Jan 30, 2021
If lifestyle has a major impact on your health, shouldn't doctors address it in meaningful ways? Arti Thangudu believes partnering with patients to treat lifestyle habits is important and she has the data to show it makes a difference. Listen and learn
Arti Thangudu, MD, is a triple
board-certified physician and a thyroid, endocrinology, and
diabetes specialist. While most of her work is clinical, she tracks
her own outcomes and assesses her own data. She shares with
listeners several key factors at work in the human endocrine system
that lead to disease and what pathways are involved.
She explains the connection between endocrinology diabetes mellitus
and thyroid disease and how those with autoimmune-caused type 1
diabetes are at greater risk for other autoimmune endocrinology
issues like hypothyroidism, specifically Hashimoto's
disease.
She tells Richard that most of
her patients have exhausted all their resources and haven't been
able to improve their numbers. She has a particular cohort of
retired police officers and firefighters who've faced a career of
stress and long hours and, as she's board-certified in lifestyle
medicine as well, she works with these patients on diet, nutrition,
sleep, and stress.
These elements have proven health connections yet physicians often
aren't able to spend the time and energy addressing them. The
diabetes and metabolism impact factors seen from this close
attention was remarkable. She shares how and why and what she
thinks makes the biggest difference. "We can move the mountains of
diabetes," she adds. Listen in to find out how.
For more about her work, see her clinic website: sacomplete.com.