LDN Video Interviews and Presentations

Radio Show interviews, and Presentations from the LDN 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019 Conferences

They are also on our    Vimeo Channel    and    YouTube Channel

Dr Ronald Hoffman, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr Ronald Hoffman shares his Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on ehe LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Dr Ronald Hoffman is the founder and medical director of the Hoffman Center, New York’s oldest complementary medicine center. He's also the host of ‘Health Talk’, America's longest running physician-hosted radio program.

Dr Hoffman first came across Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) in the 1980s when faced with a HIV patient. At the time there was no conventional treatment, but new approaches were emerging at the time in New York, headed by Dr Bernard Bihari.

One of such pioneering approaches was the use of LDN as a medication to treat drug addiction while also having a positive effect on the body’s immune response. Fascinated by Dr Bihari’s findings, Dr Hoffman has been a strong advocate of LDN since.

This is a summary of Dr Ronald Hoffman’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Dr Hoffman’s story by clicking on the video above.

Dr Ronald Hoffman Interviews Linda Elsegood on LDN and The LDN Book (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood shares her Multiple Sclerosis (MS) and Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) Story on the Intelligent Medicine Podcast with Donald Hoffman.

In 1969 at the age of 13, Linda had glandular fever (Epstein-Barr virus). She was seriously ill and away from school for six months. 

Late 1999 Linda’s mother had a serious heart attack and the trauma affected her badly. She was working full time, travelling two and a half hours every day and running the home. This excessive workload and stress began to take its toll on her health, and by May 2000 she had lost her balance, lost feeling in the left side of her face and her head, tongue and nose were numb with pins and needles.

In early December 2003 Linda started Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN), and the results were incredibly positive. By Christmas Linda was functioning again, and her liver tests were back to normal. She felt like herself again.

Linda founded the LDN Research Trust in May 2004. In this interview she says that it is the most exciting thing she has ever done. She is able to give many hours a week to the Trust, helping people to get LDN and trying to get it into clinical trials.

This is a summary of Linda Elsegood’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Linda’s story by clicking on the video above.

Dr Patrick Callas, LDN Radio Show 2017 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr Patrick Callas shares his Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Although he started his naturopathic career only 5 years ago, yet he studied under his mentor Neil McKinney, who has been a naturopathic physician for over 30 years and has prescribed Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) to over 10,000 patients in his career.

As well as autoimmune disease, Dr Callas has found LDN to be effective in tackling Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Crohn’s Disease and Ulcerative Colitis. 

In this interview, Dr Callas explains how LDN is incredibly effective against autoimmune disease by dealing with inflammation, which is the cause of many issues with the body’s systems.

This is a summary of Dr Patrick Callas’ interview. Please listen to the rest of Dr Callas’ story by clicking on the video.

Dr Pat Crowley, LDN Radio Show 18 Dec 2016 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr Pat Crowley shares his Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Dr Pat Crowley is a retired GP from Kilkenny in Ireland, and he's been prescribing Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) since 2004. He graduated from a university college in Dublin in 1968 and went on to have an extensive 40-year career in the pharmaceutical industry.

Throughout his career he has noticed the incredible benefits LDN has had to offer for not only his autoimmune patients, but also many cancer patients. Additionally, there has been instances which Dr Crowley has noticed where LDN has been effective in treating addictions such as Alcoholism.

This is a summary of Dr Pat Crowley’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Dr Crowley’s story by clicking on the video.

Dr Kat Toups, LDN Radio Show 15 March 2017 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr. Kat Toups is an MD from California in the US,  a functional medicine doctor and a psychiatrist.

After graduating, being a psychiatrist I ending up working in a research centre, found trials and studies on psychiatric medications, and came to see the answer really wasn't in a pill. The kind of illnesses that my patients had could not be fixed just by giving them a medication.

They were multifactorial reasons and that the pharmaceutical route was not the answer. Maybe some of the medications did help relieve suffering for people, but they didn't solve the problem of why they were sick.

So like many people that have come to the functional medicine table, I came into it with my own illness. I had immune problems sort of on and off most of my adult life and finally crashed and burned with some serious immune illness. As a physician, I knew the limitations of what traditional medicine had to offer me.

They could give me steroids to suppress my illness, but that wouldn't cure things. And so I started learning functional medicine at that time. And I suspect a lot of your listeners are familiar with functional medicine, but the basic idea of functional medicine is that we want to understand the root cause of why someone is ill, and it usually causes are plural.

 And then as we address all of those factors and bring those things into balance, we can restore health and get people well.

I went through all the training courses with the Institute for functional medicine and subsequently became certified there.

I would say in my practice a large majority of people have immune type illnesses or infection type illnesses. Many with Chronic Fatigue and then, of course, all kinds of mood symptoms that go along with immune illness.

So some of my patients kind of have the double whammy. They have immune illnesses, and they have a brain component, either psychiatric or cognitive problems.

So I would say that I've ended up with a pretty complex set of patients and I really enjoy working with very sick people because it's so much fun to help them on that path to getting better and getting their health back.

The first thing that I look at is a timeline. So I have patients fill out quite detailed questionnaires that I can start to see what has been happening. So I start back with when your mother was pregnant, did anything happen? You know, did she have illnesses?

What happened at the delivery? Was it a vaginal birth? We know that people who are born by C-section and subsequently are not breastfed may have lower levels of healthy probiotics.

We know that the gut microbiome and our healthy probiotics are what controls our immune system in great part. So if we don't have a healthy gut microbiome, then we can predict problems with chronic illness down the road. So then I'll look at the factors all through their life. What happened in early childhood? Did you have your infections? Did you have allergies? Did you have colic?

And then I look at the stressors happening and all those various factors. What were your teenage years like? Was it pleasant or was it a time of struggle and conflict and what was happening in your family? Was somebody a drinker?

Was somebody impaired by psychiatric disorders? Did a parent die or abandoned the family? We know now that when people have a lot of those factors, we can see immune disorders developing at higher rates like 20 or 30 years later.

So the notion of PTSD Post-traumatic Stress Disorder, you don't have to be beaten or raped.

I'll ask about tick bites. I'll ask about mould exposure.

Those were, of course, things that can affect the brain and the immune system.

 And testing, of course, testing is a big part of what I do.

I also test for SIBO, Small Intestinal Bacterial Overgrowth, and people with SIBO have a lot of GI issues. They typically have a lot of bloating and a lot of gas and people can have a lot of Irritable Bowel Syndrome, either constipation or diarrhoea or both. And what happens with SIBO is we have a lot of bacteria in our colon, and that is normal, but we shouldn't have such a high level in our small intestine, but when the bacteria get out of balance they can grow into the small intestine and overtake that. And so when you eat certain foods that are fuel for those bacteria, that will just have a little party with all that food, and they give off gas and bloating, and some people can appear six or seven months pregnant with the magnitude of the bloating, with the SIBO.

And so, as a psychiatrist, it's very clear. When people have SIBO and  there's a disruption in the gut that causes leaky gut or increased permeability in your gut, that allows food particles to get through into our bloodstream and then sometimes bacterial or viral or parasite components and all those things activate our immune system. And so when that immune system gets activated, it release's these inflammatory chemicals called cytokines and they'll travel around, and they freely cross the blood-brain barrier, and they turn on the immune system in the brain.

And when there are these inflammatory cytokines turned on in our brain, it causes psychiatric symptoms. And kind of the first thing that I'll see is anxiety.

 And then it can have depression ramifications. It can have cognitive ramifications and even people who never had ADD can have ADD symptoms with trouble paying attention and being distractible and can't focus.

 SIBO is where I learned about LDN. As part of the regimen for SIBO treatment, LDN is used theoretically as a prokinetic agent. And so the thinking was that you probably have some kind of GI infection.

Your immune system turns on to fight that infection. And so the thinking with LDN is that it somehow settles down that immune reaction so that people can quit suffering from constipation or diarrhoea.

I use LDN  in a variety situations. It's been probably best studied with immune disorders and Cancer. Cancer is really kind of the ultimate failure of your immune system. So cancer is certainly one place that I have used it.

And I've used it for Hashimoto's thyroiditis, unfortunately, a condition we're seeing so much more of these days. For some people, it can help the Hashimoto's so quickly that I always warn my patients that are on thyroid medication. If they start feeling hyperthyroid, like they're on too much medication, you can feel jittery, heart racing.

Then, when you're on too much thyroid medication I advise them to let me know immediately, and I give them blood lab order to get their thyroid tests right away because what I find is for some people they can reduce their thyroid medication because of treating with the LDN. And I've had people that have completely resolved their thyroid antibodies.

I've used it for psoriasis and I started taking LDN myself because I have psoriasis and I would say within days, I stopped needing to use topical steroids on my scalp, which is where I have the worst symptoms.

I've used it with Parkinson's patients, multi-system atrophy, with a lot of Fibromyalgia's patients and Fibromyalgia is one area where people say you should watch the side effects of LDN that sometimes it might flare it up in the beginning and you might have to go start lower and go slower.

And I really haven't seen much of that. I usually let my Fibromyalgia patients know that that's been reported but I still go ahead and start with my standard dose titration.

I use it for pain conditions. We know that when you, take a dose of LDN that, it's reported that it temporarily blocks your own opiate receptors, and that causes your own brain to make opiates.

So your own brain is reported to make six times more opiates with a dose of LDN. Of course, there are feel-good hormones and that is also the component of narcotics that helps the pain. So LDN can be quite useful for pain conditions.

I spoke with one woman who told me she had been on high doses of narcotics for many years, for Regional complex sympathetic.

It's a neurologic pain disorder that can be quite disabling. And she told me that by using LDN, she was able to get off of her high doses of narcotics because it had controlled her pain.

I've seen it really help people's depression and anxiety.

I have used it with veterans with PTSD or post-traumatic stress disorder and typically we've given it at night time because that's the time when you're sleeping that your brain reportedly makes a lot of opiates but some people end up moving the medication to the daytime because of vivid dreams although they are temporary side effects. So we have the idea of giving this a couple of times during the day to see if we can get that endorphin increased during the day when these patients are really stressed and triggered by the PTSD symptoms. So they started splitting the dose and they have some very lovely results with that so I learned that I had shifted a lot of my patients who do have anxiety or PTSD symptoms to taking it in the daytime.

Lyme disease and the co-infections with Lyme are another areas that LDN is definitely put that on the first line. What I think because it happens with Lyme disease is it shuts down the immune system.

And so LDN then becomes a mechanism to help support the immune system so that it can detect and clear that infection.

I've had some discussions with one of my friends and colleagues who works with pandas, and that's the pediatric autoimmune neuro-psych disorders. Typically it's been reported in children that they'll have an infection most often strep, but it can be caused by mycoplasma.

It can be caused by other infections that trigger that child's immune response. And then the immune system starts attacking the brain and these children can develop the pretty acute onset of severe obsessive-compulsive disorder and behavioural problems. And I had recently worked up a 12-year-old for his pandas and discovered that he had an infectious source with active mycoplasma. I had started that child on Low Dose Naltrexone.

The thing about infectious diseases we have a beautiful design that is supposed to work for some kind of acute infectious diseases with a short course of antibiotics that may knock things out. The problem that we get into is with the people that have chronic infectious diseases. That is chronically triggering their immune system. And those are some of the kinds of patients that I see.

And they come in, when I take their symptom history, they have, 20 or more active symptoms that are troubling them. A traditional doctor will look at that many symptoms and say, "Oh my God, there's your neurotic, you're a psychiatric patient." I am the psychiatrist, so from my perspective, I can say you have all these symptoms. This is not in your head. It's in your body. There's something happening in your body that is triggering the symptoms. The answer for me isn't giving the psychiatric meds because those don't get them well.

I may use psychiatric medications in the short term as a bandaid.

The LDN definitely is one part of the toolkit to start helping support the immune system.

They are written about dental infections. This is a really tough area where people have a root canal because they've had an infection in a tooth and the dentist take out the roots, and they fill them up with material. What I've learned is beyond those roots stars, the infection can get into those microtubules and maybe it's a low-level infection, but it can be enough to keep turning on someone's immune system.

And some people with immune disorders just won't get well until they pull those root canal teeth, because it's triggering this chronic infection.

I took part in a Lyme disease documentary and they have so many different symptoms. And even though these people are really obviously very ill, unable to move, function, the pain, cognitively, etc and the doctor says "It's all psychological. It's in your head. "And how devastating when you feel that low to be told it's in your head and being offered antidepressants and things. I empower people and get them to believe that they can get well. And that these symptoms really are of a physiologic nature and that once we can find all the causes and support their nutrition and support their immune system, that they can get better.

My website has the information. My practices called Bay Area wellness.

So the website is www.bayareawellness.net. And my Facebook It's called Bay area wellness dash functional medicine psychiatry.

Summary of Dr. Kat Toups interview. Watch the YouTube video for full interview.

Dr Jordan Atkinson, LDN Radio Show 12 May 2017 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr Jordan Atkinson shares his Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Dr Jordan Atkinson, based in Vancouver, has utilised LDN for a variety of autoimmune conditions and cancer with excellent results. As a Naturopathic doctor, his clinic does extensive testing to evaluate the patient before prescribing diet, exercise and medical solutions. 

He takes the time to know each patient's situation and then, he custom formulates a resolution. He believes in being proactive, not reactive and getting to the root of the problem before it becomes serious.

This is a summary of Dr Jordan Atkinson’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Dr Atkinson’s story by clicking on the video above.

Dr Jill Cottel shares her LDN experience, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr Jill Cottel shares her Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Dr Jill Cottel is a medical advisor for the LDN Research Trust and was a presenting doctor at the LDN Conference in Portland Oregon.

Now, she has developed a tele-medicine system in her practice whereby she can do medical appointments by phone in the states of Virginia and California. This added service is invaluable for patients who cannot travel for one reason or another. 

She has been a solo-practitioner with a private practice for over 20 years with a focus on holistic medicine. Dr Cottel is very knowledgeable not only of how useful Low Dose Naltrexone can be in treating autoimmune diseases, but also for treating alcoholism through alternative methods such as the Sinclair Method.

This is a summary of Dr Jill Cottel’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Dr Cottel’s interview by clicking on the video above.

Dr Deanna Windham, LDN Radio Show (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Dr Deanna Windham shares her Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) experience on the LDN Radio Show with Linda Elsegood.

Dr Deanna Windham currently works in the Whisker Wellness Institute in California, the United States. She and her institute first heard of Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN) around 12 years ago while establishing their adjunctive cancer treatment program.

However, the process by which she could obtain LDN was difficult. Nevertheless, Dr Bihari phoned Dr Windham to explain the many benefits LDN can have for cancer patients.

At her institute, Dr Windham has established a tried-and-tested prescription program of LDN to ensure that each individual patient starts on the correct dosage of LDN for them personally in order to reap the best possible benefits.

This is a summary of Dr Deanna Windham’s interview. Please listen to the rest of Dr Windham’s story by clicking on the video above.

Dr Bruce Berman, LDN Radio Show 2016 (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Linda Elsegood: I'm joined today by Dr Bruce Berman from sunny Florida in the US thanks for joining me, Bruce. 

Dr Bruce Berman: My pleasure. 

Linda Elsegood: Could you tell us how long ago it was when you first heard about LDN? 

Dr Bruce Berman: Yes at least five years, I read an article about it.  I'm an addiction specialist, so I was very intimately familiar with naltrexone, and I know that the side effect profile is very negligible. And when the hypothesis came up concerning low dose, I said, it makes perfect sense to me. The benefits certainly outweigh the risks. So I started using it.  Hashimoto's disease, any autoimmune disease, cancer, depression, fibromyalgia. It's sometimes miraculous. I had a 29-year-old woman with ulcerative colitis who was having 15 bloody bowel movements a day that nothing in medicine could stop. We started LDN and in two days her bowel movements were down to two, and they were normal its great for the joint pain in rheumatoid arthritis.

 I use it as I do integrative cancer therapy. So I use it as part of an overall program in cancer. Cause as you know, it's the endogenous opioids that have the antitumor ability.  Plus, they help balance the TH1  to immune cells. So it's a double whammy against cancer cells,  it's just amazing.

The worst side effect I've seen and really not that bad. It's just bothersome, is vivid dreams and sleep may be affected. You may have an early awakening. We've now tried giving patients the LDN in the morning. And it still works, and it doesn't affect their sleep then.

So I'm, I'm a satisfied customer. A lot of patients are coming to me cause they do research on it and they see it. They go on the cancer tutor website and a lot of other websites and just do alternative therapies and my name comes up. And I'm happy to give the service because it's so innocuous. It's such a benign treatment, and the effects can be dramatic. 

Linda Elsegood: And how long would you say, if pushed on average, it would take a patient to notice that there are benefits of taking LDN? 

Dr Bruce Berman: I'd say anywhere from a couple of days to a couple of weeks, usually within a month. You see some dramatic results. I start low.

I start at one and a half milligrams and work up from there. Usually around three milligrams, you're going to see effects, and if you need to push it to four and a half, patients respond. But usually within a month, sometimes within days, patients respond.

Anything you want to treat for,  it's safe. It's inexpensive. It's easy to obtain. It has almost no side effects. It's like the perfect drug. Most conventional doctors are so pigeonholed that they will say, Oh, I can’t prescribe that. It's not indicated. When, of course, as you know in the States, if you have one indication for a drug, you could use it for anything called off label use, but they don't want to do it because most conventional doctors are, they're hamsters on a wheel. They don't know they're spinning. They think they're going forward. That's why I had to do functional medicine. 

Linda Elsegood: Well, he says he taught this like you who think outside of the box. 

Dr Bruce Berman: Well, I was on the hamster wheel, and all I did was give patients drugs to placate symptoms. And now, I mean, yeah, when you address causes the results are dramatic. Really, really dramatic. And it's, that's why I'm here. To find out what's in my patient's highest and best good. 

Linda Elsegood: So, in your practice, you mentioned Hashimoto's and cancer. Do you do all the autoimmune conditions? Do you know ms? 

Dr Bruce Berman: Yeah. We use LDN on all of them. We also use bee sting therapy in autoimmune, quite dramatic the way they work together. They work together to balance the immune system. But here in the States,  the LDN is so inexpensive. It's under $40 a month.

Linda Elsegood: And I'm always being asked by patients who can't travel. Do you do any online consults?

Dr Bruce Berman: Skype  I do. I do phone counsels as long as they can get local blood work if they need to just have a doctor on hand for any conditions that might need local attention. Why not? I do it a lot. I have a couple of patients from England.  I have one from South Africa. 

Your listeners should go to the website, the LDN summit 2016  was just held in Orlando last month. You can download and watch the videos on all the presentations on LDN. It was tremendous. And there's also a book about LDN now.  I know some of the speakers, Marty Gaydon, is right near me in Miami. In our field what we do in functional medicine, people are few and far between. I'll give you an example. Martin is a hundred miles south of me. And the next closest doctor is 150 miles North of me. Nobody in between. 

Linda Elsegood: Wow. 

Dr Bruce Berman: pretty sad. 

Linda Elsegood: It is. And it's a shame. I didn't know about you before. 

Dr Bruce Berman: Well, that's okay. I’m happy just to be able to see people. I had a woman, I just saw her yesterday for a recheck. She came to me last July, so we're coming up on a one year anniversary, psoriatic arthritis, so bad that the inflammation was affecting her joints. Her skin was horrible. Her dandruff was horrible. She's been on it now for ten months. She's about 90% improved. 

Linda Elsegood: wow. 

Dr Bruce Berman: The lesions are going away. She can make a full fist. There's almost no dandruff. Now we did other things. Besides that, you know that I don't know if your readers know readers or listeners know the most common cause of the autoimmune disorder is dairy products, reaction to the casein protein in milk and gluten. Yes. So all my autoimmune patients have to go off that, or I can't promise they're going to get better, but this one has been really, really strict. I have a patient who just told me she found out there's gluten in her Chapstick so who would think, wow, but gluten is everywhere. So you really have to investigate. If you want to take care of yourself because no one's gonna take care of you. The corporations aren’t going to take care of you. They're just going to give you something that's easy to use and appears to work and tastes good. They have no concern about whether or not it's beneficial. 

Linda Elsegood: And how sad is that. 

Dr Bruce Berman: I'm over the sad part, I'll tell you why I understand it. Because corporations have one job to do, their stock price goes up. Truly they don't have a humanistic component or anything else.  My patients need to be educated on what to do.So it's a lifestyle change for all of this. For cancer, for autoimmune. I mean, we've reversed three cases of MS. Well, they are reversing. They're not normal yet, but they're getting better. That doesn't happen in medicine. I had an ALS patient, Lou Gehrig's disease, actually got off a ventilator off a wheelchair onto a Walker.

Linda Elsegood: So 

Dr Bruce Berman: it's not me. We're just reversing the toxicity of this world. So I'm a, as we say, I'm a satisfied customer. 

Linda Elsegood: Wonderful, and thank you so much for sharing your experience. 

Dr Bruce Berman: Of course, my pleasure. And please have your readers, if your listeners go to their doctor and say, can you prescribe this? And the doctor says no, I can educate them.  It's innocuous. And if they have any questions or concerns, they can go to my website. All my contact information is there. 

Linda Elsegood: Wonderful. Thank you very much. 

Dr Bruce Berman: Wonderful. Have a great day.

Linda Elsegood: Do you have LDN experience to share? If so, please email me at contact@ldnresearchtrut.org I look forward to hearing from you.

Aletha - US: Psoriasis (LDN, low dose naltrexone) from LDN Research Trust on Vimeo.

Aletha from the United States was diagnosed with Psoriasis at the age of 14/15. She experienced this on her head and sometimes as far down as the back of her neck.

She was prescribed liquid form Low Dose Naltrexone (LDN), and tried it for three months, yet it did not provide any form of benefit at all. Upon telling her GP, Aletha was prescribed the pill form of LDN, and once again, tried it for a further three months. This time the medication worked. Aletha had realised she had not been itching her scalp and, in fact, the psoriasis had gone. She made it very obvious that she recommends LDN to those she feels could benefit from it.

This is a summary of the interview or the whole interview, watch the video.