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Home » Transcript: Dr. Will Bulsiewicz On The Microbiome: Heal Your Gut, Sidestep Disease & Thrive

Transcript: Dr. Will Bulsiewicz On The Microbiome: Heal Your Gut, Sidestep Disease & Thrive

Read the full transcript of board certified gastroenterologist and gut health expert Dr. Will Bulsiewicz’s interview on The Rich Roll Podcast titled “Microbiome: Heal Your Gut, Sidestep Disease & Thrive”, May 16, 2022.

Introduction

RICH ROLL: Hey everybody. Welcome to the podcast. Today I come bearing gifts and good news because the good Dr. B is back and this conversation on all things gut health, the microbiome, and the powerful health benefits of being fiber fueled is just absolute fire.

One of the most popular guests in the history of this podcast, Dr. Will Bulsiewicz is a board certified award winning gastroenterologist and the New York Times bestselling author of “Fiber Fueled.” Dr. B has authored more than 20 articles in the top American gastroenterology journals. He’s been featured in many prominent media outlets and he’s got a new book out called “The Fiber Fueled Cookbook,” which beyond the amazing recipes, is filled with tons of practical, actionable gut health promoting takeaways.

Our first episode, check out episode 538. If you missed it, spent a lot of time focused on the why behind gut health. Well, this episode picks up where that one left off, focusing more on the how – how to eat optimally, how the microbiome affects cognition, brain health, mental health, and many other fascinating topics.

Final note: Much like Simon Hill, Dr. B was kind enough to create a PDF with links and citations to the many studies and articles in support of the claims that he makes over the course of our conversation, a link to which you can find in the description below. I’ve got a feeling that this episode is going to rock your world. So please hit that subscribe button and let us now take a fantastic voyage into the middle mysteries of the microbiome with Dr. Will Bulsiewicz.

Dr. B is in the house. How you doing man?

DR. WILL BULSIEWICZ: I’m great. Happy to be here. I’m happy to be live in front of you right now. Last time I know we did this and I was not only on a zoom call with you, I couldn’t get my microphone to work properly and I was on call and I had a patient in the hospital who was sick and it was just crazy.

RICH ROLL: Well, the audience didn’t seem to care. You didn’t feel distracted to me in any way. That was a very popular episode. People loved it. And I made you promise that if you found yourself in LA that you had to come by. And here we are.

DR. WILL BULSIEWICZ: Here we are. It’s the first time I’ve been in LA in about 15 years.

RICH ROLL: Really?

DR. WILL BULSIEWICZ: So, yeah, seriously, it’s crazy. The last time that I was here, I was actually interviewing for GI Fellowship at UCLA, and this was, you know, I was in my late 20s and clearly not married and no kids, and now it’s my life has completely changed.

RICH ROLL: Yeah, there’s a lot of changes. There’s a lot of stuff to catch up on. You’ve been on quite the trajectory in lockstep with everybody’s growing fascination around all things microbiome and gut health. And your particular skill set and level of interest intersects perfectly with all this emerging science that’s occurring right now that we’re going to get into.

So I’m really excited to sit down with you, and my desire and intention for this particular episode is to have it be a little bit distinct from the first one, where we kind of went into your backstory and covered a lot of ground, of course. But for people who haven’t listened to that or haven’t stumbled across that episode, I mean, definitely go check it out. I think it’s episode 538 from a year and a half ago or something like that.

I would very much like this to be a standalone, comprehensive review of all things microbiome, gut health, why it’s important, and the many ways that we can take action in our own lives to not only sidestep disease, but to live to our healthiest potential.

DR. WILL BULSIEWICZ: Yeah, I mean, I think we could do an incredible episode where we take it all the way from the top. That way you have the introductory material that you need, but we’re going to bring you all the way to the cutting edge. There’s studies that I’m ready to talk about today that have been published in the last few weeks.

Latest Breakthroughs in Microbiome Research

RICH ROLL: Well, let’s come out of the gate hot with the cutting edge. What has got you excited in terms of the latest literature and what we’re discovering about the microbiome?

DR. WILL BULSIEWICZ: I was at a microbiome meeting recently and blown away. And this is coming from the guy who’s nerding out on microbiome studies all day, blown away by what’s happening in cancer research with the microbiome – complete game changer.

So what we’re seeing here is that, first of all, going back a few years, we discovered that cancer has a microbiome.

RICH ROLL: How does that work? A distinct microbiome that is differentiated from how we commonly think about it. Explain that.

Cancer’s Hidden Microbiome

DR. WILL BULSIEWICZ: I’m not even talking about the gut microbiome. So let me start with this. Microbes are everywhere. They cover us from the top of our head to the tip of our toes. They’re most concentrated inside of our gut. But they’re on plants. They’re part of the plant microbiome. They’re in the soil. Obviously, everything that’s alive in this planet either is a microbiome or has a microbiome. Those are the two choices.

So everything has a microbiome. And I thought a tumor would be, you know, I mean, a sterile mass of cells. And a few years ago, they discovered that tumors, cancer, cell cancer tumors, actually have their own microbiome separate from the gut microbiome. They have their own microbiome.

And they took this further. They were taking a look at pancreatic cancer, which is one of our most deadly cancers, and they analyzed the microbiome of the tumor, not the person’s gut microbiome of the tumor, and discovered that a person who has a low diversity within the tumor microbiome has a worse prognosis or a lower likelihood of survival relative to the person whose tumor has a high diversity.

RICH ROLL: So explain what that means, low diversity.

Understanding Microbiome Diversity

DR.