Category: Cardiovascular Health

I have just had two more articles published in Today’s Practitioner Magazine!

Today’s Practitioner magazine is a free online practitioner magazine dedicated to advancing integrative medicine – I am a regular contributing author.

My two latest published articles:

Lithium Orotate and Brain Health

https://todayspractitioner.com/…/lithium-orotate-and…

Treating Kidney Stones with Chanca piedra (Phyllanthus niuri (Stonebreaker)

https://todayspractitioner.com/…/reducing-kidney…

For more health news, check out my website:

http://roblamberton.com

By Rob Lamberton, BSc Biology, FNTP, FDN-P (candidate)
#RobLamberton #RobertLamberton


🧠 What Is AoPWV?

Aortic Pulse Wave Velocity (AoPWV) measures the speed at which the pulse wave travels through the aorta — directly reflecting arterial stiffness and vascular aging.
Unlike cholesterol levels or blood pressure alone, AoPWV provides a functional measure of vascular elasticity, the key determinant of cardiovascular resilience.


📊 The Global Standard

The Reference Values for Arterial Stiffness Collaboration published the landmark study:

European Heart Journal (2010; 31:2338–2350) — “Determinants of pulse wave velocity in healthy people and in the presence of cardiovascular risk factors.”

This study established age- and blood-pressure-adjusted norms for carotid-femoral pulse wave velocity (cfPWV), now recognized worldwide as the clinical gold standard for arterial stiffness.


💪 Maintaining Arterial Flexibility

  • Engage in regular aerobic and resistance training
  • Support nitric oxide production with beetroot, pomegranate, and leafy greens
  • Manage stress and prioritize deep restorative sleep
  • Include polyphenols (pomegranate, resveratrol, olive leaf) and omega-3s for endothelial protection
  • Ensure optimal magnesium and K2 for calcium regulation and arterial elasticity

🧬 Why It Matters

AoPWV identifies vascular aging years before clinical symptoms appear — enabling early lifestyle or nutraceutical intervention.

Monitoring this marker empowers individuals to maintain cardiovascular flexibility, reduce disease risk, and extend healthspan as well as lifespan.

My Clinical Experience

If you would like to know more about my functional approach that I use to help clients deal with health issues, maintain a good AoPWV and optimize their health, reach out to me.

🔗 Learn more at: roblamberton.com

#AoPWV #CardiovascularHealth #VascularFlexibility #Longevity #HeartHealth #FunctionalMedicine #IntegrativeMedicine #RobLamberton #RobertLamberton

By Rob Lamberton, BSc, FNTP, FDN-P (Candidate)
Product Formulator & Functional Health Consultant | roblamberton.com

🌿 Ancient Wisdom Meets Modern Science

In the Amazon and Brazilian forests, the medicinal herb Pedra Hume Caá — often called the “vegetable insulin” — has long been valued for its ability to balance blood sugar and strengthen kidneys and liver. Modern phytochemical studies confirm its effects on alpha-glucosidase inhibition, antioxidant defense, and insulin sensitivity (Rain-Tree

🧠 Key Traditional Uses

🌿 Supports glucose regulation and metabolic balance
💧 Assists kidney and urinary detoxification
🔥 Reduces inflammation and oxidative stress
🩺 May help normalize lipid and blood-pressure levels


🧬 Phytochemistry & Mechanisms

Pedra Hume Caá contains potent flavonoids and polyphenols — including myrciacitrins, myrciaphenones, quercitrin, catechin, and gallic acid.
Mechanisms include:

  • Inhibition of α-glucosidase & α-amylase → slower carb absorption
  • Improved insulin receptor sensitivity and AMPK activation
  • Protection of liver and kidney tissue via antioxidant enzymes

💡 Formulator’s Insight

As a Product Formulator & Functional Health Consultant, I view Pedra Hume Caá as a cornerstone medicinal herb for metabolic and longevity formulas. It pairs well with:

  • Berberine, Gymnema, Cinnamon, Chromium, Gymnemna sylvestre, Bitter Melon for glycaemic support
  • ALA, CoQ10, PQQ for mitochondrial protection
  • Rhodiola & Ashwagandha for stress-axis stability

⚠️ Because of its hypoglycaemic effects, monitor closely when combined with antidiabetic or antihypertensive agents.


⚖️ Safety Profile

Human and animal data show low toxicity at traditional doses. Avoid during pregnancy or in hypoglycaemia. Standard use: leaf tea (1 cup 2-3× daily) or 1–2 g leaf capsules per meal.


My Personal Experience Clinical Experience: (anecdotal)

Pedra Hume Caá includes compounds referred to as Aldose reductase inhibitors (ARIs) which are substances that act on nerve endings exposed to high blood sugar concentration to prevent some of the chemical imbalances that occur and thus protect the nerves.

I have prescribed to patients dealing with blood sugar/diabetes issues  – as part of a complete functional approach a blood sugar/diabetes formulation I developed which includes Pedra Hume Caá and within 24 – 48 hours their neuropathic pain in their legs and feet disappeared after many years of discomfort.

📚 Key References

  1. Rain-Tree Tropical Plant Database – Pedra Hume Caá (Myrcia spp.), 2025.
  2. Figueiredo-González M et al. J Pharm Biomed Anal. 2016; 118:322-327.
  3. de Oliveira A et al. J Appl Pharma Sci. 2015; 5:89-93.

🤝 Work With Me

I help nutraceutical companies and clinics design science-driven products using medicinal herbs that optimize metabolic health, cognition & longevity. Let’s collaborate on your next evidence-based formula – plus I have well developed supply chains to access these lesser known but very powerful medicinal herbs.

🌐 roblamberton.com

FormulationScience #MedicinalHerbs #MetabolicHealth #IntegrativeHealth #BotanicalMedicine #Longevity #ProductFormulator #RobLamberton #RobertLamberton

For years, we heard moderate drinking could benefit the heart. But new research says the risk begins with the first sip (WHO 2022

1. The Evidence

A global analysis of 28 million people found that even one drink daily increases risk for cancer, liver disease, and premature aging. The Canadian 2025 guidelines now classify two drinks per week as “high risk.”

2. Alcohol’s Hidden Sleep Disruption 😴

  • Suppresses melatonin and delays circadian rhythm
  • Reduces REM and deep sleep by 20–40 %
  • Raises cortisol and heart rate overnight
  • Blunts growth hormone and liver detox while you sleep

Poor sleep then worsens hormone balance, mood, and weight regulation — creating a vicious cycle of stress and fatigue.

3. Functional Health Connections

Alcohol → gut permeability → inflammation → oxidative stress → adrenal activation. Together these impair detoxification and mitochondrial function — the foundation of energy and longevity.

4. Practical Steps

  • Experiment with alcohol-free weeks and track sleep with wearables.
  • Support detox with nutrients (glutathione, taurine, B-complex).
  • Use adaptogens or magnesium to relax without the nightcap.

✨ Your sleep is your greatest healer — protect it by reducing the toxic load that starts with “just one drink.”

My Personal Experience

Early in my working career, I was involved in the medical/surgical business and I spent a lot of time sitting in on surgical cases – it was a great education on the power of high tech medicine!

If I was going out for business lunches or dinners with colleagues or clients it was pretty common for everyone to drink!

How times have changed…

How about you? Have you changed your drinking habits based upon the recent research suggesting that no amount of alcohol consumption is safe?


For decades, chronic diseases like diabetes, hypertension, and even cancer were regarded as illnesses of middle or late adulthood. Today, however, the script is flipping—with a striking rise in chronic conditions, notably colorectal cancer, among Millennials (born 1981–1996) and Gen Zers (born 1997–2012).

An Unprecedented Trend: Cancer Rates Are Rising for Young Adults

Recent data reveal a surge in colorectal cancer (CRC) diagnoses among adults under 50 worldwide. The American Cancer Society noted that, in 2023, 20% of all CRC diagnoses occurred in patients younger than 55—double what was seen in 1995. Early-onset CRC rates (diagnosed before age 50) are climbing by 2% per year. Even more troubling, these cancers are often detected at more advanced stages, severely impacting survival rates.

  • CRC is now the No. 1 cause of cancer death in men and the No. 2 in women under age 50.
  • Millennials are twice as likely to be diagnosed with colon cancer and four times as likely with rectal cancer as Boomers at the same age.
  • Death rates among those aged 20–24 have jumped by 185% and by 333% for those aged 15–19 over recent decades.

This trend is not limited to the U.S. Studies across Europe and Asia document similar increases, with early-onset gastrointestinal cancers consistently rising among young people.

Hidden Risks, Delayed Diagnoses

One of the greatest challenges facing Millennials and Gen Zers is the misconception that CRC is primarily an “old person’s” disease. Both younger patients and healthcare providers sometimes dismiss early symptoms—like rectal bleeding or changes in bowel habits—as hemorrhoids, diet issues, or stress. As a result:

  • Over 70% of CRC cases in those under 50 are diagnosed at late stages, reducing five-year survival from 90% (stage 1) to 18% (stage 4).
  • Young people often endure more aggressive treatments, face unique fertility and life-stage concerns, and report higher rates of anxiety, sexual dysfunction, and body image issues after diagnosis.

What’s Driving the Surge?

Researchers point to a “perfect storm” of influences fueling this epidemic:

  • Dietary habits: Western diets high in processed foods, red meats, and low in fiber increase risk.
  • Obesity and sedentary lifestyles: Higher rates of obesity and inactivity among young adults are strongly associated with CRC.
  • Alcohol and tobacco use: Both independently raise the risks for CRC and are on the rise among young people.
  • Environmental exposures and ‘bad luck’: Factors like antibiotic use, early-life gut infections (certain E. coli strains), and environmental pollutants are under study for their potential role in increasing risk.
  • Chronic conditions and genetics: Inflammatory bowel diseases, diabetes, and specific hereditary syndromes (like Lynch syndrome) amplify CRC risk, but most new cases are not linked to a known genetic disorder.

Key Symptoms to Watch For

CRC frequently goes unnoticed until advanced stages, particularly when tumors are on the right (ascending) side of the colon. Everyone—no matter their age—should consult a doctor if they experience:

  • Rectal bleeding or blood in the stool/toilet
  • Unexplained changes in bowel habits (diarrhea, constipation lasting 2+ weeks)
  • Oddly shaped stools (black, narrow, thin, or ribbon-like)
  • Abdominal pain or cramping, feeling of incomplete emptying
  • Unexplained weight loss
  • Weakness, fatigue, or chronic anemia

Early Detection and Prevention: What Young Adults Can Do

  1. Know your family history: If a close family member was diagnosed with CRC (especially before age 50), talk to your doctor about starting screening early—often 10 years before the relative’s age at diagnosis.
  2. Screening saves lives: Most guidelines now recommend adults at average risk begin regular screening at 45 (previously 50). Those with risk factors may need to start earlier. Screening options include colonoscopy, stool DNA tests, and—more recently—FDA-approved blood tests for CRC.
  3. Healthy lifestyles: Adopt a diet rich in fiber (aim for 25g/day), minimize red and processed meat, exercise regularly, avoid tobacco, and limit alcohol to recommended amounts.
  4. Pay attention to symptoms: Don’t ignore rectal bleeding or persistent gut changes. If your doctor dismisses symptoms and they persist, seek a second opinion.

Solutions & Hope for the Future

The surge in chronic disease and CRC among Millennials and Gen Z has led to a wave of innovation:

  • Enhanced screening options: less invasive stool- and blood-based tests, increased insurance coverage for screenings starting at 45.
  • Greater patient advocacy: Groups are boosting awareness and lobbying for policy change.
  • Specialized survivorship care: Programs now provide fertility counseling, mental health support, and practical life guidance for young adults facing cancer.

Health Inequities: Not Everyone Faces the Same Risk

Certain groups—including Black, Indigenous, and Hispanic populations—face higher CRC rates and worse outcomes, exacerbated by disparities in healthcare access, economic factors, and mistrust of the medical system. Addressing these inequities is vital for turning the tide on CRC for all young people.

Final Thoughts

Millennials and Gen Z are at the front line of a new health battle. Early-onset colorectal cancer and other chronic diseases are no longer “rare” in young adults. Lifestyle changes, awareness, and vigilance can make a profound difference. Above all: trust your body and, if something doesn’t feel right, push for answers.

More details on this topic and other health topics:

Visit RobLamberton.com


Key Citations:

FDA/Medicare—Blood-Based Colorectal Cancer Screening

Yale Medicine (2024): “Colorectal Cancer: What Millennials and Gen Zers Need to Know”

American Cancer Society, CA Cancer J Clin (2023)

Cancer Research Institute/American Cancer Society (2024-2025)

Exact Sciences (2024): “Colorectal cancer in young people: what millennials and Gen Z need to know now”

NY Post/British Journal of Surgery (2025)

By Dr. Richard Z. Cheng, M.D., Ph.D.
Editor-in-Chief, Orthomolecular Medicine News Service
Adapted for RobLamberton.com


⚖️ A Landmark Discovery — And the Question It Didn’t Answer

The 2025 Nobel Prize in Medicine celebrated groundbreaking research explaining how our immune system maintains balance. Scientists discovered how regulatory T cells (Tregs) and the FOXP3 gene keep the immune system from attacking its own tissues — a molecular key to understanding tolerance and autoimmunity.

But while this discovery explains how immune balance is maintained, it leaves unanswered the deeper question:

“Why does this balance so often fail — and why now more than ever?”

That’s where Orthomolecular Medicine comes in.


🌿 The Orthomolecular Perspective: Root Cause Healing

Orthomolecular Medicine looks upstream — at what creates the imbalance in the first place.

Modern living constantly disrupts the redox–metabolic networks that regulate immune function. These aren’t random events. They are predictable biochemical consequences of nutrient depletion, oxidative stress, and toxic exposure — all products of our modern environment and lifestyle.


🍞 1️⃣ Diet: The Everyday Immune Saboteur

The Nobel Prize explained that Tregs calm inflammation.
Orthomolecular Medicine adds: a modern diet rich in processed foods, seed oils, and refined carbs silences those protectors.

High blood sugar and oxidative stress push immune cells toward inflammation. In contrast, whole-food, low-carb, antioxidant-rich diets restore balance and produce butyrate, a compound that reactivates FOXP3 — the immune system’s peacekeeper.

✅ Within weeks, better nutrition and movement can restore immune balance at its source — often achieving what billion-dollar drugs attempt to mimic.


☀️ 2️⃣ Micronutrients: The Foundation of Immune Tolerance

  • Vitamin D3 activates the FOXP3 gene through the vitamin D receptor.
  • Vitamin C helps “unmethylate” and stabilize this gene via enzyme activation.
  • Niacin (vitamin B3) and butyrate promote immune tolerance through GPR109A signaling.

When these nutrients are low — as they often are — immune regulation falters.
Replenishing them is not “alternative medicine.” It’s cellular maintenance — the foundation of immune resilience.


☣️ 3️⃣ Toxins & Stress: Breaking Redox Control

Air pollution, pesticides, plastics, and chronic stress generate oxidative injury that suppresses FOXP3 and promotes inflammatory dominance.

This toxic overload is one of the hidden autoimmune triggers of our era.
Orthomolecular detoxification — supporting liver, gut, and mitochondrial function — helps rebuild the redox terrain on which immune balance depends.


💥 The Ten Root Causes of Immune Imbalance

  1. Poor diet and metabolic stress
  2. Micronutrient deficiencies
  3. Environmental toxins
  4. Gut microbiome imbalance
  5. Hormonal dysregulation
  6. Chronic stress
  7. Physical inactivity
  8. Overmedication (polypharmacy)
  9. Epigenetic instability
  10. Early-life nutritional deficits

Across all ten, the common denominator is mitochondrial and redox injury.


🌿 How Orthomolecular Medicine Rebuilds Balance

  • Nutrition first: Real food, balanced carbs, rich in antioxidants
  • Micronutrient repletion: Vitamins C, D3, B3, Zn, Mg, Se
  • Detoxification: Reduce toxins, rebuild glutathione, repair the gut
  • Lifestyle optimization: Movement, sleep, stress recovery, hormone balance

These are not fringe therapies — they are biochemical first aid for the modern world.


💡 The Takeaway

The Nobel scientists revealed how the immune system maintains balance.
Orthomolecular Medicine explains why it fails — and how to restore it.

When we repair the terrain, FOXP3 and Tregs do what evolution designed them to do — keep us in balance naturally.


📖 Learn more at Orthomolecular.org