目录

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功能医学 Jess Peatross

**现代医学的不足与功能医学的视角**

@Dr. Jess Peatross : 我曾在传统医疗体系工作多年,但逐渐发现其局限性。传统医学更关注症状治疗和药物使用,忽视了整体健康和根本原因。我亲眼目睹了患者服用大量药物却未能真正康复的现象,这让我对传统医疗体系产生了深深的失望。最终,我选择离开传统医疗体系,转向功能医学,寻求更有效的治疗方法,帮助患者从根本上解决健康问题。我坚信,真正的医生应该致力于帮助患者减少药物依赖,而不是增加药物依赖。 我开始关注地形理论,它强调身体是一个智能的系统,即使生病也是一种自我修复的过程。疾病的发生并非仅仅是病原体的入侵,而是身体内部环境失衡的结果。我们需要关注身体的整体状况,保持内部环境的清洁,才能有效预防和治疗疾病。 在临床实践中,我发现许多疾病与患者的情绪和心理状态密切相关。例如,淋巴系统淤积会导致情绪困扰和器官功能紊乱。疤痕组织会阻碍身体能量的流动,导致疾病。而根管治疗、汞合金填充物和乳房植入物等都是常见的健康隐患,它们会持续释放毒素,导致身体持续的炎症反应。 功能医学应该关注根本原因,而不是仅仅关注症状治疗。我们需要帮助患者改善生活方式,例如保证充足的睡眠、积极的社交、阳光照射、健康饮食、规律运动和正确的呼吸方式,从而增强身体的自我修复能力。 @Dr. Chris Motley : 作为一名同样关注整体健康的医生,我非常认同Jess博士的观点。传统医疗体系确实存在一些问题,例如过度依赖药物治疗,忽视了患者的整体健康状况和心理状态。许多疾病的发生并非偶然,而是多种因素共同作用的结果。我们需要从根本上解决问题,而不是仅仅关注症状治疗。 Jess博士提到的地形理论,以及她对淋巴系统、疤痕、根管治疗和乳房植入物等问题的分析,都为我们提供了新的视角。这些问题往往被忽视,但它们却可能对患者的健康造成严重的影响。 功能医学的兴起为我们提供了一种新的治疗方法,它更注重个体化治疗,更关注患者的整体健康状况。然而,功能医学领域也存在一些问题,例如过度依赖实验室检查和补充剂,以及行业内的竞争和商业化。我们需要警惕这些问题,避免功能医学走向另一个极端。 总而言之,我们需要一个更全面的医疗体系,它既要关注疾病的治疗,也要关注患者的整体健康和心理状态。我们需要更多像Jess博士这样的医生,他们能够以更开放、更全面的视角看待疾病,并为患者提供更有效的治疗方案。

385: From Root Canals to Breast Implant Issues: What Modern Medicine Misses | Dr. Jess Peatross

Ancient Health Podcast⋅2d ago

03:44 我曾经是一名传统的西医,但在医院工作期间,我逐渐对传统医疗体系感到失望,因为它更关注药物治疗而非整体健康。

06:23 我意识到自己无法独自改变这个体系,所以我选择离开,去寻找不同的方法帮助人们。

06:52 我很高兴自己做出了离开的决定,因为现在我觉得自己真正地实现了人生目标,能够真正地帮助他人。

07:33 现有的医疗体系是反向的,它通过让人们长期依赖药物来获利,而不是激励人们保持健康。

07:54 现有的医疗体系存在缺陷,因为它只关注症状治疗,而不去寻找根本原因。

10:13 根据地形理论,身体是一个智能的系统,即使生病也是一种自我修复的过程,关键在于保持身体内部环境的清洁。

10:38 理解地形理论的关键在于认识到人体是一个智能的系统,它总是试图治愈自己。

11:23 地形理论认为,细菌和真菌等微生物并非疾病的根本原因,而是身体试图清除毒素和废物的过程中的参与者。

12:26 肠道菌群失调(如SIBO和SIFO)并非问题本身,而是身体内存在毒素和压力等问题的表现。

12:56 念珠菌感染等疾病往往与个人的情绪和心理状态有关。

13:32 身体的过敏反应(如组胺释放)可能源于个人的思维模式和压力状态。

14:17 淋巴系统是身体的情感缓冲器,它会受到思维模式的影响。

15:02 淋巴系统是身体的情感缓冲器,其功能会受到毒素和金属等物质的影响。

15:31 淋巴系统淤积会导致情绪困扰和器官功能紊乱。

16:34 疤痕组织会阻碍身体能量的流动,导致疾病。

17:21 可以通过注射疗法来疏通疤痕组织,改善能量流动。

20:00 根管治疗、汞合金填充物和乳房植入物是常见的健康隐患。

20:27 根管治疗会留下坏死组织,导致慢性感染。

20:42 根管治疗通常只能维持8到10年,因为它是一种人为的修复方法,无法与人体自然结构完美结合。

21:19 根管治疗会减少牙齿的血供,为细菌感染创造温床。

22:28 根管感染会消耗身体能量,并可能影响相关器官的功能。

22:45 牙齿与身体器官之间存在经络联系,拔除某些牙齿可能会导致相关器官出现问题。

25:43 如果怀疑牙齿存在感染,应进行锥形束计算机断层扫描 (CBCT) 检查。

26:08 建议找生物牙医或整体牙医来解读CBCT扫描结果,因为传统牙医可能不会关注根管感染问题。

28:08 改善淋巴引流最简单的方法是练习呼吸技巧。

28:53 许多人不知道如何正确呼吸,这会影响淋巴系统的功能。

29:23 正确的呼吸技巧可以促进淋巴引流和器官排毒。

30:06 瑜伽等运动可以帮助人们更好地呼吸,从而改善淋巴系统的功能。

31:34 乳房植入物可能会导致乳房植入物疾病 (BII)。

32:02 乳房植入物中的铂合金和硅胶等物质可能会导致自身免疫疾病和其他健康问题。

32:23 乳房植入物中含有各种重金属和化学物质,这些物质可能会对人体造成损害。

32:58 乳房植入物破裂或感染可能难以通过影像学检查发现。

34:48 乳房植入物会持续释放毒素,导致身体持续的炎症反应。

35:50 功能医学领域虽然发展迅速,但也存在一些问题,例如过度依赖实验室检查和补充剂,以及行业内的竞争和商业化。

38:20 保持健康的关键在于良好的生活习惯,例如充足的睡眠、积极的社交、阳光照射、健康饮食、规律运动和正确的呼吸方式。

**Transcript**

00:00

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00:24

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00:45

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01:15

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01:45

Welcome to the Ancient Health Podcast, where East meets West in the world of medicine. I'm Dr. Chris Motley, and here we explore how modern Western science and traditional Eastern wisdom come together to unlock the body's full healing potential. Each week, we'll dive into powerful tools, techniques, and approaches from both sides of the world to help you optimize your health and live with vitality. Let's bridge the gap between ancient practices and cutting-edge medicine. Let's get started. 语法解析

02:14

Hello everyone. Welcome to the Ancient Health Podcast. I'm your host, Dr. Chris Motley, and today I have one of my special friends, Dr. Jess Pietros. She is here at A4M with me, and I am so thankful that we got to see and connect with each other. And you guys have seen her on Instagram. You guys have seen her talk about from all things inflammation to drainage to toxicities. 语法解析

02:38

She's a medical doctor that has a different perspective on health, which is refreshing to me. And I'm just going to say, we're going to brag a little bit more about you. And we're going to, guys, we're going to talk. 语法解析

02:48

We just discussed like terrain theory. We're going to talk about interferences in your health that you may and I may overlook. And she's the perfect person to talk about. So thank you so much. Thanks for having me, Dr. Motley. I appreciate it. We have our cups of coffee. We do. We're ready to rock and roll. So first things first. I know that individuals. Oh, yes. Cheers. Cheers. Here we go. Mmm. 语法解析

03:11

All right, guys. We're ready. Esteban's back there. He's running the show. So we're really glad that we're here today to give you guys some information about these subjects. But one of the things I like to do, I know people know who you are, but also there's some people that may not. So can you give us a bit of a background to let them know? Yeah, sure. So I started out 语法解析

03:32

as a traditionally trained conventional medical doctor and I was board certified in internal medicine and for almost seven years I worked in the hospital as a hospitalist. So, you know, 语法解析

◉ 我曾经是一名传统的西医,但在医院工作期间,我逐渐对传统医疗体系感到失望,因为它更关注药物治疗而非整体健康。

03:44

putting central lines down people, putting on the ventilator, emitting the ICU or the floor. And really, I didn't know something about everything. And then I just started to kind of see cracks in the system. I just started to see, you know, I'm just charging these people on 40 different medications. That's not really health. I'm, you know, they've got all these crazy different foods in the hospital that aren't conducive with health. You know, they have Pepsi and Coke and like Cheetos and… 语法解析

04:12

you know, like white bread that's like, I don't know, whatever brand. And so I would go down there. I would just be so disappointed. I would like kind of gripe at the cafeteria staff like they could do anything about it. But, you know, they kind of, they labeled me a disruptive physician. For saying that? Yeah, because I would say something 语法解析

04:30

every day. Like, you know, it came to the point where I was so irritated and they were probably so irritated with me because I was right when they had started electronic medical records. And so I wrote in the chart that this patient who came in the ER had been on a proton pump inhibitor like Prevacid or something for acid reflux for almost eight, nine years. And the package insert says six months to a year. 语法解析

04:51

And so I wrote in the electronic medical record, this is a liability. This patient has been on this medicine this long. And the primary care doctor is an outpatient doctor called the lead hospitalist to gripe about me and said, she's the liability when I wrote that in the chart about him because he prescribed the medication. What? 语法解析

05:08

So I could kind of see, you know, it's almost like doctors protecting doctors and their bad behavior a little bit. And I could see this is just how the system is. It's broken. Just deal with it was what I was told. And I wasn't going to do that. I wasn't just going to deal with it. So I ended up quitting. Sure. 语法解析

05:25

Pretty much then and there. Yeah. And I jumped really fast. Like, I don't know if I would have done it had I known that I was going to make a fourth of what I made in the hospital. You jumped. You just stopped. You quit. Yeah. Was it that decision, though, that you were like, I'm fed… I mean, of course, I'm fed up. And something just clicked in your head and you're like, God put some kind of thought in your head and said, do you belong here? I think there was a slight inkling that perhaps they didn't know what I was… They didn't see my perspective. They didn't see the… 语法解析

05:55

the inauthenticity in the system. And maybe if I pointed it out, they would be like, oh yeah, we could do something about this. But I was wrong. I came to the point when I quit that I was like, you know what? I can't change this system alone. I have to go out and do something different because I can't fix this broken system. And that's what kind of, when I quit, that was my realization. Wow. But did you find, because the people out there are thankful that there's doctors out there that would look at somebody who was on that for years 语法解析

◉ 我意识到自己无法独自改变这个体系,所以我选择离开,去寻找不同的方法帮助人们。

06:23

that long and say, “Hey, they're actually looking out for me.” Did you feel a certain amount of peace when it came over, when you left? I know there's gonna be fear, but it's like, 'cause you're making a fourth of the money. - Yeah. - But now looking back, like what's your, you know, your thoughts are like, “So glad I did that.” - Yeah, I'm so glad I did it because now I feel like I'm actually serving my purpose and I'm actually able to help people genuinely. And I think a real doctor's merit should be how much medicine can you get people off of? You know, we should be incentivized that way. 语法解析

◉ 我很高兴自己做出了离开的决定,因为现在我觉得自己真正地实现了人生目标,能够真正地帮助他人。

06:52

Wow. I mean, that's a great incentive, right? Yeah. Because like it's the old Chinese medicine, what's the word? I can't even think of it. It's adage. That's the word. They say that the doctor is only paid whenever. They're not paid when you're healthy. I'm sorry. 语法解析

07:12

They're not paid when you're sick, but they're paid when you're healthy. And I was like, oh, I was like, you know what? That's pretty good. I mean, I've thought about that. It's really it's like our whole system is kind of backwards to the Chinese medicine world. You know, it is, you know, because the ultimate goal is how do you make money on people who are healthy? And it's really hard to do that. People who can think straight, their body straight, their mind, their emotions are straight. It's really hard to pull the wool over those people's eyes and make money off of them. 语法解析

◉ 现有的医疗体系是反向的,它通过让人们长期依赖药物来获利,而不是激励人们保持健康。

07:33

Yes, right. And unethically. But if they're sick and their mind is hindered and their body is hindered or handicapped, it's easier to keep them in the system making money. So the system is completely backwards. Yes. Completely backwards. It labels everyone. Here's a medication that fixes you for life. And then we never look at any other perspectives about what root cause might be. 语法解析

◉ 现有的医疗体系存在缺陷,因为它只关注症状治疗,而不去寻找根本原因。

07:54

And then we incentivize them to keep people on these medicines forever. That's how the system makes money. It's like so broken. It's crazy because even like I have family members that have been different medications and I do my work and thankfully I found some doctors that would look at some of the reports. But I think it's really alarming though. It's like, for instance, my mom had been in the hospital for some heart stuff and Western medicine has its place with emergency. I totally get that. But then after a while, did you see that… 语法解析

08:22

She would have so many medications given by one physician and another one would add more on to it. And then when I was in the hospital, you know, people out there probably understand. They're like, man, I've got it. I've got to make sure my family member is okay. Yeah. I know a bit about some things. But at the end of it, though, like they were sending like the pharmacy different like orders from so many different doctors. And by the time there's like 11 or 12 medications. It's called Heart Wars. Yeah. 语法解析

08:48

Really? So the famous one that is always brought up is the nephrologist, the kidney doc versus the cardiologist, the heart doc. Because the heart doc is only concerned about the heart. And once that, but then he kind of compromises the kidneys. And the nephrologist come in and said, no, the kidneys are most important. You can't do this medication. So it's kind of almost like they fight like passive aggressively in the chart. What? Yeah, it happens all the time. 语法解析

09:09

So they actually can get upset with each other. Oh, yeah. Because they don't understand that the body works as a whole synergistically. They look at these separate organ systems and say, which one's the most important? My hierarchy is higher than yours. And it's almost like it's the ego. It's just… 语法解析

09:26

It's like a whole battle of egos and individuals having chart wars. That would be a great movie. Chart wars? I'm sorry. Fighting doctors? Like, stuff like Star Wars characters, except they're doing charts. Okay, everybody's going to be like, that's ridiculous. But it'd be a good idea. Anyway, so there is this fight. So when you were coming out of it, you started going into functional medicine. Yes. Like, when you're talking about terrain theory. So not trying to take too big of a shift, guys, but… 语法解析

09:53

I can't explain terrain theory like Jess can. Oh, I'm sure you can. But I'm saying terrain theory in the sense that when you look at the body, I mean, you're really saying in one aspect, can the body be healthy enough to do what it's doing? But can you give us an explanation about terrain theory? Yeah, and I'm actually going to back up before I give you a definition because I want to point out a very – 语法解析

◉ 根据地形理论,身体是一个智能的系统,即使生病也是一种自我修复的过程,关键在于保持身体内部环境的清洁。

10:13

not so clear perspective, possibly for the general population about this, is that what is the key to seeing this theory is understanding the human body. And so if you're someone that thinks that your genes are a life sentence, or that you're broken, or that you can't heal, or the body is not your friend, it isn't intelligent, always trying to heal you, there's something wrong all the time, it's sinful, it's bad, you're not going to see the train theory as well. 语法解析

◉ 理解地形理论的关键在于认识到人体是一个智能的系统,它总是试图治愈自己。

10:38

But you have to understand that the body is an intelligent vessel. And even when you get sick, even when you get cancer, it's like, what is it trying to heal you from? You know, even fibroids and different types of adenomas are the body walling something off from the bloodstream because it's so intelligent to protect you. So like you have to look at this perspective that the body is perfect and beautiful the way it is. And even if you get sick, it's really a healing process. And so with that being said, 语法解析

11:03

Now with terrain theory, terrain theory is the belief that the germ is not that much and the milieu is everything. Or the body, the terrain and the vessel of the body, if that is clean, you won't have recurrent infections. And I'll use examples to drive the point home. For example, if you have a dirty wound, you might have maggots in it. 语法解析

◉ 地形理论认为,细菌和真菌等微生物并非疾病的根本原因,而是身体试图清除毒素和废物的过程中的参与者。

11:23

They clean it up, right? Oh, yeah. When there's an oil spill in the ocean, the red tide has a higher propensity to occur there to clean up the oil spill. Actually, there are trees that when they're ill will get termites. And you can see the termites and they're actually there because they're healing a process with a tree that's ill. 语法解析

11:43

So all these things that we think are bad, infections and all this stuff, what is it there for? We know bacteria digest organic waste. Yeah. We know that mold, that's what it does. It digests decaying things. 语法解析

11:58

And so if you're putrefying your food in your gut, you're gonna have a problem with maybe SIFO, small intestinal fungal overgrowth. You're gonna have bacteria like SIBO there. You might have issues with the current infections, recurrent infections, because it's the trauma and the toxins and the adrenaline in your nervous system and dysregulation that keeps those there. They feed off that stuff. They're digesting it for you. They're not the problem. - They're actually symbiotically trying to help you with the condition. 语法解析

◉ 肠道菌群失调(如SIBO和SIFO)并非问题本身,而是身体内存在毒素和压力等问题的表现。

12:26

So when we see SIFO or SIBO, anything, our mindsets need to turn a bit and say, why is this overgrowth occurring? Because there could be some toxin like the red tie. It's a beautiful example in the body and it's overgrowing because our body's allowing it. There's an innate intelligence. Correct. Exactly. And there's an emotional aspect to it too, which I know you love. I love, but I don't hear this. So, you know, candida, for example, so what's eating you up inside? Yes. Literally, literally and figuratively. 语法解析

◉ 念珠菌感染等疾病往往与个人的情绪和心理状态有关。

12:56

This is so good. And so, you know, it's, there's always an emotional aspect to these things, right? And so, you know, a lot of people that I see that are sick, and I'm sure you do too, have histamine problems, itchy, puffy, bloated, brain fog, you know, rashes, and mast cell activation syndrome. And this is a lot of times from their thoughts, which set off certain neurotransmitters that like a 语法解析

13:18

that hard wire neurons that fire together, hard wire together. Right? It's like a truck stuck in the mud. And so then everything they see is a foreign intruder that the mast cells release histamine, release histamine to protect you until I can calm them down and their thoughts. 语法解析

◉ 身体的过敏反应(如组胺释放)可能源于个人的思维模式和压力状态。

13:32

It doesn't matter if I kill anything in their body. Wow. It doesn't matter because the thoughts are going to release that noxious substance every single time and keep them ill. And so it goes back to their thoughts and their trauma and that they're stuck in sympathetic overdrive or functional freeze. Oh, okay. Functional freeze. So they're in overload. 语法解析

13:51

They literally, if they're itchy, bloating, and they're in a hyper-fired state, and you're like, well, you're in a fire state in your mind. And so your body creates that relationship. It's protecting you. Yeah. Look at what you're thinking. That's exactly. So it's actually responding to how you think. They were saying, oh, this is beautiful. Because there's one aspect they would say in the Chinese medicine world, and you've seen it in Ayurvedic, where they'll say, well, part of your lymph system 语法解析

◉ 淋巴系统是身体的情感缓冲器,它会受到思维模式的影响。

14:17

will respond to how you think. Like you'll go, if you say like, I'm not going to take care of myself, your body will listen to you. That's right. And it will do what you ask it to. That's right. I mean, I'm so glad you brought up the lymphatic system because that's a deep emotional system. We will talk about spirit science and emotions mixed with science. I mean, that's the emotional shock absorber. Really? Mm-hmm. 语法解析

14:37

when something happens in your life. Oh, got to keep going. Yeah, this is great. Yeah. I mean, you know, it's where cellular memory is. You know, we're at 70% water and water is structured. And if there are toxins or metals involved, it can't structure properly. So the harmonics of the body are off. And that's all in a piezoelectric system and lymphatic system and fascial systems. And it's a shock absorber. Yes, an emotional shock absorber for stress and trauma because it contracts. 语法解析

◉ 淋巴系统是身体的情感缓冲器,其功能会受到毒素和金属等物质的影响。

15:02

and it flexes with your body and it contracts down and it's smooshing all the neurons. They can't fire properly. Your autonomic nervous system isn't working as a whole properly, which is what happens with scars. So, oh, okay. I just threw so much at you. Sorry. This is great. Okay. So if the emotional resiliency of your body is dependent or it's represented by your lymph. So if your lymph system is congested and you have slow lymph and you're puffy and 语法解析

◉ 淋巴系统淤积会导致情绪困扰和器官功能紊乱。

15:31

You would say you have some emotions. Yes. You are getting hit by emotions. You have some trapped, stored emotions in your cellular memory. Oh, my word. And I can almost guarantee they're waking up at certain times at night where the organs are overworking. And you know they're asking you when you say it to them on your visits. They're like, how do you know that? How do you know that? Yeah. Because the resiliency part of it is… 语法解析

15:56

in our culture and you're making sure that you don't miss that part of, I guess it's triad or body, mind, spirit. But what about when you said scarring? Because now you're making me think like there's the lymph pump, like you're going through 语法解析

16:13

guarding. But then scarring, it doesn't mean I'm emotionally scarred. I'm scarred or like, what is it? Well, not necessarily. I love that analogy. But I want to hear what you say about scars. I love that. So keeping your terrain clean as you can, scars can be something that is an interference in the body, meaning that it's a place the body is constantly going to provide energy because there's something stuck there. 语法解析

◉ 疤痕组织会阻碍身体能量的流动,导致疾病。

16:34

or stagnated. And stagnation breeds disease. So in a scar, you've got to think the scar tissue is hardened. It's gotten thicker to protect you because there's been an injury. It's thick. It's almost like a keloid. I have a little keloid up here. I have one right here. So you can feel it's hardened up to protect you. Well, what happens if you have a big scar in the midline where a lot of the meridians run, where all the energy and the chakras are? You need things flowing properly here. So a scar is like 语法解析

17:04

kind of congested fascia. It's all, you know, stretched improperly. It's contracted improperly. The nerves can't fire in there properly. Yes. So if you inject the scar along the plane and you can inject homeopathics or a local anesthetic like lidocaine or procaine. Procaine. 语法解析

◉ 可以通过注射疗法来疏通疤痕组织,改善能量流动。

17:21

Procaine, yeah. And it acts as a vortex to drive the homeopathics in. And they're like liquid acupuncture talking to the body. Wow. And so what that does is it opens the fascia and gives it another chance to relay properly, right? It's almost like sauna does for heat shock proteins in our brain. It lets them unfold and refold properly again. And same with the fascia. 语法解析

17:40

So it's like it's sort of like bumping it so it like pops back open again like a spring that's been crushed. Hey, you're stuck. You're not firing properly. Come on. So, you know, once you do that a few times, like you could actually peel a C-section scar off a woman and it's gone after you inject it maybe 20 times. 语法解析

17:54

Are you serious? Yeah. And then their anxiety will be gone because it's a midline scar that infects their energy meridians. Oh, my word. Okay. Okay, everybody, seriously. I had… It's blowing my mind because I had a stomach surgery in 2017. Had a ruptured ulcer. Oh, my gosh. That's bad. That's scary. It hurt. It was the worst. I never had a baby, so I'm not trying to make light of that. But I was like, if this is what childbirth would feel like, I mean, it hurt desperately. 语法解析

18:19

It was like somebody stabbed me. Well, the scar that was there, one of my friends in Austin, I didn't know much about procaine. I heard about it. And I want to tell you guys something. I mean, when you say peel off… 语法解析

18:31

I got it injected. He goes, let me put some procaine in there. And I remember, because I still have problems with it. I still have to do fascial release and I have to do lymph therapy and laser on my scar. Laser helps a lot too. I do a lot of laser, especially when I'm driving. I put the laser on my stomach. Literally, I'm not kidding. People are like, if they see me in the car with a laser on my stomach. I remember when I had it, I still feel so good. And I got the procaine. And I'm telling you, you're right. I got out of that. I was like, 语法解析

18:58

It felt like I was actually connected to my body. Yes. Like I felt like emotional. I was like, I would say like, why am I welling up? And he goes, oh, it happens all the time. And I was like, well, that's easy. All the time. All the time? All the time. People will feel their hands and their feet numb and tingly. They'll start sweating. It's literally a release. Yeah. And you finally release. So when you find these things that like you have the limp, you have the scars, you're finding these techniques to release them. 语法解析

19:28

you're on the cutting edge because you know you're at these conferences and you're learning all about these things 语法解析

19:33

When you find that there are those interferences, we have scars, we have lymph. What are some of the other ones like, you know, people out there that have and they're like, dude, I have that. The most common thing, unfortunately, are root canals and mercury amalgams. And I hate to be the bearer of bad news with this. Breast implants are another one. Yeah, there's a lot of stuff on that. Yeah, there's a lot. There's a lot of stuff in there that you don't want in your body for sure. But, you know, root canals really it's… 语法解析

◉ 根管治疗、汞合金填充物和乳房植入物是常见的健康隐患。

20:00

They all have metal. Metal always oxidizes. They are the only place we leave in necrotic tissue and think it's okay. And it's not because they leave the periodontal ligament, which tells the body, the immune system not to go there, that it's taken care of, but they cut it off from the blood supply. So there's thousands of tiny porous channels within the tooth where bacteria can hide. Parasites can hide. Lime can hide. Fungus can hide. They found mold in tooth sockets before. They found lime and myelitis. 语法解析

◉ 根管治疗会留下坏死组织,导致慢性感染。

20:27

microscopy from root canals and teeth. - What? - Yeah, so unfortunately root canals are a place where the body constantly has to go 'cause there's a pocket of simmering infection there over time. They usually only last eight to 10 years. They're a man-made procedure. 语法解析

◉ 根管治疗通常只能维持8到10年,因为它是一种人为的修复方法,无法与人体自然结构完美结合。

20:42

in a not man-made body, I don't know what to say. And same for breast implants, eight to 10 years. And there are certain genotypes that are a little more predisposed, that aren't as strong or resilient. But ultimately these people, these canaries in the coal mine are showing us it's not good for any of us. - Wow, and so when you get like, 语法解析

21:02

We're not being doomsday. We're just saying that when you have the root canal with that ligament, so you have a reduced amount of blood supply that can get there. You have tiny holes in your tooth where infections can fester. Correct. Is that why… I had a friend of mine go get her upper gum. She got a cone beam scan and… 语法解析

◉ 根管治疗会减少牙齿的血供,为细菌感染创造温床。

21:19

They literally pulled out like these pockets, these little like green looking balls. Yes. So she had a cavitation, which is that pocket of infection. And it can actually eat away at the bone. And it's not… There's no symptoms. You'll just be systemic symptoms, not symptoms right here at the mouth. That's why it's confusing. So it goes… It's all over the body and it is… Yeah. It can cause autoimmunity or infertility depending on what meridian on the tooth it's on, what organ it attaches to. Oh, I was about to keep going. Yeah. So, you know, with… 语法解析

21:46

I've seen cavitation surgery before. They just took a little hole and what happens when that pocket of simmering infection comes out, it looks like oil just coming out, oil, oily stuff coming out of the gums. It's wild. Dr. Justin Marchegiani: Is it crazy? So this stuff has infections just festering inside. Dr. Amy Moore: Correct. 语法解析

22:03

It's a pocket, so the body can't, it's like a walled off abscess. You know, the body can't penetrate it well. So it's constantly sending white blood cells and other things there to fight for you and pulling energy away from other processes in the body that the body might need it for. And so when it's pulling away energy, you refer to the tooth having like an association with organs. So you're saying that there's certain meridians or lines that go to each tooth. 语法解析

◉ 根管感染会消耗身体能量,并可能影响相关器官的功能。

22:28

Correct. Talk a little bit about that. So I don't know the numbers and the organs right off the bat because we'd need a tooth meridian chart for me. But yes, so I will tell you, for example, wisdom teeth. Those are on the meridian with a lot of different hormones. Really? And gut stuff. 语法解析

◉ 牙齿与身体器官之间存在经络联系,拔除某些牙齿可能会导致相关器官出现问题。

22:45

So we'll see a lot of people get their wisdom teeth pulled, develop a cavitation, and then have gut issues or not be able to get pregnant. What? Yeah. So a lot of times we can take root canals out, clear a cavitation, and women's fertility problems are a problem no more. If you're feeling low on energy, struggling with brain fog, or need a natural boost of hydration, Beam Minerals has you covered. 语法解析

23:08

Their products are plant-based and bioavailable, which means they're all natural and easy for the body to absorb. No harsh chemicals added. 语法解析

23:16

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23:39

That is amazing. So I remember there's a doc in my neighbor, like in the neighborhood or in the health neighborhood in Franklin. And he was saying that he would always check like a machine that you can get like a biological dentist or a healthy minded dentist. I'm not saying they're not healthy minded. I'm just saying like mostly like a holistic type dentist. Yes. And they were like measure like they say if a tooth is dead. 语法解析

24:04

And then I got sent a video and it said that if they measured a tooth, because the teeth are like batteries, and it was a medical doctor that was on video. And it said that if you are in a positive charge, like you have a positive and negative pole of the battery, and all the electrons were pushed towards the positive side, that person usually have a tumor or some kind of cyst in the organ related to the tooth. Wow. 语法解析

24:30

Wow. I totally believe that. He said he would measure. He said that the dentist didn't relate to me. He said that if you did the measurement on the tooth and they gave you a certain level of positive polarity, they can almost guarantee you had a hidden cyst. Whoa. 语法解析

24:47

I honestly feel like so many mystery patients, that's what's wrong with their teeth. I've seen people, they can't breathe through their nose, their mouth breathers, they have a positive mark on, so mold in their sinus cavities. They have all this stuff going on, huge tonsils, and it's all from their teeth. It's all from cavitations. It is a good thing for people out there. If you had wisdom teeth taken out, if you have teeth bothering you, 语法解析

25:16

So the first thing probably would be like do some like cone beam or what? Is that what you do? I would say people who have an infected root canal who don't know it, they have a dark, they have dark, it can be dark around the gum line. Yeah. Right. There can be pain when they chew. There can be a weird sensation sometimes. Like the body's so smart. Don't ignore that. You know, don't ignore that. That's your body telling you, hey, there's an issue here, guys. Come on. You know? And so, yes, the first step is a cone beam scan, a 3D cone beam scan. Yep. Yep. And yeah. 语法解析

◉ 如果怀疑牙齿存在感染,应进行锥形束计算机断层扫描 (CBCT) 检查。

25:43

I would beg people not to have a conventional dentist read it because they don't think that anything is wrong with root canals. So they don't have a trained eye to see if there's an infection there because they don't believe that. So a biological or holistic dentist and get a couple different opinions because this is a scan that can be read objectively a number of different ways. And so chart wars. Yeah. You know, scan wars. Yeah, exactly. Let's show on 语法解析

◉ 建议找生物牙医或整体牙医来解读CBCT扫描结果,因为传统牙医可能不会关注根管感染问题。

26:08

Bravo. I can already see it. Yeah. So it's, it's, and then, you know, so how to get a couple different opinions. And if, if you've done everything else, you know, if you've done nervous system and drainage and detox and you're still sick and can't figure it out, this is probably the reason I can almost guarantee it. So yeah. So be really diligent about your teeth. If you know something's wrong, it probably, there's probably something wrong. 语法解析

26:30

wrong? I mean, I'm with you because you're hitting nails on the head with me because like, I want to talk just a little bit circle back about what you would recommend for like just initial lymph drainage. Cause that's important. But the thing was that the patient that had, um, one of my patients came back and she'd had lymph nodes consistently on her arms and it just kept getting tight. Whenever I checked her though, 语法解析

26:50

it would always go to her pericardium meridian, which goes up. The meridian goes like underneath the armpit. So I'm like, okay, so heart, but she's had heart issues from her fat past. Get this though. Interesting. But you're hitting the hell in the head because she, she finally was, I was like, every time I had my biofeedback device, I was like finding areas around here. And I was like, 语法解析

27:07

Oh, wow. And I was like, what? She goes, yeah. She's like, I went to the dentist and I'm thinking I got a root canal here and I've got to get a tooth taken out here probably. That's it. And when you press down to do a muscle test, it was totally weak. And I was like, so then I lasered it. Yep. 语法解析

27:22

And she didn't have any heart palpitations for like three weeks. Right. I mean, you got to think these, these cardiologists, they give, Oh, you're going to the dentist. Let me give you this antibiotic. Cause they know that you spray bacterial emboli from the teeth into the heart area. They know this. They give you antibiotics before they work on your teeth for this reason. Absolutely. Absolutely. Connected to the heart. Absolutely. See, this is like, this is why I'm glad we're on. We got to have more of this. Okay. So if you, okay, you go get the cone bean, you find somebody can read it. 语法解析

27:50

And then if you also, too, like if you suggest that you need lymph drainage, too, when you're doing this stuff, what would you suggest? Like, is there something that you like to do? For sure. Yeah, listen, you know, there's a million different recipes depending on the person for lymph stuff. It's, you know, whatever floats their boat, honestly. But what I like is very simple and very free. And it's really just breath. 语法解析

◉ 改善淋巴引流最简单的方法是练习呼吸技巧。

28:08

Breath. Breath. Because the lymphatic system doesn't have a heart like the circulatory system. It just has the diaphragm, which is a muscle that moves with breath. Oh, man. What? Yeah. And so really, if you want your lymphatic system to move, if you want all your organs to be draining and not be stagnant, you need breath and oxygenation, which washes away toxins. So you would think… 语法解析

28:31

You would suggest like breath work and those things like learning how to breathe and how to go. Yeah, you almost need a breath work coach because there are some people who don't know how to breathe. And this sounds very like paradoxical, but they literally don't know how to exhale. Like they don't. I mean, seriously, you're saying like some people could just breathe a certain rhythm and it's not beneficial for their body. I mean, their exhales are like. 语法解析

◉ 许多人不知道如何正确呼吸,这会影响淋巴系统的功能。

28:53

Yeah. It's like you haven't got any air out of your diaphragm and the rest of your body at all. You're not exhaling and moving anything. It's like a hydraulic pump, right? So you're barely pumping the pump and you're expecting all your lymph to clean out and it's not done. And there's no way. So the first thing that's the simplest thing for everyone is just learning how to breathe with breathwork exercise, learning how to breathe into certain areas of their body. I mean, put your fingers beside people's spine, on their paraspinal muscles in their back right here and say, push my fingers away. Breathe into the back of your back. 语法解析

◉ 正确的呼吸技巧可以促进淋巴引流和器官排毒。

29:23

and they can't. There's so many people who can't right away. You can teach them because the biggest nerve runs in the posterior mediastinum. Wow. Is that why when you teach a person to breathe, like sometimes I've had patients where I say, well, just take a big breath in. 语法解析

29:37

And then they'll go, well, I feel kind of like buzzy and lightheaded. And it's like, is it just moving the lymphs because they finally started unlocking it? Yeah, exactly. Sheesh. And it's just, you know, they probably haven't had oxygenation in certain parts of their body for a really long time. I mean, it's almost like a neglect, like if somebody had a stroke and they neglect certain parts of their body. It's like they almost do that subconsciously as they've gotten older and got tattoos and patterns and walking in their body a certain way. And they don't know how to exhale and feel that part of their body anymore. 语法解析

◉ 瑜伽等运动可以帮助人们更好地呼吸,从而改善淋巴系统的功能。

30:06

They can't put oxygen in there anymore, which is why yoga is so helpful for so many people. So they get that. That's why some people say I swear by yoga and I have to do it because you're actually putting oxygen into their system. You're breathing with the movement. It's like moving meditation. And then they'll say things like breathe into that external hip when you're in pigeon pose. Yeah. What does that mean? And some people are like, what does that mean? How do I breathe into my hip? Yeah. 语法解析

30:29

But, you know, the more you do it, the more you're like, oh, that's how you breathe into the hip. That's exactly right because they'll do the, I'm not a great yoga person at all. Actually, I went to yoga class one time and I wore boots. They let you in the room? I went with Dr. Axe and we went out, we were in New York and he goes, he looked at me, he goes, really, really? And I said, I don't have any other shoes anyway. But when you're breathing into like the stance and I think it was sun warrior, but also too, they were saying, move this, breathe into your kidney. Yeah. 语法解析

30:58

And I have to tell you, like I believe because I do Chinese medicine, but it was like you could feel the energy and the air going into my kidney. That's right. And I remember that rest of the day, I had to pee a lot more, but it felt – it was like a good cleansing. And I was like, that's what they mean by breathing into it. So – 语法解析

31:16

Yep. You're breathing into it. You got lymph. You got your teeth. Now, okay. So I do want to touch a little bit about like the breast implants because there's a big thing about, was it breast implant sickness or is that what they call it? Breast implant illness. Yeah. BII. What is that? Like I know you've dealt with that. What is like some of the main things you would tell a person who… 语法解析

◉ 乳房植入物可能会导致乳房植入物疾病 (BII)。

31:34

Not to be scary, just to ask about a person who does have it. - They'll have lots of lymph and fascial problems like we talked about because there's platinum cross ties in the breast implants. And a lot of the platinum cross ties and the silicone, which is not, silicone is natural, silicone is a man-made compound, and it can migrate and actually look like these granulomatous tumors to doctors on scans and they think they have cancer. Now there is a higher risk of breast cancer with breast implants. 语法解析

◉ 乳房植入物中的铂合金和硅胶等物质可能会导致自身免疫疾病和其他健康问题。

32:02

a certain type of leukemia with breast implants. But there is also people aren't told full informed consent. They are not told all the ingredients of breast implants by the manufacturers. They don't know there's 30 different heavy metals and epoxy resin and polyvinyl chloride that was in the Ohio derailment spill. They don't know that. 语法解析

◉ 乳房植入物中含有各种重金属和化学物质,这些物质可能会对人体造成损害。

32:23

That is alarming. And then platinum cross ties and silicone. And so all of this is nothing natural to the body. If there's any leaching whatsoever with these implants, you can't even see if you have an infection in teeth. You're not going to see a little rip in a breast implant on a scan. 语法解析

32:38

That's exactly right. You're just not. And so unless it's completely ruptured, they're not going to see it a lot of times. And so people will come up with these mystery symptoms like autoimmunity is a big one. Yeah. Autoimmunity, fatigue, brain fog, like all those vague symptoms, pain. And it doesn't look like it's connected directly to the implants. But it is directly because… 语法解析

◉ 乳房植入物破裂或感染可能难以通过影像学检查发现。

32:58

I mean, I'm telling you guys, these are bringing up some thoughts. I know you've seen this too, but guys, I had a patient. I remember this story where she had got to a certain age and she said she just got super sick. When we finally, after about three or four months working with her, she finally went back. She goes, that was the time I had breast implants. And so we were like, what? And she goes, yeah, she goes, yeah. 语法解析

33:23

So we started investigating, but every time, like with the work I do, I mean, we all do our different styles. I kept finding a toxicity signal on all the meridians right around here. And I was like, okay. I said, I don't know, but I think you need to go get it checked. She goes and gets it checked. He says, definitely it ruptured. She said, okay. When they opened up, she got to keep it. And one looked like that was full was… 语法解析

33:46

- Okay, but it was calcified all around it. - Yeah, that's what the body does to protect you. - Is that what it is, calcified? - It's called a contracture. - And it scarred– - It embeds into the wall of the breast tissue. - That's what she said, it hurts so much after they pull out. The other one looked like a shower curtain that had mold on it. - Yeah, they grow mold. Absolutely, they grow mold. - Really? - So this is a source of mold in the body for people. 语法解析

34:06

So I mean, it's like these interferences, if you want to stay healthy and keep infections away, this is something the body constantly is trying to keep clean for you and you're losing energy. It's why people are so tired with these things. So, you know, like we're talking about the whole energetic system. That's why we like Jebedee here. It's like we're talking about like 语法解析

34:25

Dr. We don't want to hyper focus on the breast implants, but what it's doing is robbing you of energy so you can't live your life. Correct. It's a constant source of exposure of a toxin in the body. It's not like something we breathed in or ate that we can get rid of. It's always there. It's always there. Dr. So your body's always going to be creating a histamine response, a mast cell response. Correct. 语法解析

◉ 乳房植入物会持续释放毒素,导致身体持续的炎症反应。

34:48

So the things that we're saying is like you need to look at some of the things that were man-made devices and things and kind of have it take an eye on that and look into it. And I mean, this people are going to chew on this for like quite a long time. And this is OK. So we have terrain there. Now, I know time's precious because we're here and Jess is very needed. So we got to make sure her time's valuable. Yeah. 语法解析

35:12

But I was going to ask you just one more thing. Like when you see like with how the healthcare, even in functional medicine is going, I, 语法解析

35:24

Can you give us your perspective about how you want it to go or where it's going and what you think that people should look into and desire in functional medicine? Yeah, you know, I will say that there's an explosion of functional medicine in the last decade, I would say, an explosion. It's a lot. It's a lot. And I see a lot of great things, a lot of great things, a lot of good knowledge getting out. But I also see a lot of ego and a lot of competition, which is unfortunate. And I also see a lot of green pharmacy. 语法解析

◉ 功能医学领域虽然发展迅速,但也存在一些问题,例如过度依赖实验室检查和补充剂,以及行业内的竞争和商业化。

35:50

which is where people are like looking at labs and everything that's wrong, they're spot treating it, which is the conventional medicine way only with natural medicine. They're doing it now. And I try not to give like more than six to eight things to a person at once. Yeah. Because I did that as a hospitalist. I gave 30 things to people on discharge. So now I'm trying to be a different person. And I feel like, 语法解析

36:11

the body can only handle breaking down so many pills and capsules and everything. And so I see a lot of people doing green pharmacy. I see a lot of ego in the business. And those are the things, the two things I think I wish didn't happen. They bother me the most, probably. And then really a lot of looking at things that I don't think are root cause. Gotcha. Gotcha. Yeah. So 语法解析

36:37

For people out there, they want to hear. We've had this before. Fortunately, sometimes I go to a practitioner and they'll come in and say, they gave me a B6 for this, they gave me a B1 for this, they gave me this, and then they gave me this and this enzyme to do this. They come in and they're already frustrated. By the time they said, I've already spent like $800. Then I feel bad because I'm like, I don't want to give you any more. I got to just work with what I have. There's this need. It's good to look out for a functional medicine doctor who says, okay, let's try to work with 语法解析

37:06

what your body could handle. Right. And that's what you, like you say, look out for that kind of practice. And it's so expensive. Like you said, it's so expensive too for people. How do we fix that for people? It is. And so when you look for the doc that does that and then look for like when people may go down different routes of what a real true root cause are. So I would just suggest everybody listening, like, you know, watch Dr. Jess's Instagram feed and get good results with 语法解析

37:32

the test she even recommends because I'll watch it and I'm telling you, I will say, like, they'll ask, my patients ask me what test and I'm like, you just need to go check out Dr. Jess's page. No, I'm serious. Like, there are new, there's so many new 语法解析

37:46

that are coming out. I'm asking about that because sometimes there's so many new tests, I'm like– - It's overwhelming. - It's a little bit overwhelming. - It's overwhelming. - I get there and they're like, “TG, hear about this new neurological toxin test,” which I think is awesome. And I'm like, “I gotta go study that.” But everybody has good intentions, I believe, in their heart, but there's a lot out there. - Yeah, as we're so stuck in the weeds, sometimes we don't see the forest for the trees. And so I feel like if we pulled back and we just said, “What are really the best doctors?” 语法解析

38:14

Sleep. Community. Sunshine. Good food. Movement. Breath. 语法解析

◉ 保持健康的关键在于良好的生活习惯,例如充足的睡眠、积极的社交、阳光照射、健康饮食、规律运动和正确的呼吸方式。

38:20

That's right. And are you doing those? Then we probably wouldn't need all these tests. We probably wouldn't need all these supplements. You know, people need a community. They need to feel like they belong and they're safe. And that's where everything branches out from, in my opinion. And so we can do all these tests. We can create all these tests. We can create all these supplements. We can create all these biohacks. But ultimately, are you living life that is conducive to how our ancestors and nature wants? That's right. 语法解析

38:45

That's right. You know, this is the good, I'm telling you, I'm, I'm so grateful. I know like Jess, thank you for the pleasure. Oh, you're great. This is such a little flowy, great interview. Like you're a great interviewer. I'm just saying this has such been so informative and I want people when they watch to, 语法解析

39:02

To be like, feel easy with it. It's like, no, I can go and listen to this and I can actually do something about it. Yeah, because ultimately, I think the last thing I want to hear is that people are hopeless and they feel helpless. And I just want them to know that knowledge is power. And it may sound scary. I don't mean to scare anybody by telling anybody this, but you can take this information and go find the right people that will help serve you. 语法解析

39:23

Mic drop. I'm telling you, that's right. You've got to find the people who serve you. And I'm saying with all my heart, this has been great. Thank you. So, Jess, tell the people how they can find you and your website and how they can work with you. I always say there's hierarchy to these things, however you guys want to do it. So, you know, if you like the free stuff, I'm up on Instagram just like Dr. Motley here. 语法解析

39:41

And we do a lot of education. And so that's free always. I have a wellness platform called Wellness Plus where I teach you how to be your own best doctor. And there's an uncensored community forum where docs answer. There's some protocols. And we're revamping the whole thing for next year. And then I have a supplement company called Aegis Formulas where we have a couple different supplements and we're launching… 语法解析

40:06

Peptides that dissolve on the tongue and have 100% absorption in January. I'm part of that. Yeah, we have BPC on there. So one of them. So, yeah. And then finally, I have a virtual clinic where you can see me in person. And I have an eight-month or a four-month package. So there's lots of ways. Oh, man. It's like… 语法解析

40:23

Dr. Jess MD is here. Just watch her information. Please, I'm just saying, I think everybody out there is refreshed that somebody is looking out for them. Same for you. We need more doctors like this. We really do. Like you, we need more doctors who tell the truth and are vulnerable and who are seekers of knowledge. I always thought they'd be the best, the coolest hospitals would be the ones that had a floor where there are so many different practitioners that just really said, 语法解析

40:50

we gotta look at it holistically maybe we could put our heads together can you imagine oh a different world but guys we are so thankful that you guys joined us today and so if you like this information you know like and subscribe give us a thumbs up hit the little bell to get reminded when you know new episodes come up um and 语法解析

41:08

Just check Dr. Jess's information out. We're here with Dr. Javin Moore, too. He's doing some stuff. We all have a lot of good, collaborative people that care about each other, and we're all here about sharing and loving each other. So, guys, we care about you. We thank you for joining us here at the Ancient Health Podcast. Until next time, have a great day. Talk soon. 语法解析

41:23

Before we wrap up, please remember that the information shared in this podcast is for educational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing, or other professional healthcare services, including the giving of medical advice. No doctor patient relationship is formed through this podcast and the use of information here or materials linked from this podcast is at your own risk. The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. 语法解析

41:50

Always consult with your health care provider before making any changes to your health regimen and do not disregard or delay seeking medical advice for any condition you may have. Our content may include sponsorship and affiliate links to which we earn a small commission on sales made through those links. 语法解析

42:08

Thank you for joining us today on the Ancient Health Podcast. We hope you've gained valuable insights into the harmony between Eastern and Western medicine. If you've enjoyed today's episode, be sure to subscribe, share, and leave us a review. 语法解析

42:21

Remember, true health is about balance, mind, body, and spirit. So stay tuned for more episodes where we continue to explore how ancient wisdom and modern science can work together to help you thrive. Here's to your health, balance, and well-being. I'm Dr. Chris Motley, and I look forward to our next episode together. 语法解析

Edit:2025.04.04

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