The paradox: We spend a lot of money and time on increasing our antioxidant intake through foods and supplements. Yet most of us never know if this effort is making any impact on our health. Should we be checking our oxidative stress levels as often as we check our cholesterol?

Not a day goes past that we don’t hear about oxidative stress in the news and interwebs, and how it is shortening our lifespan or causing diseases like heart disease, diabetes and cancer.

Unless you’ve been living under a HUGE rock, you also know that antioxidants protect us from oxidative stress. And you most probably spend some of your dollars on antioxidants through healthy food choices and supplements.

But how do you know if those dollars spent.. or the time you spend thinking or reading about antioxidants, rewards you with any real benefit?

Today we look at measuring oxidative stress and how you can use biomarkers to assess your health status and whether your efforts, such as making buying choices based on antioxidant content, are paying off.

“In my ideal world, I would love to see most people looking at their markers of oxidative stress once a year…. if once a year we could get an idea of antioxidant status in our system and know if our antioxidant level is keeping up with damage in our body, it just gives us a much better window into prevention.”
– Cheryl Burdette

Dr. Cheryl Burdette is president of Dunwoody Labs, a lab that specializes in cutting edge labs for integrative medicine, and a practicing physician at Progressive Medical Center, the largest center for integrative medicine in Atlanta, U.S.

She is currently lecturing on nutrition and cancer at the University of Bridgeport and has a number of published studies in the journals Alternative Medicine Review and Clinical Chemistry.

As education director at Dunwoody Labs she is involved in clinical trials of different nutritional products as well as development of functional testing profiles – and an area she has looked at in particular is oxidative stress.

The show notes, biomarkers, lab test and links to everything else mentioned are below. Enjoy the show and let me know what you think in the comments (click here – in the comments)!

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What You’ll Learn

  • The usefulness of oxidative stress markers for managing and improving health.
  • The implications of high oxidative stress found in the body with connection with damage and cancer, heart disease and neurological conditions.
  • The two perspectives to understand your oxidative stress status: the direct measure of oxidative damage and reduced intracellular anti-oxidant status.
  • Glutathione’s role in protecting your body from oxidative stress and its relation with health and disease and what you can understand from its status.
  • The relationship to goals of longevity and physical performance of antioxidant enzymes like Glutathione.
  • Lipid Peroxides and the specific damage they relate to in the body, and the differences in biomarkers available: TBARS, MDA (MalonDialdehyde), F2-Isoprostane.
  • How oxidative stress levels negatively impact methylation processes and its negative feedback dynamic with mitochondria.
  • Some of the criteria Cheryl has used to select the oxidative stress markers for her assays and panels from amongst the over 30 currently used in research.
  • How taking supplements like bioavailable forms of curcumin, sulforaphane from Broccoli, and alpha-lipoic acid or resolving chronic infections can resolve raised oxidative stress levels.
  • Trends in use of the oxidative stress markers that Cheryl has noted such as use by integrative medicine practitioners and across the U.S. geography.
  • Appropriate testing strategies for healthy individuals for routine assessment of oxidative stress and how it can highlight future potential health risks vs. individuals that have some chronic or pathological condition.
  • Do we need oxidative stress? Can you overload on antioxidants so that they have a negative impact on your biology rather than positive?
  • Looking at oxidative stress markers in athletes or people who exercise heavily to understand issues they may have with their performance and their recovery.
  • Some of the trends, new research and tests Cheryl Burdette is looking forward to coming out in the next 5 years.

Dr. Cheryl Burdette & Dunwoody Labs

  • Dr. Cheryl Burdette: Her profile on Progressive Medical Center, where she works as a physician.
  • Dunwoody Labs: Cheryl’s lab, where she is president and education director.

The Tracking

Biomarkers

Used and Recommended by Dr. Cheryl Burdette

    Lipid Oxidization Levels
  • F2-isoprostane: A more direct marker of lipid peroxidation levels in your body than TBARS and MDA.
  • Oxidized LDL: A measure of the amount of your LDL (Low Density Lipoproteins) that are oxidized. This is considered to be a much more predictive marker of cardiovascular disease than straight LDL measures.
  • Intracellular Antioxidants and Enzymes
  • Glutathione Peroxidase (GPx): The body’s main enzyme for detoxification and for neutralization of free radicals (oxidative stress). This biomarker measures your current blood levels.
  • Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) I: Levels of an intracellular antioxidant that resides in the cytosol (inside your cells). More association with conditions like ALS.
  • Superoxide Dismutase (SOD) II: Levels of an intracellular antioxidant that resides inside the mitochondria. More association with fatigue and cancer, and general health status of mitochondria.
  • DNA Damage
  • 8-OHdG: 8-hydroxy-2′ -deoxyguanosine is tested via a first void urine test to show levels of oxidative stress in the body. This marker is supported by over 1000 research studies. See the Pubmed entry here.

Mentioned But Not Recommended by Dr. Cheryl Burdette

    Lipid Peroxidation
  • MDA (MalonDialDehyde): MDA is one of the most widely used markers for lipid peroxidation found in the research.
  • TBARS Assay (ThioBarbituric Acid Reactive Substances assay): As with MDA, this marker has been used extensively in the research.

Lab Tests

The Tools & Tactics

Supplements

  • Curcumin: Bioactive compound in the spice turmeric. Works as an antioxidant in part through the process of hormesis – a low-dose form of stress that stimulates the stress adaptation response in a healthy way. The most effective forms of curcumin are Curcumin BCM95 and Liposomal Curcumin. Learn more about hormesis in episode 8 with Todd Becker.

People and Other Resources Featured

Other Organizations Mentioned

  • JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, also the most widely peer-reviewed journal circulated in the world. JAMA covers general medical topics with no specific focus.

Full Interview Transcript

Transcript - Click Here to Read

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