Approach towards the Matrix COPY Flashcards
What is the mindset of functional medicine?
1) In a fire, be the detective finding the source of the fire, not just the fireman putting out the fire.
2) There is a continuum of health and wellness, where is this person on that continuum?
3) Is there imbalance?
4) Biochemical individuality. Genes and their expression differ from person to person.
5) Personalized approach (look upstream and personally tailor the approach). This is risk assessment, not diagnostic. Evaluate and treat EARLY biochemical imbalance.
6) Interconnection-the systems are all interconnected, like a web. What affects one system affects the others.
How many biological systems are there in FM?
7
What is the point of the MSQ?
To find out where the patient on the continuum of health and wellness paradigm? Are they on the left, middle or right? Do they just need a little intervention or a lot?
What are the 7 biological systems in the Matrix?
1) Assimilation
2) Structural Imbalance
3) Communication
4) Transportation
5) Biotransformation
6) Energy Regulation
7) Defense & Repair
What is the acronym used for the systemic approach used in Functional Medicine? What does it mean?
GOTOIT. Gather: Collect MYSELF, and all the information (MSQ, etc). Organize. ReTell. Initiate: Order: Track:
What does the MSQ tell you? How do you use it?
Gives an indication of overall health. Gives a good indication of the toxic load of the body. Ideal score: <10 Score: 30-50 (need for concern) Score: 50-100 (needs definite attention) Score: >100 (major medical problems) Able to predict increases in inflammation, immune dysregulation, oxidative stress Use it monthly.
What is the physical examination in functional medicine?
- What is the person’s body shape? What is their body composition? Ex-pear shape, apple shape. Above or below waistline-where is the fat?
- Waist circumference?
What does the pear shaped body tell you?
More gut dysfunction, hormonal issues. May not be eating as much as apple shape.
What does the apple shaped body tell you?
More towards insulin resistance, inflammation. May eat more. Digestive system almost soothes the hormonal imbalances.
What are antecedents?
Factors that PREDISPOSE a person to illness, (whether genetic or acquired).
- Ask about family history (parents, grandparents, siblings, etc).
- Preconception, prenatal and birth info.
Ex:
Trauma, sexual abuse, toxicity, intrauterine history, intestinal permeability
What are triggers?
Factors that PROVOKE the signs and symptoms of illness.
- Usually major events that happen through life.
- Triggering events spiral our lives downwards.
- Empower people so they know what to do when those triggering events occur, so they stay closer to health.
-Ex. Physical or psychic trauma. Memories Stressful events Microbes Toxins Surgeries
What are mediators?
Factors that CONTRIBUTE to the pathological changes and dysfunctional responses, whether biochemical or psychosocial.
-Factors on a daily basis or regularly that are contributing to pathological changes.
What are the 3 components of the assimilation system?
1) GI system-Digestion, gut microbiota
2) Skin
3) Lungs
What is the acronym used to describe the key functional roles and aspects of the gut?
What does each acronym letter stand for?
DIGIN
Digestion and assimilation Intestinal permeability Gut Microbiota/Dysbiosis Immune modulation/ Inflammation Nervous system
What are the consequences of gut dysregulation?
1) Immune systems sends out inflammatory responses.
2) The mucosa is not intact.
3) Portal circulation gets flooded with too many antigens and causes detoxification stress.
4) More immune complexes are formed and immune cascades are made.
5) Chronic inflammation (systemic or local) can affect the HPA axis.
What are the components of the Defense and repair system?
1 of the 3 finite processes that the other systems go through, it is a funnel to the signs and symptoms. It is connected to all other systems. It touches many components of the MSQ.
-It is about NON-resolution of inflammation.
- Immune
- Inflammation (if chronic-> failure of resolution?)
- Oxidative stress
(ex. watery itchy eyes, chronic coughing, frequent illness, etc).
What is the cycle of chronic inflammation?
1) Signal in bloodstream cause adhesive cells to blood vessel epithelium, which attracts PMNs to the extracellular tissue.
2) Neutrophils (PMNs) engulfs whatever the signal indicates, then starts apoptosis, which starts another signal.
3) The monocytes are called by the signal into the extracellular tissue, which calls the MACROPHAGES. The macrophages engulf the neutrophils which are apoptotic to contain the contents. Then they turn into REITER cells, which go into the lymphatic system and are resolved.
If the macrophages do not do this, then the neutrophil contents (lysosymal enzymes) creates necrosis and inflammation of the tissues. This creates more signaling to the immune system, causes increased oxidation and starts the process over again.
Defense and repair problems can lead to auto-immune problems.
What process works hand in hand with genetics?
Methylation.
Methylation quenches oxidative stress! More oxidative stress leads to more inflammation.