Villages Vitality: Senior Life Unscripted

Transforming Longevity: Dr. Hany Demian on AI in Healthcare

Mike Roth Season 8 Episode 9

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Dr. Hany Demian on AI, Wearables, and Personalized Longevity Medicine for Seniors

Host Mike Roth launches Season 8 of Villages Vitality Senior Life Unscripted and interviews Dr. Hany Demian, founder and CEO of Praesentia Healthcare and CEO/owner of BioSpine Institute, about how AI and wearable data can shift care from reactive to predictive, personalized intervention. Demian explains using continuous metrics (sleep, stress, temperature, EKG, activity) combined with lab testing (18 blood markers, hormones, supplements, and organ-age testing) to identify risk and guide habit changes, nutrition, supplements, and lifestyle. He challenges the idea that aging must be endured, describing aging as driven by cellular energy decline and outlining regenerative approaches (exosomes, peptides, stem cells, NAD, therapeutic plasma exchange, intermittent fasting). He emphasizes sleep, exercise/strength training (including home programs), diet/protein, and regular checkups, discusses joint health and warmups to prevent injury, shares cautious optimism on stem cells, explains peptide use, and provides contact details via DrDemian.com, including virtual testing and follow-up. 

00:00 Season Eight Kickoff
00:39 Meet Dr Demian
02:12 Wearables Data Problem
03:51 AI Personalized Coaching
04:57 Testing And Age Markers
05:19 Clinics And Locations
06:00 Myths About Aging
06:43 Reversing Aging Basics
07:44 Regenerative Protocols
08:29 Timeline And Consistency
10:07 Foundations Sleep Exercise Diet
11:45 Gym Alternatives At Home
12:24 Sorting Real Treatments
14:02 Ghost Cholesterol Warning
15:33 Key Aging Biomarkers
16:50 Sleep Diet Walking
19:33 Avoiding Joint Replacements
20:48 Warmup Matters
23:45 Stem Cells and Peptides
27:24 Aging Optional Book
28:20 Wrap Up and Supporters

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 Transforming Longevity: Dr. Hany Demian on AI in Healthcare

[00:00:00] Dolores: Welcome to Season eight of Villages Vitality Life, seniors Life unscripted. In this new season, we talk to leaders of clubs and interesting folks who live in and around The Villages. We also talk to people who have information vital to seniors. You will get perspectives of what is happening in and around The Villages, Florida, in addition.

We will add more information for all seniors. We are a listener supported podcast. 

[00:00:35] Mike: This is Mike Roth 

on Village's Vitality

Senior Life Unscripted today I have Dr Hany Demian with me Thanks for joining me Dr Demian

[00:00:46] Hany Demian: Thanks for having me, Mike. It's a pleasure.

[00:00:48] Mike Roth ai5: Let me tell our listeners a little bit about you Dr Demian brings a unique grounded perspective to one of the most timely conversations in healthcare That is how artificial intelligence is reshaping longevity predictive medicine and human performance With a background spanning surgery emergency medicine and chronic pain care Dr Demian approaches AI not as a technology trend but as a clinical tool of transforming how we understand aging disease risk biological decline These things are very important to my listeners so you're really talking to the right demographic here. His work focuses on using data-driven systems medicine to shift healthcare from reactive treatment oh yeah that's that's 1.0 That's what 

[00:01:39] Mike: Attia talks about all the time to something he calls Medicine 2.0 you're focused on using data-driven systems based medicine to shift healthcare from reactive to predictive personalized intervention. He's also the founder and CEO Praesentia Healthcare LLC.

[00:01:59] Mike Roth ai5: He is Concerned with how AI is changing longevity in medi medicine and you're developing a wearable technology do you want to talk any about that wearable technology today

 

[00:02:11] Hany Demian: I would love to.

[00:02:12] Mike: I

[00:02:12] Hany Demian: I appreciate the introduction, like you mentioned, I did.

General surgery, did chronic pain management

Emergency medicine.

[00:02:20] Dr. Hany Demian ai: All the problem was that we visited the patient

For five, 10 minutes, half an hour, or during the procedure.

[00:02:29] Hany Demian: I don't have a full picture of their

life before and after. 

I don't have a

picture of the patient or data of the patient 24 7. 

[00:02:35] Dr. Hany Demian ai: sleep temperature, E K G all of these data are wasted.

People wear their wearables, whether it is a 

Apple IWatch

without actually knowing how powerful this data is.

[00:02:48] Mike: wear a Samsung watch which tells me the daily number of steps that I've walked

[00:02:53] Hany Demian: Yep.

[00:02:54] Mike: And that's that's nice But I have yet to and I'm a computer guy but I'm I've yet to figure out how to figure out what the average number of daily steps was over the last 30 days or the last 60 days I mean it it vanishes it

[00:03:09] Hany Demian: Exactly.

[00:03:10] Mike: it takes my pulse rate you know and BMRI but the data vanishes 

[00:03:15] Hany Demian: Exactly, and you don't know what to do with it. And your sleep is the same. Your stress

[00:03:19] Mike: Your

[00:03:20] Hany Demian: is it actually above the limits? Below the limits, how it affects your heart rate, your body temperature,

Mental health.

[00:03:27] Dr. Hany Demian ai: We take

all this data, compare it to your biometrics and the test that you've done, blood, work 

[00:03:35] Hany Demian: E K G is the test that we start with aging

and we lookat it and seehow these habits, your daily activities, can affect

[00:03:42] Dr. Hany Demian ai: You developing chronic condition, aging 

a stroke, heart attack, blood pressure or cholesterol 

[00:03:50] Hany Demian: And then we take all

For ai 

[00:03:52] Mike: ai Mm-hmm AI will

[00:03:53] Hany Demian: analyze this significantly with our systems.

I will tell you, you know what?

I think you need to sleep better.

[00:03:57] Dr. Hany Demian ai: You lower

Your stress.

And this is how we're gonna lower your stress.

through supplements, Some kind of food that you take

we notice that this food increase your heart rate, increase your body temperature, increase your blood pressure.

So why don't we lower this, drink more water, drink less coffee, have a walk in the sun, go out for 30 minutes. you said you are walking a lot and it's measure your steps, but are those the healthy steps? are you really exposed to the sun? Exposed to the air, exposed to having the vitamin D that you need, calcium and whatnot.

A I , in a personalized approach Will Suggest tweaks in your habits,

[00:04:34] Hany Demian: Supplements that you need, and the way that your lifestyle should be. Reduce your stress. have more free days in your schedule. If you're doing

podcast in the morning, maybe you should do them midday . 

 

 

 

 

[00:04:46] Mike: it's an app that takes advantage of someone's iPhone or

[00:04:50] Hany Demian: We start with test Mike. So we test your blood. We have 18 markers. We test your hormones, we test your supplements. We do an age test to see. Each organ in your body, how fast it's deteriorating or aging or not aging. And we look at all this, compare it. So we actually look at the source of where this data coming from. 

[00:05:13] Mike: So where is your practice located? 

[00:05:15] Dr. Hany Demian ai: We have seven practices

IN

Florida.

 

[00:05:18] Dr. Hany Demian ai: Hopefully, we'll be in New York and Michigan by the end of the year.

[00:05:21] Mike: Where is your closest location to The Villages 

[00:05:24] Hany Demian: I think Orlando will be the closest.

[00:05:25] Mike: Orlando would be the closest Yeah Okay That's about 70 miles away

 

[00:05:29] Hany Demian: We get a lot of patients from The Villages and we've done,

[00:05:32] Mike: and

[00:05:33] Hany Demian: Quite a bit of seminars,

[00:05:34] Mike: of

[00:05:35] Hany Demian: Through the company. Bio Spine Institute.

 

[00:05:37] Mike: Okay Yeah I've heard the ads for the Biop Spine

[00:05:39] Hany Demian: Yeah.

[00:05:40] Mike: Where you one of the founders of that 

[00:05:41] Hany Demian: No. I'm not, but I'm the CEO 

Owner.

[00:05:44] Mike: Well that they do some wonderful work Wonderful work 

[00:05:47] Hany Demian: Yes.

 

[00:05:48] Mike: I think one of my friends that was one of the patients Okay let me ask you this question What is the biggest myth that people still believe about aging and what the science actually say today 

[00:06:00] Hany Demian: Aging has been

Been the secret

been the secret

for many years. Everybody's been looking for the Fountain of Youth.

And I think we're almost founded, Mike. So of the biggest myths for aging.

Aging just

a phase. You have to go through it,

to go through it

you have to endure it.

to endure it

It's not like that anymore.

[00:06:21] Dr. Hany Demian ai: Aging is not just a phase. You can,

Stop it. You can reverse it. You can avoid it, 

[00:06:25] Hany Demian: Right? Because aging now has got hallmark.

[00:06:28] Mike: You now has

[00:06:29] Hany Demian: You can reverse it. Yes.

[00:06:30] Mike: How would one reverse aging

 

[00:06:32] Hany Demian: Aging in a nutshell is.

 

[00:06:34] Mike: is 

[00:06:35] Hany Demian: Right? And I'm not talking energy to do the day-to-day activities that you want. 

[00:06:40] Dr. Hany Demian ai: It's energy on a cellular level. Our cells get to the point they don't have the energy in their mitochondria. To restore the body function, to get you back into recovery, to get you back, your heart back into beating regularly.

Your brain thinking properly, your, your muscles acting properly, you don't recover. That's why when we get older, we cannot train like we were in our twenties. If we get this energy back, you will be able to train like you are in twenties and there are. Protocols now that we can put the patient through or the client through it and they will be able to train as much as they were in their thirties and forties.

So once you get to the mitochondrial cellular level, you see what the breakdown,.

[00:07:24] Mike: Are you talking about stem cells or regenerative medicine there

 

[00:07:30] Dr. Hany Demian ai: I'm talking about regenerative medicine in general. Yes

Yeah, yeah. Exosomes and peptides stem cells.

A aging has three hallmarks.

Number one Our DNA breaks down,

breaks down

 

[00:07:43] Hany Demian: so,

We go back to stem cells and exosomes to do that.

[00:07:47] Mike: exosomes to do that

[00:07:48] Hany Demian: The mitochondria, it breaks down, doesn't have energy.

we can add supplements like NAD, we can add exosomes and peptides to give back the energy, an accumulation of damaged cells that the body cannot get rid of. Right. We can do that through therapeutic plasma exchange, through intermittent fasting, eating certain kind of foods that clean those and cleanse the body from those dead cells.

Once you get to that point, you'll get your energy back and the recovery will be much better.

 

[00:08:16] Mike: mm-hmm

[00:08:17] Hany Demian: The other,

[00:08:18] Mike: How long would something like that take on the average 70-year-old person

[00:08:21] Hany Demian: As a holistic approach, you cannot do one and leave the if, if somebody is really consistent with this. I think within six months you can see results. we've done it into circles, and we like our patients to to commit to a year worth of treatment. you'll get body composition.

You'll get muscle mass, and you'll get your sleeve back and you get all those foundational, important factors back. The rest is super easy once you get their sleep, which we know when we age, our sleep get disrupted, we don't get enough rem sleep. Our exercise, we are not able to exercise because of pains and aches and muscle loss.

We lose quite a bit of muscle. Starting at age 35, we lose also almost 1% of our muscle mass every year.

[00:09:09] Mike: every year

[00:09:09] Hany Demian: That number.

[00:09:10] Mike: number

[00:09:12] Hany Demian: by age 60

[00:09:13] Mike: age

[00:09:13] Hany Demian: triple by age of 70.

[00:09:15] Mike: Right. 

 

 

 

 

 

[00:09:16] Dr. Hany Demian ai: And . 

[00:09:16] Mike Roth ai5: here in The Villages 

[00:09:17] Hany Demian: Yeah. after we eat less protein. 

Most people don't want to go to the gym and when they go to the gym, they don't, they're not able to push hard due to aches and pains. And I understand that.

And then. Our diet changes. We don't eat as much because appetite slows down. We don't want to be full because we know when we eat certain kind of food, it hurts, it doesn't digest.

It keeps us up at night, so we eat less. So, unfortunately that increase the insulin,

[00:09:46] Mike: increased

[00:09:47] Hany Demian: Resistance and increase the glucose sensitivity as well,

[00:09:50] Mike: sensitivity as

[00:09:50] Hany Demian: so it

[00:09:51] Mike: Mm-hmm 

[00:09:51] Hany Demian: it becomes a problem there.

[00:09:53] Mike: problem

[00:09:53] Hany Demian: Right. So,

[00:09:54] Mike: so

[00:09:55] Hany Demian: yeah, go ahead.

[00:09:56] Mike: are some of the things that people in their sixties and seventies who wanna stay healthy and independent longer what kind of things can they do that will make the most difference

 

[00:10:06] Hany Demian: Four foundational factors like sleep. You have to really dig deep into sleep. This is where the wearable come really handy when you look really at your sleep is at any age you think that you slept properly, but when you look closely, you didn't. So. Be obsessed about the sleep. Be obsessed about your exercise.

You have to go to the gym. There is no other way. Muscle power and muscle tone and muscle size is the only currency that will keep us mobile and independent. There's no other way around it. it's been tested

being

a lot and muscle is the only thing, the currency that will keep us,

[00:10:44] Mike: will

[00:10:44] Hany Demian: Independent

[00:10:45] Mike: independent

[00:10:46] Hany Demian: diet.

[00:10:47] Mike: diet

[00:10:48] Hany Demian: And supplements, 

[00:10:49] Mike: supplements 

[00:10:50] Hany Demian: that are designed

designed

Mike.

for you

It's not the same, like for me, it's not the same like for anybody else.

like for

has to be done properly depending on your activity. You are intellectual guy, you're doing podcast. You need certain supplements for brain health, for heart health.

Right. Some others, I like to be on the golf course all day or whatnot. They need other supplements. They are in the sun. They need to be protected. They need joint health. They need muscle health. They need back health. so each person, depending on their activity, we design the supplement. And this is where it really comes, the point that we, I always say it's not one size fits all.

That's where individualized medicine becoming really popular.

 

[00:11:34] Mike: And what you said kind of does mirror what Dr Peter Attia has said about exercise Yeah not all of us can exercise Some of us have bad shoulders bad knees bad backs and for other people the gym is just not attractive 

[00:11:51] Hany Demian: Yes.

[00:11:52] Mike: I think the gym is a breeding ground for germs and disease and colds and whatever

[00:11:57] Hany Demian: Yes,

[00:11:58] Mike: frankly I try to stay outta the gym I'd rather walk in the neighborhood for an hour than go to the gym for a half hour 

[00:12:05] Hany Demian: I would agree. And that's why we work with you, Mike, and design home exercises, right? There's nothing wrong with home exercises.

[00:12:12] Mike: Home

[00:12:13] Hany Demian: Yeah. We learned during COVID that home exercises will be the same as gym exercises.

 

[00:12:18] Mike: Yeah It it depends on the intensity We hear a lot about new treatments how does a a senior get to know what what is real and what is just too risky untested or proven wrong you know whether it's these plasma rich in in injections you know frankly I've I've dismissed that as as pure hocomb you you can't take stem cells from a a 70-year-old person's fat and turn em into good stem cells to to regenerate muscle and there were people I think selling cells from goats so what what kind of new treatments supplements do you believe in?

[00:12:57] Hany Demian: I believe in data driven evidence-based treatments, and the reason that most doctors now are coming. On social media is influencers trying to be doctors, unfortunately. Right? So doctors had to stand up and ha we had to, to put our word there. So like you said, a lot of those are, are not only not tested and not evidence-based.

Even when it's evidence-based, Mike, it might not work for you. Right? So patient selection is quite important.

 

[00:13:32] Mike: Yeah I had Anecdotal based evidence of only one or two cases doesn't prove that a therapy works Double blind studies something I happen to believe in does prove it but before we get more into that let's take a short break and listen to Dr Craig Curtis talk about Alzheimer's tip Go ahead Dr Curtis.

 

[00:13:51] Dr. Craig Curtis: When we talk about the causes of heart attacks and strokes and peripheral vascular disease, we all know about things such as diabetes, smoking, and poor diet choices. Those are all called modifiable risk factors. You can change those and you can lower your risk. And then if we talk about non-modifiable risk factors, things you cannot change.

There's a cholesterol that has been labeled. The ghost cholesterol. 

[00:14:25] Mike: I've heard of good cholesterol and bad cholesterol. Now I have to worry about a ghost cholesterol. 

[00:14:31] Dr. Craig Curtis: That's right. There is a cholesterol known as lipoprotein A, that cholesterol has been known about for a long time. However, scientists over the last decade have discovered that this is one of the major.

Risk factors for heart disease, cardiovascular disease, cerebral vascular disease, such as strokes and peripheral vascular disease, such as problems in the legs. And what they've discovered is that this is a genetically linked lipoproteins. What that means is. It runs in families, and unfortunately, we've had no way to modify this.

[00:15:11] Edward: To learn more, visit his website, CraigCurtisMD.com, or call 3 5 2 5 0 0 5 2 5 2 to attend a free seminar. 

[00:15:21] Mike: Thank you Dr Curtis I'm back with Dr Hany Demian tell me what are the most important biomarkers that people should be paying attention to as they age

 

[00:15:34] Hany Demian: Not only in their age, Mike, I think from as early as their twenties and thirties, because if they look at dose when they age, it might be too late. But I really believe that aging start in our twenties through our habits, environment choices. Obsessed with few of them.

Testing for everybody that walks our through our clinic. I like the applebee for cardiovascular health. I like glucose control and glucose sensitivity and insulin resistance. Inflammation markers. I'm very big on inflammation and inflammatory and chronic inflammation in the body.

[00:16:11] Mike: body

[00:16:12] Hany Demian: muscle mass, muscle strength, grip strength.

Very important,

Kidney and liver

Is Very important, 

[00:16:19] Dr. Hany Demian ai: and we really have to look into kidney age otherwise you aren't going to make it to old age. 

[00:16:24] Hany Demian: VO two max for cardiorespiratory. Health and Body composition

Is very important. I look at hormones.

at her bones

But hormones are really important as well, just to know where they are.

[00:16:33] Mike: Right now most people here in The Villages are more than 50 years of age but what is one thing that People are doing or not doing that they should be doing that's quietly accelerating their aging process or increasing their risk of physical

decline. 

[00:16:52] Hany Demian: I think number one is Ignoring their sleep. And I've seen it a lot. I see it as in my father. My father is in his nineties. He doesn't care to sleep much. He nap during the day. Sleep is very important, right? For recovery, their diet. My father, every time I see him eating something with sugar or whatever, I tell him, I said, I'm 90.

Who cares? Right? No, you should care, right? Because you need to live. Healthy for the grandkids and for your activity and to be as independent as possible. The thing that my father did, he was a walker all his life, right? He walks faster than me till today. Like if we're walking together, he will be like, he.

Far along right. And he walks. He didn't use his car. He walked,

[00:17:36] Mike: car

[00:17:37] Hany Demian: he used to walk me to school. He walked to the hospital. He was a doctor and walks, winter rain, sunshine, he walks and that's why I believe till now he's quite independent in his nineties, right? So

 

[00:17:52] Mike: walking is a great exercise

[00:17:54] Hany Demian: very important.

[00:17:55] Mike: very important I'm gonna call it moderate paced Walking much more important than walking slowly I some people describe me as a fast walker but I only consider myself a moderate paced walker I think walking really exercises a lot of muscles

[00:18:09] Hany Demian: Yep.

[00:18:10] Mike: one side Yeah And then actually it gives you time listen to podcasts in your earbuds

[00:18:16] Hany Demian: Yep.

[00:18:17] Mike: ,You're walking

[00:18:17] Hany Demian: able till today, in his nineties, go up the stairs, second floor, go to the basement, go out in the backyard because the muscles, the lower his lower body. Is quite strong from walking. he's a walker. He like, when I tell him like let's go to get something from the convenience store.

we will walk together, go to the mall. I can't keep up with him till today because he is a moderate pace walker. I'm a slow walker. I can walk on a treadmill, but he is, once he's oriented to a target, he's walking. So, yeah, so walking, sleep, diet. if we ignore our protein in the diet, which a lot of us do we will decline.

The muscle will decline, and otherwise just regular checkups with doctor. Checkup is not once a year. I don't believe that once a year is good enough. I think every few months you need to do the checkup. You need to check your blood work.

Blood sugar

[00:19:11] Mike: blood

[00:19:11] Hany Demian: This is very important.

That's the wearable

[00:19:13] Mike: I

[00:19:14] Hany Demian: are more,

[00:19:14] Mike: you I see

[00:19:15] Hany Demian: yeah, go ahead.

[00:19:16] Mike: see my personal physician about every six to eight weeks you know one of the things you said which leads me to a question is a lot of folks here in The Villages whether it's from playing pickleball or something else wind up with bad knees and they wind up needing to get a knee replacement is there anything people can do who are in their sixties to eighties To avoid knee replacement or hip replacement or shoulder replacement I've heard of I mean it it seems like these kinds of things are extremely.

 

[00:19:48] Hany Demian: I would agree. the reason we grind our knees is we don't drink enough water. We don't eat enough food containing collagen. We all our life, we abuse your, our knees. I've seen a lot of people that, whether they're leading sedentary life. Or they're really not using their knees and they decide at one point in their life I'm trying to do pickleball.

So warming up is very important, and the older we get, the more we need warming up, stretching gentle physical exercises. So even if you're sitting at home, you know what I mean? Doing moving your knees, moving the hips before you really get engaged in a pickle ball match or whatnot is very important, right?

[00:20:31] Mike: let me back you up cause you said warmup exercises I've never been a big believer in warmup exercises and there were some activities where I'm forced to do warmup exercises like improvisational theater I've always thought of em as a waste of time because you know I don't need to stretch my arms or walk around why is it so important

 

[00:20:55] Hany Demian: It gives the receptors and the muscle the indication that you will start an activity. Whether it's the shoulder, hip, or knee, it's not used to hard work unless you give it. A little bit of warmup because it moves the synovial, the fluid in the joint around, right. It makes sure that the muscles are not tense at one area.

'cause all our muscles, all our movement is flexion and extension. There is a muscle that does something and the other one does the opposite. So you're giving both the opportunity to start contracting. It's like, like. Sports car. Right? You cannot take the sports cars on the track without having few warming laps, right?

I always tell my patient, I used to race cars, so you cannot just jump in. You need to get this oil in the engine, right? You need the engine to start warming up. the shifts and the gears to start working together and whatnot. You cannot take it from really cold. To really pushing the car hard on the track.

Joints are like that. Joints will give you more if you do a little bit. And we're not talking half an hour. I'm talking 10 minutes, 10, 15 minutes, right? I lived in Toronto and before removing snow or shoveling snow, what should I do? Warm up. I stretched my back ' cause I hurt my back years ago.

Shoveling snow as well. Warm up the back little stretches, go down, touch my toes, and extend all the way back side to side before I go do it. Because that really get the synovial fluid in the joint. Warm up. it actually spread it so the joint is not dry. Right? And get the muscles working together.

 

[00:22:31] Mike: Okay now now now I understand that it makes more sense opposing muscles and and and getting the joint used to moving but but I actually I I did race cars on racetracks

[00:22:42] Hany Demian: you can't take a cold. Right?

[00:22:44] Mike: take gold

[00:22:45] Hany Demian: You need to warm it up.

[00:22:46] Mike: you needed that warmup lap but

[00:22:48] Hany Demian: Yes.

[00:22:48] Mike: one warmup

[00:22:49] Hany Demian: That's it.

[00:22:50] Mike: on the backside That's where the problem was for me They gave us one cool down lap but if you stopped your car at the end of the cool down lap you were about 50 50 on warping your rear rotors 

[00:23:03] Hany Demian: Right.

[00:23:04] Mike: rotors because wherever the pad touched the rotor it was gonna warp around that And so every time I a streetcar I would wound up buying a set of brakes and a set of rotors because it didn't have the cool down in in the working out of our own bodies Is it important to have a cool down as well as a warmup 

[00:23:22] Hany Demian: I don't believe in the cool down. I believe

[00:23:24] Mike: I believe

[00:23:25] Hany Demian: you push hard till the end and then whenever you stop, you stop.

[00:23:28] Mike: Okay a couple of last questions What is your opinion of stem cell therapy now 

[00:23:34] Hany Demian: I believe it's the future, but I don't believe that we're there yet.

[00:23:38] Mike: would very end Mm-hmm

[00:23:39] Hany Demian: The

[00:23:40] Mike: Okay

[00:23:40] Hany Demian: the science is good,

[00:23:41] Mike: is

[00:23:42] Hany Demian: honestly, Mike, I haven't seen good quality yet.

[00:23:44] Mike: quality yet I kind of agree with you and you mentioned peptides and regenerative medicine Tell us a little bit about the way you use it in your practice

 

[00:23:54] Hany Demian: So peptides, I used it personally during COVID.

[00:23:56] Mike: during

[00:23:57] Hany Demian: once I hit

[00:23:58] Mike: I

[00:23:59] Hany Demian: My mid forties,

[00:24:00] Mike: mid

[00:24:00] Hany Demian: my recovery slowed down, so I looked everywhere and I looked into the peptides and I discovered that the only compound that we know or known to human that will be able to go inside the cell.

Peptide because it's amino acids, exactly like protein. I eat a lot of protein, protein bars, protein drinks. So it's exactly like amino acids. It's naturally existing in our body and it's connected by peptide bone, which is the easiest. So they go inside that cell and delivered the message that we need to, to deliver most medication that we take.

And I'm not against western medicine, it's just western medicine. Is like a hammer. the medicine will go in, cannot enter the cell and force the cell to have that or to act the way that we want it to act. That's why we got side effects to every single medication. Peptides are not like that.

They go inside the cell, they tell it what to do gently and fixes the mitochondria. We'll tell it, you know what, we need you to heal. We need you to push a little bit and get some more energy. Going to the, the CRE cycle or where the power is generated and said, okay, we need to produce more power and we need you to heal.

So it starts secreting healing factors, growth factors, and basically do what we needed to do, right? Gently having yet to see side effects. But I am very cautious with using them. I'm not using them where following the hype I'd like. People to know that it's still a chemical, it still need to be used with the direction of a physician who knows what they're doing and design it exactly for you.

I can advise somebody to use those kind of peptides, but it wouldn't work for somebody else. 

[00:25:46] Dr. Hany Demian ai: So use it properly . Use pharmaceutical grade .

[00:25:50] Hany Demian: And use it under the supervision of a physician. They are magnificent for healing, recovery, pain, specifically cartilage, collagen really, really revolutionized medicine in the last few years.

 

[00:26:05] Mike: Okay one of our listeners wants to get a hold of you and your practice how do they do that 

[00:26:10] Hany Demian: You can reach me on my website, DrDemian.com. Instagram, Demian, LinkedIn. Demian.

[00:26:23] Mike: Make good sense to me if someone wants to call your office to set up a possible appointment in one of your practices how do they do that?

 

[00:26:30] Hany Demian: On the website, DrDemian.com, D-R-D-E-M-I-A-N.com. Leave a message and my team, myself will reach out and get an appointment. We start with virtual if they're not in the areas where our clinics are and we send most of the tests to their house. So we send it to the house, we get the test, send it back, and we will have a virtual call and we'll discuss the results.

We'll discuss direction, supplements and we'll advise them with the supplements they need to use with their program. And we will monitor their progress, whether through a wearable or whether, virtual calls.

 

[00:27:07] Mike: Very good Is there anything that I failed to ask you that you wanted to mention today 

[00:27:12] Hany Demian: I'm writing a book. What if Aging is optional? I truly believe that aging will be considered the condition in the next five to 10 years. I don't want the listeners to think that this is a phase. I have to go through it. I have to endure it because I'm old. No, you don't have to suffer. You don't have to struggle.

Most of the symptoms could be stopped, could be reversed, and you could live a youthful, fruitful life. Forever, till our time comes.

 

[00:27:45] Mike: So how close are you to getting the book out so that we can buy it on Amazon

 

[00:27:48] Hany Demian: I'm six months out. I met recently with an oncologist, a cancer doctor, and she's writing a chapter how to prevent Cancer. So I'm waiting for her. 

[00:27:59] Mike: I'm waiting for her That would be a very popular chapter

[00:28:02] Hany Demian: Yeah.

[00:28:02] Mike: Hany thanks again for being on the show and I hope some listeners contact you

 

[00:28:06] Hany Demian: Thanks a lot, and thank you for having me, Mike. Have a good day.

 

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