Frequently Asked Questions
Your body is complex! In my area, which is functional nutrition, I focus on how systems like your gut and brain interact with your genes, inflammatory processes, diet and lifestyle to bring you health, well-being and optimal longevity.
Here are some of the questions my clients ask about how it all fits together
Our biological individuality is dictated by our genetic variations. It's the 0.1% difference in our DNA that makes us unique — from the color of our eyes, hair and skin to how we react to exercise, stress and food.
Genes are much more complex than a fixed blueprint. Even identical twins with the same genes are often very different. Our genes are engaged in a complex dance with our environment that determines how they "express" or behave. This process is studied as the scientific field of epigenetics, and it means you can get different outcomes from the same genes, depending on the environment. Our lifestyle, our daily choices, what we eat, how we react to stress, what chemicals we are exposed to, and more, all have the potential to determine whether given genes get expressed or not.
Another factor to consider is that genes vary in how powerfully they can potentially impact our biochemistry. For example, an individual who carries a gene variant associated with Alzheimer’s Disease called APOE4/4, the strongest genetic risk factor with an increased risk from 50-90% (depending on which study you read), would want to seek help through carefully screened medical, nutritional, behavioral and environmental modifications. However, if the gene variant is lower power, the potential for Alzheimer’s Disease is low and would not warrant a warning signal.
Understanding our genetic code can have a significant impact on our health. We can look at how our genes work together in cellular pathways such as detoxification and inflammation; energy systems such as weight gain and loss resistance; and functional systems such as brain and vascular health. Traditional healthcare approaches predominantly look at finding symptoms and making them less bothersome. This is what we call treating downstream. Often this is unsuccessful or unsustainable — working so far downstream misses the "why?" Understanding your genes helps you get closer to the why, so you can work upstream to address existing conditions and head off problems down the road.
I'd love to answer YOUR question.
Although everyone can benefit from a comprehensive nutrition and lifestyle program, each person I work with is unique. Let's chat about what's holding you back.
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