurlow: I think a lot of the listeners would find this particularly of interest. Specifically, not only for people that are still cycling, still getting their menstrual cycle, but also for menopausal women, women who’ve gone more than 12 months without a menstrual cycle because it also applies to them as well.

Casey Means: Yeah, absolutely. There’s fascinating relationships between our sex hormones and glucose and insulin that show up at really every single layer of the woman’s life cycle from cycling and our hormones just during a normal menstrual cycle to if people are dealing with infertility, incredibly strong links between metabolic dysfunction, insulin resistance and polycystic ovarian syndrome synonym, which is the leading cause of infertility in the United States.

Casey Means: Then moving into of course pregnancy and impact of gestational diabetes on American pregnancies. Then you get into perimenopause and menopause. We know there’s a strong link between hot flashes and obesity and diabetes. Then post menopausally, when we see women really unfortunately go off this metabolic cliff, where as estrogen declines, we start to see increasing rates of obesity and diabetes. It’s every single stage. We need to be aware of our insulin, our glucose, our weight and how that’s impacting our sexual function, not to mention the impact of metabolic dysfunction and insulin resistance on libido and on sex drive, which has been shown in both men and women.

Casey Means: Really interesting, and I think there’s huge opportunities for women to really take control of their health by understanding their glucose levels, by understanding their insulin levels and understanding where they are in terms of metabolism, which I say that women need to take control because the system is not sharing this information. I have so many OB/GYN friends, who I’ve talked to who really tell me that this is not taught in their programs, that we should be treating people with infertility with dietary education about carbohydrates and insulin. It’s just not a part of the standard really paradigm. We are often reaching for our prescription pads.

Casey Means: To get into it in a little bit more detail, talking about the cycle, as many of the listeners probably know, there’s two phases of the menstrual cycle. There’s the follicular phase, which is pre ovulation. There’s a luteal phase that post ovulation. The luteal phase is characterized by increased estrogen and progesterone as the body prepares for fertilization and then a drop before menstruation if no fertilization occurs. The follicular phase generally has lower progesterone levels, but an uptick of estrogen at the end of the cycle, towards the end of that part of the cycle.

Casey Means: What we know is that the estrogen to progesterone ratio seems to have a really strong impact on our glucose sensitivity and our insulin sensitivity. Actually, we see people being more insulin sensitive in the follicular stage of the cycle and less insulin sensitive in the luteal phase. This is thought to be because of the ratio between estrogen and progesterone. With estrogen being higher compared to progesterone as a protective pro-insulin sensitivity factor.

Casey Means: You may see if you’re wearing a continuous glucose monitor that blood sugar is actually easier to control and slightly lower during that pre-ovulatory phase and higher in the luteal phase. That’s something to just keep in mind, perfectly natural and normal, but again given the way we’re eating these days, it could be quite pronounced. You could see big glycemic swings. That could make you more moody and not feel as good as in your pre-menstrual part of the cycle. It’s possible, and certainly we don’t know this empirically yet with studies, but it’s possible that really dialing into a balanced glycemically-aware diet in that second half of the cycle could help with how people are feeling as they’re going into their cycles.

Casey Means: That’s one thing to note with our periods and I think time will tell if we can see in bigger populations and studies whether this might be a really positive intervention for PMS type symptoms, but I really would not be surprised if we’d see some improvement in that with a more stabilization of blood sugar during that part of the cycle.

Cynthia Thurlow: I am super excited that I am launching a new supplement called Simply Fiber. It is comprised of two forms of resistant starch, which includes organic green banana flour and organic potato starch. These resistant starches are defined as a type of starch that is not readily accessible to human enzymes in the GI tract. They’re metabolized differently, but they are hugely beneficial. We know that resistant starch can be helpful for those that are on low fiber, low carb or high-fat diets as well as those that have a history of dysbiosis, small intestine permeability like leaky gut, that they have inflammatory bowel disorders, if the have blood sugar disregulation or are wanting to rid their bodies of excess body fat.

Cynthia Thurlow: These two resistant starches together actually help feed the healthy bacteria in the gut and they do it in a really cool way and obviously anything that I’m going to be bringing to market and sharing with my listeners are because they’re things that I’ve been using in my personal and professional life and my clients rave about this product in particular. It’s called Simply Fiber. You can check it out at www.cynthiathurlow.com/supplements. That’s www.cynthiathurlow.com/supplements. Simply Fiber is simply amazing.

Cynthia Thurlow: I am super excited to share one of my new supplements called Simply Energy. It is a medium-chain triglyceride, or MCT oil, featuring 100% pure caprylic acid sourced from coconut oil. We know that this product can help support ketone production often times without the need for carbohydrate restriction, improves cognitive function and mental clarity, can improve cellular energy generation and maintain a healthy weight. MCTs are special fats that the body readily converts into ketones even when someone is not on a ketogenic diet. Ketones are an energy source that most cells and tissues in the body can use, but are especially known for fueling the brain.

Cynthia Thurlow: One of my favorite aspects of intermittent fasting is it helps facilitate a special type of ketone that is absorbed directly across the blood-brain barrier and this product can improve that process. Most importantly, Simply Energy can be added to coffee, tea, shakes or smoothies or it can be incorporated into a homemade salad dressing and other condiment. Check out Simply Energy at www.cynthiathurlow.com/supplements. That’s www.cynthiathurlow.com/supplements. Simply energy is simply amazing.

Cynthia Thurlow: I think there’s this real lack of awareness in terms of the interrelationship between where our insulin is fluctuating, where our blood sugar sensitivity is throughout the menstrual cycle and there’s certainly as you mentioned your OB/GYN friends. I mean, certainly I had zero discussion about this. It wasn’t until I started heading into perimenopause and started becoming much more aware of what I tolerated, what made me feel good, what impact did sleep and stress management and over exercising…

Cynthia Thurlow: Certainly the integration of whether it’s a glucometer or a CGM, which is certainly much easier. I had to laugh. I think you mentioned in another podcast that one of your colleagues… The only way to duplicate the information, the data that you get from a continuous glucose monitor is to prick your finger like 50 to 70 times a day, and I’m not sure anyone listening would find that to be particularly beneficial. Let’s unpack what a continuous glucose monitor is, a little bit about how it works because I find it all utterly fascinating.

Cynthia Thurlow: I was telling my husband I’ve been wearing a CGM intermittently for about eight months. It’s amazing to me to see the net impact in a metabolically healthy person of sleep, stress, nutrition choices, etc. Let’s talk a little bit about what the device actually is doing and how you can see almost in real time what’s going on with your blood sugar which is fascinating.

Casey Means: Yeah, that person that you’re mentioning is my co-founder and the original founder of Levels, Josh Clemente. He really was pricking his finger 50 times a day or so to understand what was going on. He was in this fascinating situation where he was in his late 20s. He’s just the most remarkable guy. He was an early employee… He’s an aerospace engineer, was an early employee at SpaceX. By the time he was in his late 20s was managing a large team of people there designing life-support systems for astronauts and for the ships.

Casey Means: And was really busy, working hard and was also on the side a CrossFit instructor and was jacked and really fit, but he felt like crap. He did not feel good. He’s like, “Okay, I’m in my late 20s. I’m super fit. I’m working hard. I must just be a little tired of work and whatever.” Somehow he figured out something about blood sugar and energy like, “Oh, I’ve heard that if blood sugar fluctuates, it could lead to energy problems.” He bought a glucometer just from the pharmacy and started pricking his finger.

Casey Means: He realized his blood sugar was way too high. It was going into the prediabetic, diabetic range frequently. He was shocked because from his outward appearance, you’d think he was just the picture of health, but he wasn’t. He was basically flirting with prediabetes. He’s like, “Oh my God, I got to get on top of this. I got to figure this out.” He started checking his blood sugar more and trying to understand how food was impacting his blood sugar and realized a lot of these fitness type foods he was eating were causing these huge fluctuations that he just thought were important for fueling and recovery and what not.

Casey Means: Started really digging deep into how foods were affecting him, to do that, to see how a food is actually causing a blood sugar rise, you do have to look at several time points after the meal because your glucose will probably go up maybe 10 minutes after you start eating, which is I think a lot sooner than people would expect because you have to… It’s obviously going from the GI tract into the blood stream, but I’ve seen a handful of grapes my blood sugar in five minutes, start to go up, but it’s amazing how fast it is.

Casey Means: You’ve got to get those early time points, see how steep the slope of that line is like, “How quickly is this going up?” Then you obviously want to capture the peak, how high did it go? That gives you a sense of probably how high your insulin was also going. That spike often parallels in magnitude the insulin spike. Then you want to see how it comes down. Does it come straight down? Is the insulin causing just a very quick return to normal in the blood sugar or is it slowly petering down over two to three hours, which actually has very different implications and says very different things about how our body’s processing that glucose and how the insulin is working.

Casey Means: To do that, you can imagine, you need several time points and with a finger prick that’s very hard. This is what a continuous glucose monitor really solves. As opposed to giving a snapshot of the glucose, it’s giving you a movie of the glucose. It’s actually a wearable device. You stick it on your arm or some people put it on their abdomen. It’s got a tiny little hair-like filament that goes under the skin. That filament is coated with an enzyme that does a little reaction like a little lab test every five minutes or 15 minutes depending on the brand of the continuous glucose monitor is checking your blood sugar and then sending that information to your smartphone.

Casey Means: You end up with this amazing 24-hour graph of what happened every time you ate and also in response to other lifestyle factors like when you exercised or walked after a meal, how did that change how your blood sugar returned to normal? Did it make it faster or when you got poor sleep, did that make your glucose more erratic the next day or if you had a stressful call or a stressful conversation, did that make your blood sugar go up? We know that stress can actually mobilize glucose in the body from the liver.

Casey Means: You can start to put all of this together and learn what is impacting your blood sugar and then of course with that information figure out how to channel that into a diet and lifestyle plan that keeps blood sugar more stable and flat. That’s again what we want because it’s keeping the insulin more stable and and helping us on that journey back to insulin sensitivity and all of the amazing health outcomes that come from being insulin sensitive.

Casey Means: It’s a 24-hour monitor, it’s wearable, it’s painless and it gives you just thousands and thousands of data points so you can really craft that personalized dietary and lifestyle strategy that works for you. One other really interesting piece is people might say, “If I know all this information, I need to keep blood sugar down and I need to exercise and not be stressed and sleep well. Why don’t I just do that? Why do I need to actually monitor it?”

Casey Means: The interesting thing is that it’s different for each person. It’s not like you and I would both eat the exact same meal and have the exact same blood sugar response. It’s actually very individual. There’s been studies on this. There was this amazing study five years ago out of the Weizmann Institute in Israel that was published in the major medical journal, Cell, that was called Personalized Nutrition by Prediction of Glycemic Responses. They looked at 800 non-diabetic, healthy individuals wearing continuous glucose monitors and gave them standardized meals. They all ate the exact same thing, and they saw huge variations in how people responded to those standardized meals, which really changed the conversation around this concept of glycemic index, which is this idea that a specific quantity of food has a specific impact on everyone’s blood sugar level.

Casey Means: It has some inherent quality of how it raises blood sugar. This totally changed that conversation because what it said was actually each person probably has their own glycemic index for each food. A piece of white bread for you is going to look different in your blood stream than it does for me. When they dialed into why that was, it was multifactorial. I think they found 137 things that they studied that were in some way impacting blood sugar, but a really big one was microbiome composition, what bacteria make up your gut, which is very much dictated by what we eat, but the way the bacteria are processing the food seems to have a big impact on how glucose is released from the food and is absorbed into the body.

Casey Means: The bottom line is it’s complex and it’s individual. It’s also multivariate. If you’ve done a high-intensity interval training workout this morning, the way that your body is processing glucose is going to be different than mine if I’ve been sitting on the couch for the last five hours. Our cells are going to actually respond differently. If you’ve had different sleep than I have, it’s going to change our insulin sensitivity. There’s so many other parts as well. Micronutrient status, which rarely gets talked about… We talk about macros all the time, but micronutrients are key as well.

Casey Means: Our vitamin D levels, our selenium levels, our zinc levels, our manganese levels, our magnesium levels. Vitamin C, these things actually all serve as co-factors for the enzymatic processes that allow us to process glucose. Those things are obviously variable between people. That has an impact on how we process food. It’s beautifully complex, but when you’re looking at the data, you really start to realize these interrelationships and the whole purpose of Levels, the company that I’m one of the co-founders of is creating the software layer on top of the continuous glucose data stream to help tease out some of these really individual nuanced things, help people learn about the impact of through our education micronutrients, microbiome, how environmental toxins affect metabolic health, how our exercise, our sleep, our stress, our food, our food pairings are all leading to that read out of our glucose.

Casey Means: That’s what Levels does for people and I just think it’s a really exciting time for personalized nutrition and personalized taking control over these things because this is not a conversation you can really have easily in a 10-minute visit with your practitioner and yet it is the core thing we have to get right if we want to be healthy and have long happy lives. Metabolic healthy and insulin sensitivity is really required for optimal aging ang longevity so we’ve got to get it right. That’s where I think a lot of companies are trying to help move this along.

Cynthia Thurlow: I think the big takeaway is bioindividuality rules. Number two, if you’re listening and you’re trying to figure out like, “How do I figure out the health of my gut microbiome?”, there are companies. I like GI Map is one in particular. Tangentially, I just want to say that depending on the composition of our gut microbiome, we may extract more or less calories from the same food and that’s really important. I always think about that bacteroidetes and firmicutes in particular. There’s a lot of good research in that area. Really knowing what’s going on in your gut microbiome. You touched on vitamin D and all these other co-factors and minerals.

Cynthia Thurlow: For anyone that’s listening, we should all know our fasting insulin level without question. We should all know our vitamin D status because that impacts so many things, insulin sensitivity, immune function, etc. Actually, given the global pandemic, we know people that have done the worst with COVID… In many research studies… are those with the lowest vitamin D levels and coincidentally also low testosterone, but I think for anyone that’s listening and trying to piece all this together, obviously we’re going to put contact information, but I had a couple of questions from listeners.

Cynthia Thurlow: One of these in particular, I am particularly curious about. I’ve been low carb or carb cycling for years. That’s worked very well for me, but I notice any time I have a heavier, even if it’s squash or sweet potato… I’m not talking about junky carbs, but a higher quality carbohydrate. I notice depending on how large the portion, I will see this massive blood sugar response. It’s why I actually kicked plantains out of my diet. I do better with sweet potato and squash, but I know there an be this paradoxical blood sugar response for those who’ve been low carb for a while.

Cynthia Thurlow: I know obviously Ben Bikman’s on your team. Kind of really looking at what actually drives that phenomenon in the body. Is it compensatory? Multiple people had asked me, “I’m just curious. I’ve been low carb for a while. I almost feel like I’m carb intolerant.” I said I wonder if it’s just our bodies get a little bit lazy because they haven’t had to process quite as much as before, even though we’re metabolically healthy.

Casey Means: It’s a great question. It’s one that Ben Bikman talks a bit about, as you said. He’s really just such an amazing expert on low-carb diets as is Dom D’Agostino. I love everything they have to say about this. One thing that Ben Bikman talks about is this concept of reverse metabolic inflexibility, which is a result of essentially long-term adherence to a low-carbohydrate or ketogenic lifestyle. This reverse…

Casey Means: We don’t want metabolic inflexibility generally, which this is this process that we talked about earlier, where if you’re eating carbohydrates constantly, your body just becomes used to only using carbohydrates for fuel. You never give your body that opportunity to deplete the stored glucose and actually move into fat burning. When we don’t use particular cellular pathways, they get rusty in a sense. We need to use them to have the body be efficient at those cellular pathways. That’s why we use a term called metabolic fitness often at Levels because this is not like an on/off switch where you go low carb for one day and all of a sudden, you’re an excellent fat burner.

Casey Means: Actually, these things take time. Over time, your body shifts into these states. Going back to the question, long-term adherence to low-carb ketogenic diets can cause this reverse metabolic inflexibility that Ben Bikman talks about, which is rather than being stuck in glucose burning, our body has shifted to almost being exclusively in fat burning mode and as a result, has low… Both as a cause and effect has low insulin levels. This is healthy. This is the body’s operating perfectly fine with prolonged reliance on fat as the primary metabolic fuel, but that does mean that a load of glucose can take longer to clear.

Casey Means: Your body, if it’s seeing a substantial load of carbohydrates, you can often expect to see a higher than normal glucose rise because you’ve really shifted your function towards being more low insulin, not needing to respond to insulin very frequently, so it takes your body a little bit longer to clear it. It’s kind of interesting and his feeling about this is that it’s perfectly healthy and a fine state to be in, but is kind of a known observed phenomenon that’s seen.

Cynthia Thurlow: It’s really interesting. For listeners, this is where I am in this stage of the game. That was a question that I had and several listeners. One other question because I want to be super respectful of your time, for women that are in perimenopause and menopause, so five to seven years preceding menopause or have not had a menstrual cycle for more than 12 months, the people that continue to have hot flashes throughout this time period… For me, I always had very minimal… I used to call… It was almost like… I never really got hot. I would just have this awareness and it was probably at the tail end of perimenopause, but for women who have profound, debilitating hot flashes, I know there’s a correlation with this and blood sugar instability. What is the research that’s being done?

Cynthia Thurlow: Obviously these are individuals that would really benefit from having a CGM so that they could be monitoring what their blood sugar’s doing while they’re actually experiencing those power surges as they like to call them.

Casey Means: Yeah, absolutely. This is a really interesting area of continued research, but really the big take-home message is that people with insulin resistance, obesity or type two diabetes tend to have worse hot flashes. People with the hot flashes tend to have higher risk of developing type two diabetes. I believe that in some studies the highest percentage of hot flashes per day had a 18% higher risk of developing type two diabetes in the follow-up period. There’s clearly a link here. It’s not fully established why, but it’s likely multifactorial, the way that metabolic dysfunction, obesity and is someone is going to affect other hormones.

Casey Means: Potentially the impact of these hormones on vasomotor system, vasomotor activity. A hot flash is really this vasomotor, meaning our blood vessels are having this activity that’s causing all this blood to go to the skin and cause us to be really hot. There’s some thought that insulin resistance in the brain… because these things don’t happen in one part of the body, they happen everywhere. If we’re insulin resistant, that’s happening all over the place.

Casey Means: Where that’s showing up is where symptoms show up. In the brain insulin resistance can look like so, so many different things. It can look like brain fog. It can look like depression, anxiety. It can look like Alzheimer’s, dementia, chronic pain, fibromyalgia, but it can also potentially look like hot flashes because the brain, if it’s not getting the glucose it needs because of insulin resistance, that can cause this nervous system trigger to cause those vasomotor symptoms of hot flashes. That’s one theory is the way that essentially poor metabolism in the brain is triggering these symptoms.

Casey Means: The question then is what to do about it. There’s no studies that have been done to show that keeping blood sugar more stable can improve hot flashes, but based on what I’ve seen in the literature about these epidemiologic relationships and the proposed actual mechanisms, the way I would probably approach it is to figure out how to really improve my insulin sensitivity as much as I can, get that fasting insulin down before menopause or during, keep blood sugar more stable so you’re not sending your body on these big swings that can trigger those vasomotor episodes and really just try and move more into metabolic flexibility, give the brain the opportunity to burn fat or to use ketones for energy so it’s not totally reliant on glucose swings.

Casey Means: I would love to see those studies done, put people on a ketogenic diet or a low-carb diet with a continuous glucose monitor on and see if you can really modulate severity of symptoms, but it brings up the second point as well, which is really what’s happening to women after menopause with metabolic health. We mentioned this briefly before, but after estrogen declines after menopause, women start to see really increasing rates of obesity and type two diabetes. It’s not just because we’re getting older and this is what happens when you get older, it’s in large part because estrogen is protective from a metabolic standpoint and it promotes insulin sensitivity.

Casey Means: When we lose that unfortunately we’re at a disadvantage with our metabolic health and so that really does mean that we have to be extra vigilant to understand what’s happening with our blood sugar, what’s happening with our insulin and stay on top of it, so we don’t go down this just… get carried with the tide of what’s happening without knowing what’s going on. Certainly encourage people to ask their practitioners for a fasting insulin level, to track their fasting glucose and really strive for it to be in the optimal range. If it’s starting to creep up from… Below 100 for fasting glucose is considered “normal” by our standard criteria, but if you start seeing your fasting glucose going from 78 to 85 to 95, that’s a problem if it’s going up, so really be vigilant about those things.

Casey Means: Obviously we’ve talked a lot about the strategies in this conversation of what to do about it, but menopause is a really important time to be thinking about those things because we unfortunately get kind of this kick of estrogen going down and that has a big impact on our ability to be optimally insulin sensitive.

Cynthia Thurlow: It’s interesting because the standard Western medicine mindset is, “Okay, a woman’s gone through menopause or is transitioning. We’ll put her on hormones first. I think we would both argue that before the hormone piece, you’ve got to dial in on the sleep quality. You have to manage stress. You’ve got to get your macros better managed. You’ve got to get your blood sugar controlled. If you do all those things first, if you need to add in hormones… I think a lot of people… I think there’s less fear mongering. When I was finishing up grad school around 2000, that was at the time really at the peak of when I started seeing… There was reflexively a lot of data suggesting that solo estrogen was none beneficial for women.

Cynthia Thurlow: I saw a lot of patients being taken off their estrogen, which was almost cruel. You need estrogen. If you have a uterus, you have to have estradiol and progesterone together like peanut butter and jelly minus the bread, but the point being really being strategic about how critically important that may be. The health of our brains in our 40s and 50s are really reflected in our 60s and 70s. Really important that we’re managing and mitigating our blood sugar way before we go through those middle changes because it can just get exacerbated.

Cynthia Thurlow: Now, I want to be super respectful of your time. You just returned from vacation, but I would love for listeners to be able to connect with you. How can they sign up? I know that there’s a long waiting list for your CGM, but your blog is amazing. Your website is a fantastic resource and obviously they should follow you on social media. What’s the easiest way to connect with you, get more connection about Levels CGM, connect with you on social media?

Casey Means: Personally, I’m @DrCaseysKitchen on Instagram, so DrCaseysKitchen. Levels is @Levels on Instagram and Twitter. I love following the Levels account because a lot of our members are posting what they’re learning with their continuous glucose monitors and the insights that they’re having. It sparks lots of interesting ideas for what you can learn and how to experiment with it when you have the CGM. That’s @Levels. Our website is levelshealth.com. As you said, there is a wait list for joining our beta program right now, but sign up on the homepage there and you’ll get access to our newsletter and to the wait list. Ideally, later this year, we’ll be able to open up the program to many more people.

Casey Means: Then levelshealth.com/blog is what you were mentioning for our Levels blog, which is just this amazing source of information about metabolic health and thinking about metabolic health through this really forward thinking lens and how we can all really improve with or without a continuous glucose monitor. Lots of great articles from just preeminent thought leaders in this space, Ben Bikman, Dom D’Agostino, Dr. David Perlmutter, many others. Definitely recommend that as well, but looking forward to connecting anyone on those platforms.

Cynthia Thurlow: Thank you again for your time.

Casey Means: Thank you.

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