“I would offer that melatonin is the most powerful anti-aging tool we have. Starting a high-dose melatonin protocol, especially for those over 40, can be transformative. The older you get, the more impactful this can be on your quality of life and the length of your life.” - Dr. John Lieurance
00:00 Beyond Diagnosis: Exploring Causes
05:28 Photodynamic Cancer Therapy Insights
14:36 Methylene Blue's Medical Resurgence
18:17 Methylene Blue: Oxidant to Antioxidant
25:01 Morning Supplement: Non-Disruptive Energy Boost
30:53 Potent Methylene Melatonin Benefits
32:46 Melatonin Research Pioneer Ryder
40:01 Siberian Hamster Breeding Cycle Insight
47:30 Precise Stem Cell Injection Essentials
50:07 Adipose-Derived Stem Cells Advantage
54:18 Prostate Microbe Testing Kit
01:00:19 "Disagreeing with Makeover Plans"
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PODCAST EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
Claudia von Boeselager: Welcome to another episode of the Longevity and Lifestyle Podcast. I'm your host, Claudia von Boeselager. I'm here to uncover the groundbreaking strategies, tools, and practices from the world's pioneering experts to help you live your best and reach your fullest potential. Don't forget to subscribe to the podcast to always catch the latest episodes.
Legal Disclaimer: Please note, to avoid any unnecessary headaches, Longevity & Lifestyle LLC owns the copyright in and to all content in and transcripts of The Longevity & Lifestyle Podcast, with all rights reserved, as well as the right of publicity. You are welcome to share parts of the transcript (up to 500 words) in other media (such as press articles, blogs, social media accounts, etc.) for non-commercial use which must also include attribution to “The Longevity & Lifestyle Podcast” with a link back to the longevity-and-lifestyle.com/podcast URL. It is prohibited to use any portion of the podcast content, names or images for any commercial purposes in digital or non-digital outlets to promote you or another’s products or services.
PODCAST EPISODE TRANSCRIPT
Claudia von Boeselager [00:00:50]:
My guest today is Dr. John Lieurance, a leader at the frontier of functional health, mitochondrial health, and peak human performance. With 30 years of experience experience. He's helped thousands upgrade their vitality, longevity and consciousness using cutting edge therapies like melatonin, methylene blue, NAD plus and cranial optimization. He's the founder of Advanced Rejuvenation and the scientific advisor for mitozen. Blending ancient wisdom with modern science to unlock what he calls the three pillars of human thriving body vitality, mind mastery, and spiritual connection. He's also the author of Melatonin Miracle Molecule and Methylene the Magic Bullet. And today we're diving into how to seriously boost your energy, heal your body at a cellular level, and why tools like methylene blue, melatonin and cutting edge stem cell therapies might just be the future of health and longevity.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:01:49]:
Please enjoy. Welcome to the Longevity and lifestyle podcast. Dr. John, it's such a pleasure to have you with us today.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:01:55]:
Oh, Claudia, thank you. I'm just, I'm blessed to be here with you. And pleasure's all mine. We're going to be talking about some of my favorite subjects.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:02:04]:
I know. I'm really excited to dig in as well, and I'd love to start with methylene blue and supercharging mitochondria. So I think a lot of people have heard about mitochondria and the energy packs of the cells, but how does the methylene blue component play into that? Right, and you've called methylene blue the magic bullet for mitochondrial health. So for someone hearing this for the first time, how would you describe its superpower?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:02:30]:
Well, first of all, I'd just like to say I've got a long, long history with methylene blue. This is not something that is a fad for me personally, in my life and in my experience working clinically with it. I've been in the natural medicine arena for 30 years. I'm a chiropractic neurologist and a naturopath. And so, you know, the whole kind of way that we work with patients is we try to get to the root cause of many conditions. When people come to us and they have a diagnosis, that's not enough for us. Right. Because the diagnosis is when the thinking starts.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:03:16]:
Once we have a diagnosis, then we're thinking, okay, well, what's causing that diagnosis? We're in mainstream medicine, once there's a diagnosis, the physician will look into a booklet and find that diagnosis, and there's a list of drugs that would relate to that. And so the thinking really stops once the diagnosis is made. And so it's the opposite in kind of our field. So I had a medical doctor colleague of mine whose father had Alzheimer's, and This is like 15 years ago, and he started to run methylene blue IVs. And I remember because I would go over there and run IVs myself. It was across the street at the time. We would send patients back and forth. But I remember the dosage was so low that basically it was a big bag of saline and it was just barely blue.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:04:16]:
Right. Which, I mean, it might be just a few milligrams. Right. But back then, we were really kind of afraid of the molecule because there was some literature that talked about something called serotonin syndrome, and there just wasn't enough research at that point, and there wasn't enough people with experience that we felt really confident to really jump into it. And so kind of moving forward, I started following a scientist. His name's Francisco Gonzalez Lima. And there's some great interviews he's done, but he's dedicated his life to methylene blue and also the photodynamic aspect. So using different types of lasers and lights, interacting with what's called photodynamic substances.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:05:08]:
Like, a great example of this is like your dentist, right? A lot of people, if you've had a filling. In fact, I literally just had one done a few days ago.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:05:19]:
Okay. Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:05:20]:
And, you know, they put the putty in there and then they get that light, right? And like, within seconds, it's. It's rock solid chance, right?
Claudia von Boeselager [00:05:28]:
Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:05:28]:
So that's a really good example of a substance that, like, really resonates with a very specific wavelength of light, and then it changes something molecularly. Within that structure, there's a whole lot of medicines that have been researched and looked at, a lot of which are like cancer therapies where they've either injected the tumor or they've given the solution orally. And these different photodynamic substances might actually accumulate in these tumors and then they irradiate them. And they found in a lot of instances, some exciting things that can happen with cancer cells. And so what I think we can do is kind of like make that, make all of that make sense and kind of wrap all this together in a very simplistic way of looking at health and longevity and vitality, which I think a lot of your listeners really want to have kind of a basic framework so they kind of understand this from a 300 mile or, you know, like a scenic view from above.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:06:41]:
Birdsey view. Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:06:42]:
And. And then some actionable steps and how one might actually try to embark on utilizing methylene blue. And we might even have time to touch on some other of my favorite molecules like melatonin.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:06:57]:
Oh, 100% we're going to go there as well. But I'd love to just if you can explain a little bit about methylene blue. And I think some people, especially US based, might have seen RFK junior Bobby Ken with the blue tongue. Right. So that's like the Smurf tongue effects of the methylene blue. But can you explain, like, what is actually happening and what is the compound so powerful with? You mentioned that 15 years ago it was at a very low dose, but now there's more research to understand that a higher dose is also effective. But can you explain what is actually happening in the body when people are taking the methylene blue?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:07:31]:
Yes, yes. So the methylene blue has over a hundred years of history of use. It precedes our FDA in the United States. And the safety, when taken. Right. Is very high. So it's a very safe molecule as long as the dosage is below a certain amount and you don't go too high. Right.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:07:53]:
And we can talk about that a little bit later. It has an affinity to an area in your cell, a structure called mitochondria. And each one of our cells has mitochondria within them. And it's kind of the most important thing these cells have because it's how it makes energy. And there's something called the electron transport chain. It's kind of a fancy label for if you think about it's moving electrons. Right. It's a chain of electrons.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:08:27]:
And within the mitochondria, it's like shuffling these electrons along and in the process of moving these electrons, it's producing heat, and then the cell kind of captures that heat to produce something called ATP.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:08:42]:
ATP? Yeah. Which is the energy, essentially. Right.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:08:46]:
Think about it like gasoline in the car. Right. Or electricity in a battery. And so this ATP and this output of energy from the mitochondria is going to fuel the energy within the cell. And so our cells need to adapt to a variety of different things. And there could be very extreme things, like severe toxicity, There can be chronic toxicity over many years that can be very damaging to the body. There's different infections, there's certain lack of nutrients, and there's a lot of stressful situations that the body lack of sleep. I mean, all of these things kind of accumulate for people to diminish their energy.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:09:41]:
Right. And so it's up to our body and ourselves to be able to have an energy output, to be able to overcome these stresses when we don't have that energy and we can't overcome these stresses and adapt. So think about it like an adaptation response. Then if we can't muster up, we don't have enough energy to muster up that adaptation response, then this is where disease has an opportunity to create itself in your body. And if that stress lasts for long enough, the cell makes a switch from making energy through the mitochondria to a primitive form of making energy, which is called fermentation. And that's what happens with cancer. Right. So basically, in essence, cancer is a mitochondrial problem.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:10:37]:
Dysfunction. Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:10:38]:
With the way that we're making energy, and therefore, if we're looking at mitigating disease, if we're looking at extending life, if we're looking at dealing with something like cancer, all of these things, it's very important for individuals to look at their metabolic status. In other words, how efficient are they at making energy? And when I say efficiency, we're talking about certain amount of glucose and oxygen that's being fed into that electron transport chain. And then on the other side of it, what do we get for those glucose and oxygen molecules? And how much waste, kind of. They call that oxidation. Right. So how much. It's like when you're burning coal, how much soot or smoke is happening on the other side of that. Right.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:11:34]:
And all of these things are really important. So when we start looking at things like methylene blue, we don't know why, but for. For whatever reason, methylene blue has an affinity, a strong affinity for the mitochondria. It's a brilliant blue salt, and it happens to accumulate in the mitochondria, which historically has made it a Great tool for biologists to dissect, dissect tissues because they can see, because different tissues will have a different absorbent amount. Right. They're going to absorb the amount of methylene blue depending on how many mitochondria are populating the cells. And the brain and nerves have the most. And even within the brain, there's some that have way more than others.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:12:25]:
Maybe the prefrontal cortex, hopefully, and not the amygdala.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:12:29]:
Well, there's structures in the brainstem like the locus coeruleus, which literally means blue spot, you know, the substantia nigra. I mean, these have like millions of mitochondria per cell, but on average a lot. Most of your cells just have like a few hundred. Right. So, so this is a like, massive amount. So like if you were to stain it and then, then you were to take it out of the body and you're looking to like dissect it, you would very specifically see these very, very blue, dark blue structures versus light blue structures.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:13:05]:
That's fascinating. And I wonder from an electrical point of view, is it the electrons that are like magnetizing to each other that's why they're being drawn there? Like, I just, my, my science, geeky science side is kind of curious as to how it's targeting the mitochondria. So effectively, it's amazing.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:13:21]:
Yeah, I, I don't know. So there's something spiritual about this molecule. You know, there's, there's something very divine about it. And I say that because, again, when taken properly, there doesn't seem to be a lot of downside to it. In fact, the word magic bullet was coined by Paul Ehrlich in the late 1800s, and he was talking about a molecule that had far reaching benefits to the body, but left the body unharmed. Right. And he discovered methylene blue works for malaria and malaria is actually carried by a parasite. So they were looking for a cure for the parasite that carried, that carried malaria.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:14:05]:
In other words, this would be the cure for malaria. And so he sat there with his microscope and he was about to start experimenting with various molecules, right, to see which one might, these medicines might work. And as he added the stain so that he could witness what would happen when he added the various medicines, when he added the stain, he noticed that the parasite died. And so he's like, wow, I haven't even started and I have my cure. Right.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:14:35]:
Wow, that's amazing.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:14:36]:
This is where the medical use for methylene blue was born, in that moment. And then we kind of fast forward and antibiotics came on the scene, you know, and this is like anything else, you know, it's new and it's sexy. Right? And probably, you know, even back in the early 1900s, the pharmaceutical companies were hiring cute girls and skirts to kind of go and say, hey, you know, and it is, it's like it's our nature to be kind of excited about the newest, latest, greatest thing, and we want to be the ones on the cutting edge, right? And so all of these doctors, when these new medicines come on board, they're likely going to kind of jump onto that and forget the old boring stuff. And so that's what happened is antibiotics kind of replaced methylene blue in a lot of situations. But when that happened, there wasn't a knowledge of, like, how detrimental antibiotics were to the microbiome. They didn't even understand the microbiome back then. And so now we, we understand that. So there's a resurgence and people are getting back and finding more interest in methylene blue for things like malaria and other infections and you might ask, well, infections, methylene blue, I thought you said it was good for the energy.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:16:03]:
Now you're saying it can be treated, doesn't it, for infections? Well, there's, there's also been studies on depression with methylene blue. There's been studies on cancer. And so those are the main key points, is it seems to help with improving cellular energy, it seems to improve with infections, it mitigates toxicity, and it seems to be neuroprotective and cardio protective when an individual has it. In fact, so much so, some neurosurgeons will actually won't do brain surgery with their patients unless they have a low dose methylene blue IV running at the same time.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:16:46]:
Wow. And neuroprotective in terms of how is it supporting just because of the mitochondria or. I'm just curious to understand, like, what is going on there in terms of the neuroprotectiveness of it or does it support the neuroplasticity? Like, what do you see happening?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:17:03]:
Yeah, great question. So because it works on, it seems to recycle electrons in a way, right? So there's two structures within methylene blue. There's an amine group and a thiazine. And I kind of look at both of these molecules as, like in baseball, you have a pitcher and a catcher and they're throwing the ball back and forth and there's this recycling that happens where methylene blue can act as both an oxidant and an antioxidant. And I mean, they literally have never found anything since or before methylene blue that works anything like this. It's just a very unique molecule. Again, there doesn't seem to be, you know, when taken properly, for most individuals, like almost 99% of the population, there is a very rare gene, G6 gene snippet. If an individual has that, then it's not necessarily black or white either, then those people are going to have a hard time with.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:18:17]:
Methylene blue is actually an oxidant, okay? So when we consume it, it's an oxidant. And so when we convert it into something called leukomethylene blue, and this is what happens, up to 80%, 86% of all of the methylene blue within a short period of time is transferred into a clear kind of a white, non blue colored molecule called leukomethylene blue. It can kind of go between the two, but eventually most of it kind of dissolves into this leukomethylene blue. So if you start scanning the Internet and you see like blue brains or you're, you know, you listen to some of these, like these non scientific individuals putting out articles talking about how bad methylene blue is for you, they have no, no idea. And I've not seen one report or video or article that holds any weight that would give me to change my mind, to take it personally myself and recommend it to all my patients. But yes, so the leukomethylene blue is the antioxidant and they've done a lot of studies on leukomethylene blue and this is actually fine for these people with this G6 phosphate gene issue. But what the way to convert the meth, it's really interesting, they do this as a trick in chemistry classes is if you take methylene blue and you add like vitamin C, which is an antioxidant to it, it'll actually turn clear. You can even take light, you can take red light and run red light through the methylene blue and it'll change it and shift it where it'll either lighten up or it'll turn totally clear.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:20:07]:
So it becomes an antioxidant then by doing that. Is that right straight away?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:20:11]:
And more of the anti inflammatory and antiviral components of methylene blue, a lot of them are more from the leucomethylene blue, but your body knows what to do. Your body handles all of that in the background. And so again, don't worry, you're not, it's not like things are staining permanently like us.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:20:33]:
The stain on the carpet, you're trying to get out of your stomach.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:20:37]:
Yeah. But you know, us that are really love methylene blue and understand it. When we see that, we actually get excited and we're. We're really happy to see that. We know it's not permanent, but we know it's getting into the. Into those mitochondria, so which is where.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:20:52]:
It needs to be as well. What is the optimal protocol with it? I think you have, like, the red, the blue O2 brain protocol at Advanced Rejuvenation. So can you share some of the different protocols that you do? And then maybe for someone at home keen to try it, like, what are some protocols that you recommend to do and what to stack it with or not stack it with?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:21:15]:
Sure. Yeah. Well, I probably should just say that I recommend that you work with a healthcare practitioner starting this and any type of supplement regime. Unfortunately, there's not a lot of practitioners that really understand it. I did write a book on it, and we also offer distance coaching for people if they are looking to kind of start working with a practitioner with it. But the general kind of rule with it from looking at all of the research, if you are on SSRIs, then you definitely want to be under 2 milligrams per kilogram of body weight. And you may not want to take it if you're on an ssri. But basically, this is like the big contraindication that a lot of people talk about is the.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:22:05]:
That there's a potential for something called serotonin storm. What I found digging into that is that that warning was created based on individuals that were receiving a thymectomy. So the thymus gland, which kind of sits behind the breastbone, can have cancer. And so these patients had cancer of the thymus gland. And so they were undergoing a surgery to remove the thymus gland. And so they were given high doses of methylene blue as an IV so that the surgeons could see the thymus gland very clearly. And the patients that were on SSRIs, there was several of them that had some health issues surrounding serotonin storm. And I think a couple of them died.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:22:49]:
And so it was a big deal. It's like, oh, my God, no SSRIs and methylene blue, it can kill you. But then the Mayo Clinic kind of came along and really looked at this and said, well, you know, I think you were a little bit overzealous with that warning. You know, this is a very high dose, and it's done intravenously over a short period of time. And so they Retracted the warning and basically just said, don't take methyl, don't, don't take SSRIs if you're getting this thymectomy. And there was other countries that removed that warning, but our FDA just kind of keeps that warning there. And it's really just a blanket warning. No SSRIs and no methylene blue.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:23:36]:
And the real sad part about it, there's so many psychologists out there and psychiatrists that could be recommending methylene blue that are afraid of it. But the reality is that there's not been anything suggesting that if you take very low doses of it, which, you know, anything below 4 milligrams per kilogram of body weight is really considered a low dose. Right. However, a lot of people, you know, people, I have a tendency to suggest people take a little bit more. There's. Because I know it, I've studied it, I've researched it. Right. You're comfortable.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:24:14]:
I use it clinically. Right. I have experience with it. Right. Where there's other people out there kind of touting it or touting themselves as a so called expert with it. And oh, don't take any more than 10 or 20 milligrams, just, you know, across the board. And oftentimes these people come to us and they never really felt the methylene blue. And then we put them on say 45 milligrams or 90 milligrams or something like that.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:24:41]:
Like, oh, okay, finally my, I'm seeing my P blue. And that's something that look out for. You can have fun in the snow with that as well.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:24:48]:
Oh, that's a good point as well. And then they're really feeling the impact and the difference of it. It was just too low a dose previously. But is it something you take every day, multiple times a day?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:25:01]:
We usually suggest people take it in the morning and it's generally okay to take late at night. It won't keep you up or rev you up. It's not like caffeine. But the first time or two that you take it, you might not take it late at night because sometimes if we've been deprived of energy and then we all of a sudden get this boost of energy, those types of things can be a little disruptive to your sleep, but generally not. But yeah, we recommend people starting out in the morning and taking it such that if you don't want your mouth turning blue, then the best way to take it is in a way that we've created where it's a small little bar and it's suspended in a palm oil. And so this little square can be cut into pieces, depending on what dosage you want. And what's really amazing about it is that you can throw that in the back of your throat and drink something down. No blue in your mouth, and it dissolves completely in your stomach, which is exactly where you want it.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:26:07]:
And then we've also added a little bit of vitamin C to it, as well as a number of other plant polyphenols that help to work with this light. And so we can capture this light from our environment and utilize it within the mitochondria as well. We haven't even really gotten there yet. It's called photobiomodulation. But this can really be a powerful one, two punch where we take the methylene blue and then we utilize things like red light panels or saunas, infrared saunas going out in the sun, laser therapies like things like that.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:26:49]:
Really powerful. And then oxygen therapy you guys do as well, right?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:26:53]:
So, yeah, we really love this concept of red, blue, O2. In fact, we've done a couple of events here in Sarasota at our event center. And the idea of using photobiomodulation in the form of, you know, like, light therapy, of course, you can go out in the sun as well. And then hyperbaric oxygen or hypoxic training, We've been utilizing a lot of hypoxic type of training to accentuate the absorption of oxygen and the utilization of oxygen and breath work. And then also another form of kind of oxygen therapy that a lot of people may not be familiar with is actually breathing very small amounts of carbon dioxide gas in oxygen. And so it's a oxygen mix with carbon dioxide. So we have a carbon dioxide inhaler that we just launched. And anyway, it's real easy.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:27:55]:
It's just a small box. It sits on your desk. You hook up a tank and then you just set it. And we're breathing about 6, 5 or 6% for 10 or 15 minutes. And resetting your carbon dioxide sensors, it can be really important because it can just calm the system down. And it works on vasodilation. All the benefits that we really look at with, like, nitric oxide. So people have really been, like, digging through different health and supplement regimes.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:28:27]:
You'll definitely run across this whole nitric oxide argument that it's really important to maintain our. Our vascular system. And I found that there's, there's. It's not real black and white, right? And. And one of the arguments people will say is, like, well, I don't want to take methylene blue because it's going to decrease my nitric oxide level. And so we can address that. And so there's three forms of nitric oxide, neuronal, endothelial and inducible. Okay.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:29:04]:
And so, yeah, the inducible nitric oxide is the one that is elevated when you have an infection or you have toxicity. Like, and that's, and that's why, like when these things happen, we swell and it's like that inflammation. Right. The problem is that nitric oxide, when it mixes with certain nitrates can create peroxy nitrate. And these peroxy nitrates are the most damaging substance to tissues and to your endothelial lining of your blood vessels and your heart. Very, very bad. You really don't want those to be high. So the methylene blue only works on that, lowering that inducible.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:29:50]:
Nitric oxide, the endothelial and the neuronal, those are the ones you really want more of. And light therapy elevates those. Hyperbaric oxygen elevates both neuronal and endothelial. The sauna and infrared, near infrared light and the sun elevates the endothelial. And then you have methylene blue that lowers the inducible. And so very complementary kind of mix of modalities that one can kind of put together at home.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:30:28]:
Very powerful stacks as well. Dr. Jen, I'd love to move on to another of your favorite topics, High dose melatonin and the art of cellular recovery. So in your book Melatonin Miracul Beyond Sleep, you argue that melatonin is massively understood. Why do you think high dose melatonin could be one of the most powerful anti aging tools that we have? And what's the biggest myth around it?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:30:53]:
I would offer that methylene melatonin is the most powerful, like starting a high dose melatonin regime, especially for those over the age of 40. And the older you get, I would say the more impactful this can be on your, on your quality quality of life and your length of your life. Right. And so these are both things that we really want to work. It's not going to make a big impact if our length of our life isn't, you know, we have a longer life, but we're miserable because. Miserable, yeah, we have all this disease in our body and literally, you know, when I, when I first was introduced to melatonin, I was prescribed 60 milligrams of melatonin a day, twice a day, it would be about 180 milligrams a day. And that would be actually three, three doses of 60. And this was by this doctor in Reno, Nevada.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:32:00]:
His name's Frank Shallenberger, and he's very well known in the natural medicine kind of arenas. And kind of in the late 80s, he actually brought ozone to the United States from Germany. So he's kind of considered the father of ozone and ozone therapy. And so I went and did an internship with him and then I was able to have him kind of evaluate me. And I was just recovering from chronic Lyme disease and I was still having a lot of brain fog and a lot of word finding. And, and I told him I was having those challenges. And he suggested I go on a high dose melatonin regime and that he had learned this from this Dr. Russell Ryder, who's really considered like the foremost expert.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:32:46]:
And so then I started to research Russell Ryder's work and I found out like, this guy's literally been on over a thousand research articles on melatonin. And, and he was the first doctor to discover that the pineal gland was more than just a worthless gland. And, and I started listening to him and he's talking about hundreds of milligrams of melatonin and all of these different disease patterns in the body. Almost like kind of what we were talking about with methylene blue. Like, it was like almost this, like, oh my God, this is unbelievable. Mood hormones, neurological, cardiovascular cancer, skin, just virtually almost all diseases. I would go in and I would look in the research in PubMed and I would find not just one or two, but sometimes hundreds of articles and research studies that have been done on melatonin for those specific types of conditions, like with gut. There was research on ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:34:04]:
How is it that melatonin helps the gut?
Claudia von Boeselager [00:34:07]:
I know, I want to understand this. What is happening that threw me when you were saying that. What's going on there? What's the science saying?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:34:16]:
Yeah, I've got a book I wrote on melatonin. We have chapters on all this. So anybody that wants to like, really deep dive, it's melatonin miracle molecule. And it's, it's on Amazon, but it works on the gut because it seems to that your microbiome is on our circadian rhythm just like we are. And at night, this is when the microbiome do something called swarming, which is they reproduce themselves. And during these events you have, like, in a perfect world, the bad bacteria go down and the good bacteria go up. Right. And they found that supplementing with Melatonin seems to accentuate microbiome swarming in the gut.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:35:04]:
And so not only do you have a support where you have more of the good bacteria proliferate, but you also have a suppression of a lot of the bad bacteria in the gut. So it does it in that way, but it also protects the lining of the gut. So the melatonin, this happens for all of our tissues, is that when you have good saturation of melatonin within tissues and every cell in your body, within the mitochondria, produces melatonin. And this is what really blew my mind, is like, wow, I thought it was just the sleep molecule, like it was just produced by the pineal, but now you're telling me every single cell in your body produces it and it's within the mitochondria right in the middle of, like, ground zero of making energy. You've got melatonin right there as the master antioxidant.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:35:55]:
Wow.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:35:56]:
And it's that important. And what happens is it goes way down as we get older. And you can do all the biohacking you can. You can, you know, put on the blue blocking glasses, turn off your blue and green lights at night, don't look at screens so much after the sun goes down, watch the sun come up, watch the sun go down. I mean, all these different things that you can do to pace your circadian rhythm, you're still not going to produce the melatonin you did when you were a kid. And therefore supplementing it could mitigate a lot of diseases. And because it works on this core aspect of our cell where we produce energy and like, kind of back to the very beginning of this interview, is when we have enough energy, we can adapt. Right.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:36:48]:
That adaptation response to environmental stressors, because it's not the genes that get us in trouble, it's the expression of the genes based on our environment, the epigenetic impact.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:37:01]:
Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:37:01]:
This is where we really need to focus our attention to. And if there's. So both melatonin and methylene blue work on the mitochondria, but they work on the mitochondria in different ways and they're incredibly synergistic. Incredibly synergistic. And we often will combine both of these molecules with a lot of our cases and see people feeling quite, quite a lot better. I personally, it's been a game changer for me and my health, for sure.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:37:32]:
Amazing. And Dr. John, what is the dose for people interested in starting out? And then are there any? Because in the US you can buy it over the Counter in other countries is actually prescription based. But is there anything people should look out for if they're like, okay, I'd like to get started on the melatonin journey. You know, I'm 45, I'm 55. Whatever age they might be, what would you recommend to look out for and what to avoid?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:37:56]:
Well, first of all, don't let anybody get you thinking that melatonin is dangerous. There's two things that I would look at as a physician to determine if something was dangerous. Number one is, is it have a toxicity to it? Right. And most everything has a toxicity if you go and you take enough of it. Right?
Claudia von Boeselager [00:38:18]:
Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:38:19]:
But literally they can't even find that with melatonin. They did a study with animal models and they stopped the study. That would be as if giving a human 150,000 milligrams to like an average size adult. And they just said, well, I mean, this animals are getting pretty groggy. But no, there's just no toxicity. So if there's no toxicity to it, that's great. Now is it going to monkey up my hormonal system? Right. Because I don't want to take something like with testosterone, with progesterone, with estrogen, with cortisol, there's insulin.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:38:55]:
Like all of these things have feedback loops. Right. We're built this way because if we have enough of a hormone, we want to auto regulate it where we. Okay, let's tone that back a little bit. Because we have too much of it, we don't need to produce that much. And so with melatonin, there's no negative feedback loop. They've not done any. There's never been any studies that have demonstrated that there is any monkeying up of our hormones.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:39:24]:
In fact, it's quite the opposite. It seems to be very positive for our hormones. Right. There's some people out there that might, if you really dig into it, and some people might, some people might not. Is. There's some very, there's some very top kind of podcasters out there that'll say that, that they don't think it's a safe molecule because it will lower testosterone and potentially cause the gonads to. Which is, you know, the male. The gonads that produces testosterone to shrink.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:40:01]:
Right. And this is based on a Siberian hamster. And I know, and Siberian hamsters are on a breeding cycle based on the seasons and humans aren't. But so they have this seasonal thing. And so the more sunlight there is, the, the, the less they produce of sex hormones because they're not as active breeding at that time. So these, the gonads shrink and expand based on melatonin, based on the light, because that's the way they're wired. There's never been a human trial that suggests that this is the way it's happening at all. So I just haven't found anything.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:40:47]:
If anybody out there has anything at all, please send it to me. But it's a very safe molecule. There's no toxicity, there's no negative feedback loop. Most of the researchers out there, according to Dr. Russell Ryder, are taking 180 to 200 milligrams per day. And that's usually taken at night, you know, sometime before that. Yeah, sometimes individuals might be a bit groggy in the morning. It tends to taper off after a few days of taking the high dose.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:41:25]:
But also you can take melatonin earlier in the day and then the body has more time to metabolized. Some people are slow metabolizers of melatonin. And you'll know if that's you, if you're, if you're a slow metabolism, slow metabolizer of caffeine. So if you take caffeine and it just seems to be in your system for a long time, it's likely you're also going to be a slow metabolizer for melatonin. So if that's the case, you can take melatonin earlier, like say before dinner.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:42:01]:
Okay, before dinner, yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:42:03]:
And then as long as there's light, you know, it's going to suppress the melatonin from being released in your pineal. So you, you might feel relaxed a little bit. You know, one thing that I found really fascinating is I, I have a dog. I have a cute little Australian shepherd. And I started to do some research on melatonin for dogs and I found some exciting research showing that it tends to extend life and improve quality of life with both dogs that have cognitive decline, but also dogs that have cancer and are on chemotherapy.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:42:40]:
Wow. And if you stack that with rapamycin, right, you're doing really well.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:42:45]:
Or even just fisetin or fisetin as well.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:42:48]:
Yeah, super exciting. Yeah, I think that's a whole realm that's exciting to understand. And, and speaking of which, I'd love to touch on before we finish up today, your Excels, right, The Rolls Royce of stem cells, as you guys call it. So you pioneered the use of Excels, which are adipose derived stem cells with mu cell populations. Can you explain what they are and what makes Excels fundamentally different from Other white bread perinatal stem cells or other clinical uses.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:43:20]:
Yeah, well, yeah. So excels are a population of about 120 different types of stem cells. And you have two main reservoirs of stem cells in your body. It's your bone marrow and then your adipose, your fat cells. And when. When we look at those. So the most of these cells are all made in the bone marrow. Right.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:43:46]:
And so they'll. They'll continue to populate the bone marrow. There's just a plethora of studies showing that bone marrow transferred from, like, mostly from the pelvis. You know, they do what's called an aspiration, and then that can be transferred into, like, an arthritic knee or, you know, a spinal condition or something like that. And they. There's some great studies on bone marrow. It's been around for a long time, and it's something that we started using clinically, gosh, I want to say over 20 years ago. And then shortly after, we started using adipose.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:44:25]:
And a lot of people might be listening to saying adipose, like fat.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:44:30]:
You want to touch that?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:44:32]:
It just sounds so crazy. But literally, they settle and accumulate in the fat, particularly around your belly. And one out of every hundred cells in your adipose tissue is a stem cell, and that's way higher than anywhere else, even in the bone marrow. Even more so than in the bone marrow. Yeah. And there's this population of stem cells in the fat that are of particular interest to us, which are called muse, and that stands for multi generational endurance stem cells and Multi differentiating. Multi generational differentiating endurance stem cells. All right, there you go.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:45:21]:
Mouthful. It took me a while to memorize that. That was a tough one.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:45:26]:
More methylene blue for the cognitive enhancement.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:45:30]:
But those are your muse cell. The muse. And the muse cells are getting a lot of attention because they seem to be anti cancer. Wow. And of course, we're doing a lot of work with prostate here. And my. My team, we had a case that came in because we've been. We've been working with treating the root cause of prostate disease, which we've discovered to be infections which we can detect with a semen test.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:46:00]:
And we had a case that came in where we did an MRI just as a preliminary to just kind of see, you know, we didn't expect to see a growth there, but we did. And this individual had a small tumor in one of the lobes of the prostate. And so my. My team went and did their standard protocol with the prostable blue zone, where we're using Ozone and methylene blue. And then he had. He had a kind of a microbial overload in there. Not a big one, but. But the main concern was what was happening as far as the growth.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:46:37]:
And they added in these mu stem cells into this injection and two months later we followed up with a post mri and the growth was completely gone. Right. And this really correlates very well with the research with these mu cells. And what we love about it is that we're able to use them. And it's so safe because you don't have that safety with stem cells from placenta. In fact, it's quite the opposite. There's a lot of fear. And when people report to most clinics doing stem cells and say, I have active cancer, they'll kind of shy away from doing any systemic type of treatment.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:47:19]:
Now, with stem cell therapy, there's really a systemic and non systemic approach. A systemic approach would be doing it as an infusion, right?
Claudia von Boeselager [00:47:29]:
Yeah, IV drip.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:47:30]:
And if we did an IV drip, there's ways, we have a brain protocol and there's ways for us to get them to go and populate inside the central nervous system. And if we do local, then we would use ultrasound guidance. Anybody that's looking to get stem cell therapy, please. The one biggest thing not only is the quality of the stem cells, but also make sure that these people are good with ultrasound guidance, you know, and needle guidance. Not only that, but you can see what's damaged and then guide it. You know, like with rotator cuff and arthritic knees and hips and spinal conditions, you've got to be able to really see and guide these injections precisely. So if you don't inject it perfectly in the right place, it likely won't work, at least not nearly as good as it would as if it was. If it was precisely injected.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:48:27]:
Yeah. So the quality of the stem cell is super important. And then with the ultrasound, making sure that it's guided properly as well. And so given that excels survive longer and release exponentially more exosomes, which is my understanding. How do you see their role in evolving in regenerative neurology, especially in conditions like neuropathy, Ms. or brain injuries or even dementia and Alzheimer's.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:48:52]:
Yeah, thank you. That was one thing that I think we kind of glazed over the name of the cells being endurance stem cells. That kind of speaks volumes right there. Right. They endure and they're very hardy and they live a very long time. And so when stem cells are transplanted from one part of your body and put into Another or in most of the cases that we treat here, these are donated. It's donated from young, healthy females, usually in their early 20s. And then they're processed so cleanly that there's nothing there that could transfer any diseases.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:49:34]:
And they're cryopreserved. So we just take them out of liquid nitrogen and then we defrost them and utilize them right away. But we had utilized different placental based products over the years. You know, just like we talked about methylene blue and antibiotics. You know, it's like the new thing comes along and it's sexy. Oh well, we may not have to do liposuctions on patients in the bone marrow aspiration. We've got these new placental things. You just take them right out of the refrigerator and they're ready to go.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:50:07]:
But you know, the results were never, never as good as they were when we were pulling bone marrow. And so when I finally connected with this company that was utilizing the stem cell populations from adipose tissue, I just knew right away this is going to be the holy grail. If we could not have to subject somebody to a mini liposuction and just take it right out of the freezer. And the big thing and the reason that they weren't working for us and that they're not working for any other clinic out there, I mean, don't think that you're going to go to a different clinic and get a different result from the same stem cell unless they're injecting it differently. They don't live very long. You know, they maybe live an hour. And the difference between a placental derived stem cell and these X cells is the X cells could live, live up to and longer than two months. And so like you said, you know, you're talking about a medicine working in the body for that long of a time and it's constantly signaling the body to grow more cartilage over that long.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:51:17]:
So you're going to have thick cartilage growth. We've seen that in a lot of before and after MRIs. When it's neurological cases, you've got that support for these patients. You know, it's not just a quick little flash where there's a benefit, short lived benefit, but instead there's this really long gradual improvement that we see with cases with the use of these cells.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:51:40]:
Amazing. So I know that we're at top of the hour now. I have obviously a lot more questions, Dr. John, but we'll have to keep them maybe for round two at some point. Thank you so much. For this inspiring conversation. If people are interested in diving deep, deeper into your work, what you're up to, mitochondrial health, methylene blue, melatonin excels, etc. Where can they find you? Where would you send them to? And we can link everything in the show notes.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:52:06]:
Yeah, Claudia, thanks for having me. And so I'm on Instagram quite a bit at Dr. John Lawrence and I've got a few books that I've written. The two I think we kind of pointed out and I have my third edition of Magic Bullet on methylene blue that just came out a couple of weeks ago and it's got a lot of new stuff with what we're doing with the prostate. And then of course the melatonin book as well on Amazon. And then our clinic is Advanced Rejuvenation and the website's Advanced Rejuvenation Us and we're in Sarasota, Florida.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:52:41]:
Amazing. Do you have any final ask or recommendation or any parting thoughts or messages from my audience today? John?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:52:49]:
Well, I do. I think we've. This is a podcast that you, you know, some people might want to listen to twice because we put a lot of information out there. It's really important, I think, moving forward in today's world. It's not the same environment that our parents and our grandparents lived in. Right. And so there's a lot of man made toxins and a lot of man made stressors. Right.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:53:17]:
And so this requires something extra for us to live a healthy and, you know, a longer life in today's world and age. So I think a lot more people are becoming attracted to utilizing a lot of these strategies that we talked about today. Boy, we really gave a lot of great stuff. We talked about utilizing protocols red blue, O2, we talked about methylene blue, we talked about melatonin, and then we just finished talking about regenerative medicine. And I'm really excited. I think your interview was just fantastic.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:53:58]:
Thank you so much. Well, you were sharing the information, Dr. John, so thank you so much for sharing your wisdom. I think it's so exciting. And these are areas that are talked about a little bit less than some other ones. So I'm thank you for going down the rabbit holes of really understanding them and being able to share them so eloquently with the world. So thank you so much again for your time and for.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:54:18]:
There is one, there is one more thing I might suggest is like people that were talking about the prostate, women that might be having chronic UTIs might think that whoever their lovers are, they may be carrying these microbes in their prostate and it can be tested with semen. So whether you're a male and you're having some challenges with urination, waking up frequently, you can reach out to us and we have a semen test that we can ship out to you. And so. And if you're a female and you have a loved one that you think might be contributing to your chronic issues, then you might purchase this kit for them for. I don't know, for what's the next upcoming. We're past Valentine's Day, but maybe there could be some special.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:55:15]:
Labor Day, but I wonder. Or Memorial Day for women with continuity. I know like diminose because it's like an overgrowth of the bacteria. So potentially the methylene blue would be really powerful for combating the UTIs for women as well, right?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:55:30]:
Oh, yeah. In fact, that was an indication that they used it and that your urine turns blue and taking it can be really helpful. It starves out the microbes of oxygen.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:55:45]:
So a combination of. Would you say demon nose, like my mother, obviously dementia and later stage. So UTIs are typical thing. But combining methylene blue with D Manose, would you think that would be a really powerful stack?
Dr. John Lieurance [00:55:57]:
Yeah. And even cranberry juice.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:55:59]:
And cranberry juice as well. Yeah. Yeah.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:56:01]:
Be really interesting. Yeah, it'd be a really interesting supplement, actually. You're giving us some ideas with Mitozen.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:56:09]:
The next one to come up with it as well. Yeah, no, it's. When we have aging parents, you see different things. My father also has prostate cancer. It's spreading out to the. The bladder as well. So I'm definitely going to get them on some methylene blue as well. And then.
Claudia von Boeselager [00:56:21]:
Yeah, see what we can do. But anyway, thank you so much for your wonderful work, Dr. John. Thank you so much for everything and. Yeah, look forward to seeing you hopefully soon.
Dr. John Lieurance [00:56:28]:
You're welcome, Claudia.
I’m Claudia von Boeselager
Longevity Coach, detail-loving educator, big-thinking entrepreneur, podcaster, mama, passionate adventurer, and health optimization activist here to help people transform their lives, and reach their highest potential! All rolled into one.
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