The Ridiculously SIMPLE At-Home Treatment For Mold, Infections, Wounds, Bacteria, Viruses, Water Cleaning & More: Do-It-Yourself Ozone Kit How-To With SimplyO3’s Micah Lowe.

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ozone therapy at home

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What I Discuss with Micah Lowe:

In this episode, you'll get to explore the world of ozone therapy and its wide-ranging benefits with Micah Lowe, the owner of SimplyO3, a company dedicated to making ozone therapy accessible and easy to use. From innovative techniques like nasal and ear insufflation to the use of ozonated oil for oral health, Micah shares personal insights that highlight ozone's potential impact on conditions ranging from infections to asthma. You'll also discover the details of ozone equipment, including low-cost home setups and advanced medical-grade devices for more sophisticated treatments. Additionally, you'll learn about the unique properties of ozonated water for gut health, its intriguing effects during chemotherapy, and much more!

Micah Lowe is a trailblazer in the field of health innovation with a unique journey that began close to home. After his brother, Matt, was diagnosed with a rare and aggressive brain cancer, Micah began exploring alternative therapies to support Matt’s health and resilience. It was during nursing school that Micah discovered ozone therapy—a treatment with the potential to tackle many health issues from gangrene and strokes to Lyme disease. Intrigued by its power, he quickly became an advocate, but he saw that the research was scattered and inaccessible to most people.

Driven to make a difference, Micah committed to organizing, understanding, and sharing the benefits of ozone therapy, leading to over 10,000 doctors now practicing with ozone and hundreds of thousands of patients benefitting from its effects. But he didn’t stop there. Recognizing that many people get lost in the maze of health trends, Micah launched Theriome, a company dedicated to guiding people to the most impactful interventions for their unique health needs.

With Theriome, Micah and his team work alongside world-class clinical experts to provide personalized, evidence-based insights using cutting-edge blood analysis. His goal is simple but powerful: to reduce suffering in the world by helping people take control of their health with clarity and purpose.

Interested in innovative wellness techniques, natural approaches to health optimization, and cutting-edge therapies for immunity and performance? This episode is for you.

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Ben Greenfield [00:00:00]: My name is Ben Greenfield, and on this episode of the Boundless Life podcast.

Micah Lowe [00:00:04]: You can infuse ozone gas into water. You do want to use distilled water because you want the least amount of minerals within the water for it to retain the ozone. People drink anywhere from 4 up to 16 ounces a day, and that is a form of ozone therapy. While the research kind of shows that it's primarily utilized in stomach infections, parasites, and things of that nature. People with cancer might have alleviation of certain symptoms, specifically like the negative symptoms they get from chemotherapy. You get a huge antioxidant response, cell protective response that seems to make people feel better when they're going through that kind of stuff.

Ben Greenfield [00:00:44]: Welcome to the Boundless Life with me, your host, Ben Greenfield.

Ben Greenfield [00:00:49]: I'm a personal trainer, exercise physiologist, and nutritionist. And I'm passionate about helping you discover.

Ben Greenfield [00:00:54]: Unparalleled levels of health, fitness, longevity, and beyond.

Ben Greenfield [00:01:05]: So when I was a kid, ozone was like the thing that made the hole in our atmosphere and you weren't supposed to breathe it, and it was super dangerous stuff. And unless you've been hiding under a rock, you have probably now heard about ozone as being something that is quite popular in the health world now for a variety of issues. I've never really done a podcast fully dedicated to ozone, even though I've been using ozone or getting ozone treatments for years. You know, I've done blood ozonation and extra corporeal blood oxygenation and ozonation and, you know, rectal ozone and ozone insufflation and ozone limb bagging and, you name it. And one of the guys who's taught me a ton about ozone, including how to even do your own protocols at home, is my guest on today's podcast, Micah Lowe. And Micah's company is Simply 03. He is a real expert in ozone therapy, and I'll let him kind of fill you in on how he got into this whole field in the first place. But if you're interested in ozone and all it seems like to you right now is that it's this scary gas that you gotta be super careful with.

Ben Greenfield [00:02:22]: You're gonna learn a lot. So, Micah, dude, how you doing?

Micah Lowe [00:02:26]: Doing really good. Really happy to be here. Appreciative that we can do a podcast finally. We've been talking for a while, so it's cool to be able to join you on this.

Ben Greenfield [00:02:34]: Yeah, we can. We kind of reconnected when I ran into, for a rental that I own, mold issues in the washer dryer area and you and I were chatting and you actually have a solution that you actually use in the washer to somehow use ozone to control mold. And maybe that'd be a good way to explain to people how ozone actually works. But fill, fill me on this whole washer dryer thing, because I hear from a ton of people who are concerned, especially about front load washers with mold issues in those.

Micah Lowe [00:03:08]: Yeah. So I mean, real quick context on ozone. It's a gas, it's O3, pretty similar to oxygen, which is O2, but it's instable, which gives it a lot of properties we want. And then I think today we're going to be talking about it from a couple standpoints. Number one, it's utility and water purification, air purification, things like that. And then it's also has a lot of utility as a therapeutic agent, which is where most of my expertise is. You know, I've kind of dabbled in the water purification. I actually have this hot tub.

Micah Lowe [00:03:38]: I built a custom ozone generator for it.

Ben Greenfield [00:03:41]: No way. You don't have to use chlorine in your hot tub?

Micah Lowe [00:03:44]: No, not at all. And it's totally pure. You have purification and filtration, so you still need a filter that's getting the sediment out. But as far as purification, it takes care of everything. In fact, the Olympic swimming pools in the Sydney Olympics, I think it was back 2000, 2004, those were all just ozone. So it's kind of this like a little bit of a scam that the water purification is running in the sense that you don't actually need chemicals to do purification. I mean, ozone is a chemical, but you don't need less stuff like that they're putting into the water that's not good for your skin. You can use ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:04:16]: And the cool part about it is once you put it into the water, it dissolves back into oxygen. So the only thing left over thereafter is oxygen.

Ben Greenfield [00:04:24]: Wait, wait, I want to stop for just a second. We can't skim over this. So let's say I have a pre existing hot tub, you know, whatever. I go to my local, you know, YB tubless store or whatever and I pick up a spa and I have it on my patio. You can outfit an existing spa using the methods you've designed to actually use just ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:04:46]: I did. I mean, I'm not selling it. It's just something I personally did because I'm using a hot tub, you know, and I have access to all the ozone stuff I need.

Ben Greenfield [00:04:54]: So is it hard to do?

Micah Lowe [00:04:56]: Well, yeah, it would be if you don't have access to like, the reactor that I have for it is like huge. It's like probably 300 times bigger. It's way overkill. So it's way too strong for what it needs to be. Because I could probably use that same one for an Olympic sized pool. I just built some really beefy ozone generator. The drawback there is, since I don't have in this context, I need more expertise and understanding in water purification. Because the one drawback is I will probably have to refit all the O rings that are inside of it because they're made of a black rubber.

Micah Lowe [00:05:32]: And like I said, ozone is unstable. So once you put it in there, it probably will start to disintegrate those faster than their actual lifetime would be. If I just replace those with silicone, it'd be all good. But I do need to do that. And I just did it for me personally. You know, I've been in communication with somebody that does it for equine, so for horse, racehorses and that kind of thing. They actually have a big issue with using chemicals for some sort of water therapy that they're doing with the horses. I don't pretend to pretend to know, but yeah, we're getting a little bit into the water purification because there's a lot of need for it because you can get rid of these really harmful chemicals just to use ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:06:11]: And it's a one time purchase. So once you get it, you're all set and good to go.

Ben Greenfield [00:06:15]: Yeah, you probably void the hell out of the warranty though, on the tub.

Micah Lowe [00:06:18]: Yeah, probably. The thing that they do is they say they'll use ozone in it and then they go, well, ozone's not strong enough. What they actually do is they put like this tiny little ozone generator in there that's super small. And then that warrants them to be able to say, well, we use ozone, it's just not strong enough. But in reality, what they're doing is they are putting in a really small amount because a lot of people who know purification know ozone works. And then that way they can say they have it, but you still need to buy the chemicals.

Ben Greenfield [00:06:50]: Yeah, I'm in the market for a hot tub right now for the home I'm building in Idaho. And I've seen that advertise ozone and UV and everybody I've talked to has been like, yeah, ozone and UV, but you still need chlorine.

Micah Lowe [00:07:02]: Yeah. Which is what is. That's not actually true. You just need it strong enough. Because you make it strong enough, it Gets rid of all the. All the bad microbes that are in the water, like my. So we have to run it every couple weeks. Our hot tub will get.

Micah Lowe [00:07:16]: If, like, I've been gone for a month now, probably when I get back, it'll be yellowish. Right. Because there's all the bugs that build up and that kind of thing. But I throw it in there, and within 30, 45 minutes, it's crystal clear.

Ben Greenfield [00:07:28]: Wow. Amazing. And what about the washer?

Micah Lowe [00:07:31]: Yeah. So you can do a similar thing with laundry. The nice thing with that is that it's going to replace the need for detergent mostly. It still might be needed in the case of, like, a heavy soiling because. But since ozone is such a strong oxidant, it can go into the laundry machine just with the water and actually purify the clothes of microbes. It's an odor eliminator. So if there's odors on the clothes from working out and that kind of thing, it's going to eliminate those. There is one drawback with the laundry units, though, is that the laundry units will not get rid of stains.

Micah Lowe [00:08:09]: So you still need to do stain remover and that kind of thing. So it's not going to be removing those. But as far as. I mean, we don't use much detergent anymore, only in the case of really heavy soiling or some stains and things like that. And otherwise, it's just ozone.

Ben Greenfield [00:08:24]: Yeah. So. So for my two rentals in the Idaho home, I just bought three of the ozone units that I don't. Are. Do you actually stock them as simply 03? I don't recall. Or was this a different company that you were selling the ozone stuff for for the washer?

Micah Lowe [00:08:38]: Yeah, I don't. Yes. Simply03 has these. Well, it depends on when this podcast goes out. We are putting them in stock next week, so they will be in stock within a week of, you know, this recording.

Ben Greenfield [00:08:51]: Are they. Are they pretty easy to install, or do you usually need a professional to do the install on the washer?

Micah Lowe [00:08:56]: I mean, I guess that depends on your comfortability with a hose, but that's about it. You got to put the unit on the wall. So there's two holes that. I mean, it's like hanging up a picture frame. It's a little bit more complicated than that, but it's two screws instead of one. And then you have to disconnect the hose that's on the washer currently and connect it to that and then take a hose from that unit and put that back into the Washer and that's it. So that's simple.

Ben Greenfield [00:09:21]: So you're just, you're just mounting and doing a couple hose connections?

Micah Lowe [00:09:24]: Yeah, yeah. It's not complicated. You don't need a plumber.

Ben Greenfield [00:09:27]: Okay. If people look for it on your website, what's it called?

Micah Lowe [00:09:30]: Just Search Ozone Laundry. It'll be on there. I'm not sure what we're gonna name it. It'll be like the mold demolisher or something ridiculous.

Ben Greenfield [00:09:37]: I don't know.

Micah Lowe [00:09:38]: We'll name it. But just Search Ozone Laundry and you'll find it.

Ben Greenfield [00:09:42]: I'll hunt it down or get the link. I'll put [email protected] slash O3 podcast. Like O the number three podcast, which is where the show notes will be. So back to ozone itself. I think it's still confusing. Like I mentioned in the introduction to a lot of people who think that if they smell ozone, whether using it for medical or personal use or mold issues like a washer or say a hot tub, that it could be a bad thing. So how do you know whether the ozone that you're smelling is too much or is that just a myth that it's bad for you?

Micah Lowe [00:10:17]: So there is one thing with ozone, you can't breathe it. However, that's primarily in large doses. So the reason you can't breathe ozone is because you don't have an antioxidant defense system there. Because you need to pull in oxygen and metabolize that, utilize that. So ozone being a strong oxidant, when it goes into an environment that doesn't have antioxidant defense, it's going to irritate the lungs, lung tissue. However, there are, that's. And there's a lot of studies around that, like ground level ozone pollution, that kind of thing. So that's where this comes from is the research that's been done on that that is never talking about ozone therapy.

Micah Lowe [00:10:54]: So two entirely different topics in ozone therapy. And I'm prefacing this because I think it's important to understand is there are antioxidant defenses in your blood, in your colon and other parts of the body. And so when the ozone goes in there, the mechanism changes because it goes towards the antioxidants, are drawn to that oxidant, and then you have a beneficial response from that. But that's why you can put it in something like blood while you can't breathe. It is because of that antioxidant defense system. But that being said, you can still smell it and that's fine. So Even OSHA has standards on how much can be in the air, which I can't remember the exact standard that they've put out there, but there is a safe limit, and that's even for eight hours that they'll say, at this rate, it's totally fine to breathe, but you can smell it really quickly. So you can actually smell it at, I believe it's five parts per million, which is one of the most detectable molecules by smell.

Micah Lowe [00:11:53]: So you can smell it far before it exceeds any sort of safety standard. Now, the thing you don't want to do is throw on an air purifier and stay in the room while it's running. But you know me, I've 10, 11 years now have been around ozone, even in pretty high doses. My personal comfort with it is really high. I even had asthma, which I remediated through ice baths when it coincidentally didn't anticipate that to happen, but it did, and, and I never had issues with it even having asthma. I also didn't do inhalers and that kind of stuff, but it was pretty bad. Like, I would get to the point that it couldn't breathe and I'd throw up and that kind of stuff. But I never had that induced from ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:12:37]: I haven't had any noticeable negative effects, and I've had gotten some pretty strong whiffs of it, obviously over 11 years of working with it very actively.

Ben Greenfield [00:12:47]: You alleviated your asthma with ice baths?

Micah Lowe [00:12:49]: Yeah, it was weird. I didn't anticipate it. So I was in Washington, well, out in the Olympic Peninsula, you're familiar with that area. But they have these canals that come in from the ocean, and it'd be like a nice summer day out, like 90 degrees, whole families out there, that kind of thing. And this is what I remember specifically happening. My thought process I went through. I jumped in the water and I couldn't breathe. My lungs constricted and I was just embarrassed.

Micah Lowe [00:13:15]: The whole family's around and 5, 10 minutes, can't breathe, can't talk. So I'm in there, people are talking to me and I'm like, I guess you don't get any words out because my lungs are so constricted. So what I thought was like, you know, I wasn't even thinking about getting rid of the asthma symptoms. I was just thinking, can I make my lungs stronger so that when I get into cold water now, I'm conditioned to where I'm not going to get that constricting response. So I just started to do cold tap water baths, cold showers. And I, you know, out there in the mountains, would jump into some of that mountain runoff water that's really cold and started to do some deep breathing exercises before and after. I would notice like, the difference of the breathing exercise before and after was quite substantial.

Micah Lowe [00:14:02]: Afterwards, I would always feel better as long as I got my breath under control in the water. Always felt better. And what ended up happening over time is I noticed like, my symptoms of asthma started going away where I wouldn't just randomly get tight chested or randomly have some sort of trigger. And then I eventually got into colder water. And so six, seven years now, I haven't had any asthma symptoms. I don't know if it's gone forever or what. This is just purely anecdotal, but totally got rid of all my symptoms.

Ben Greenfield [00:14:34]: That's interesting. Especially if the asthma is driven by nervous system dysregulation or vagal nerve function. You could see a mechanism of action there. I don't think it'd work if asthma is driven by an autoimmune or, you know, or condition related to actual lung damage. But yeah, cold water is interesting like that. It's kind of a nuclear bomb on a lot of issues. You know, I've seen it solve fibromyalgia for people, chronic pain with even as little as just like a week of pretty intense ice bathing. Raynaud's, you know, it's, it's one of those things where a lot of the mechanisms of action aren't even fully understood when it comes to cold water immersion.

Ben Greenfield [00:15:08]: But this idea of thermoregulation for a variety of health issues or thermal stress, it's pretty compelling.

Micah Lowe [00:15:15]: Yeah. And I don't pretend to understand exactly what's going on. And then that's why I say it's just my story. But, you know, I posted some videos and they went viral and it had my story of asthma. I had a number of people that messaged me and said like, I had asthma and it didn't do anything, but I probably had like 200 or so messages and comments of people saying it also resolved theirs. So there's something there for a certain subset of people with asthma. And I'm not sure what it is, but it definitely seems to, to work for some people.

Ben Greenfield [00:15:44]: Yeah. Kind of a random nerdy question. But you were describing ozone, of course, as a prooxidant, which is why it can be effective against, you know, viruses, bacteria, mold, et cetera, and why it's used in health now. And it, even, as you also alluded to, can trigger the body's own endogenous antioxidant production. As the body mounts its antioxidant defenses against a prooxidative environment. But based on that, you know, when, when you exercise, for example, it's actually ill advised to take very high doses of antioxidants. Because you blunt the body's own endogenous antioxidant production and also quell the inflammatory process to such a great extent that you don't see things like mitochondrial proliferation or satellite cell response or muscle building in response to exercise. So let's say somebody is getting, I don't know, like an ozone infusion, like an ozone IV or maybe doing some of the other tactics.

Ben Greenfield [00:16:43]: We'll talk about like a. I don't know, a nasal insufflation or a rectal insufflation or, you know, drinking ozonated water or something like that. Do you think you can make a case for actually avoiding antioxidants within the period of time after which or even before you're doing ozone therapy?

Micah Lowe [00:17:02]: Yeah, I certainly think you can make a case for it. The issue I see is there's not really any studies that validate this. So there's clinical experience that you go off of. And then our understanding of the biomechanics that are going on or the biochemistry. So essentially ozone, what it's doing is it goes in and causes an acute, mild oxidative stress, which is reactive oxygen species and that kind of stuff. So you're actually getting a little bit of oxidative stress from it. But it's mild and acute are the key words there. And what your body does in response is it creates more antioxidants.

Micah Lowe [00:17:36]: So when you do ozone therapy, even though it's an oxidant kind of, you know, you wouldn't think of it as doing. Being an antioxidant therapy, but it really is because your body's response to it is to create more antioxidants. So the idea with this of, say, IV vitamin C is a really big one. You know, a lot of clinics that are doing IV ozone also do IV vitamin C. The idea would be that you would give it a day or two in between those. I think that's best practice. That's my personal opinion. Do the ozone therapy give it a day or two before you introduce some sort of antioxidant.

Micah Lowe [00:18:12]: And I think from that you would probably get a better response. But at the same time, there's like Riordan Clinic who does hundreds of thousands of these therapies now. And they run the IV vitamin C 30 minutes after the IV ozone, and they seem to get pretty good response from it. So my understanding of it is really just based on the biochemical understanding of it, which theoretically it makes sense that you would want to avoid antioxidants around this.

Ben Greenfield [00:18:41]: Yeah, that's interesting. I think a half hour is too short. Most of the data I've seen related to exercise and oxidation suggests that you should avoid for at least a couple hours doing activities that suppress the inflammatory response. An intense cold bath, high dose antioxidants, etc. I think a couple of days, you know, when it, when it comes to ozone therapy, might be a little bit generous, possibly too long. Although you do have, I think, more oxidation occurring from an ozone treatment than from exercise. So you might be onto something. But I think what's important, the takeaway for people here is like, you know, if you're going to a clinic and getting ozone therapy and they're offering you a giant vitamin C IV bag, you know, directly afterwards, or perhaps glutathione or something like that, it would be best to avoid that.

Ben Greenfield [00:19:27]: I was actually getting an ozone therapy treatment. I was recently in Spain and the nurse practitioner was, she was pretty well informed. You know, she asked me if I wanted an IV after the ozone and I said yes. And she gave me a list of things I could have in the iv. And when she got to vitamin C, she actually said we shouldn't do this one because it's an antioxidant and we shouldn't do it right after ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:19:50]: Yeah, yeah. And that's, that's pretty common practice. The reason I said a couple days is because I, I think you draw drew. A good corollary. I haven't thought about it from that angle. Is research on antioxidants and exercise or some of those other components. I think that kind of builds the case based on principle of our understanding. Um, so maybe you can kind of take the understanding of that and then apply it to ozone, assuming that it's doing a similar thing like it is doing a.

Micah Lowe [00:20:15]: It's a similar reaction to ice baths or exercise in the sense that it's a stress response therapy. So you're intentionally using a small amount of stress to create a beneficial response. The reason I said a couple days though is because actually with athletes, they see more of an uptick on day two, so approximately 48 hours. They've slept twice at that point, and that's where they get more of an increase in their anaerobic threshold. Um, and then they can run longer in that kind of thing. Sometimes if they do ozone therapy and then they have like a big event or exercise the day after, they actually see a little bit of diminishment. And I think the reason is, is because they're still in some sort of reparation process.

Ben Greenfield [00:20:59]: I didn't realize that about athletic performance. So if I wanted to get the benefits of ozone and I were an athlete and I was, say traveling to an event and wanted to harness the performance enhancing effects of ozone. And I want to ask you about these. Anyways, this might be a good segue. You have like these little capsules. It's like ozone. I think it's encapsulated in olive oil or something like that. Would that be something you could actually use as an ergogenic aid, not just for the immune system or as an antiviral or something like that?

Micah Lowe [00:21:30]: It hasn't been researched, really. The only research around this, and I'm coming at this from the angle of research because that's where I play. You know, I'm not out there. I'm not a physician. I'm not doing some sort of clinical work. So I really have to base my knowledge off of what the research is saying, which is often out of date and inadequate. That being said, most of it exists around it as an infection, anti infection type deal where it's being utilized for parasites, stomach infections like Helicobacter pylori. And that's where it really shines.

Ben Greenfield [00:22:05]: You mean for Helicobacter pylori parasites. You mean consuming an ozonated capsule?

Micah Lowe [00:22:11]: Yeah, yeah. You swallow the capsule, it goes down into the stomach. And then the other issue there is we don't think at this point that it's getting into the lower intestine very well because of the stomach acid. So what we did is we have a new one coming out where it'll be micro encapsulated and get more directly to the deeper parts of the colon and do more release there. We think that'll be helpful for people with SIBO. So I can't remember the name of the institute, but Dane Johnson.

Ben Greenfield [00:22:42]: Crohn's Colitis. He's been on the podcast. Great guy.

Micah Lowe [00:22:44]: Yeah. So we, you know, we're going to be trialing it with them and seeing what kind of effect it has there, but we're pretty certain that it'll be a little bit better at getting into the colon.

Ben Greenfield [00:22:55]: Why couldn't you just take the capsule and use it as a suppository?

Micah Lowe [00:22:59]: Well, you can, but there's, you know, A lot that's there. There's a lot of space in between the mouth and the anus. So there's a long ways for it to travel.

Ben Greenfield [00:23:11]: I mean, specifically for the. For the colonic piece.

Micah Lowe [00:23:15]: You can. So that's another route to utilize it. I think in the context of, you know, going down the canal, there's going to be some of the gut that might be missed. So when you're doing like rectal insufflation, for example, it is helpful with SIBO, but a lot of people aren't going to do that. A lot of people aren't going to do suppositories as well. And so a part of this is like just to make it more known and hopefully look for a route that you don't have to stick up something up your butt.

Ben Greenfield [00:23:43]: Yeah, many, many people's buttholes pucker just hearing us talk about it. I think you're right. There's a market friction when it comes to selling products that need to go in the less used hole than the more often administration of oral. These ozonated oil capsules. I don't quite understand that. How do you actually make something like that?

Micah Lowe [00:24:07]: Yeah, I mean, it's literally just taking a base oil and infusing it with ozone gas and then that stabilizes as a peroxide in there. It's not actually ozone oil, even though that's what we call it be more accurately called peroxide oil because that's the component that's actually in there. Now there is a process to doing this for best practice. People can do it at home. And you are going to make ozone oil. It's not going to be as strong, as stable, or as good as like professionally manufactured. So really the only difference we do is that we make that oil really cold because what's happening is a chemical reaction. So it heats up.

Micah Lowe [00:24:42]: So we just make sure that it's really cold. And we do it obviously on a big scale too. And that way you prevent formation of different aldehydes as well. So you can get. If you over ozonate it, there's too much heat in there. The oil starts to deconjugate more and you get like formaldehyde and things like that at really, really, really small doses. But nonetheless, it's better to have ozone oil without formaldehyde in it. So keep it really cold if you do that.

Ben Greenfield [00:25:11]: Peroxide seems like it's kind of a bad word these days, right? Like everybody's talking about lipid peroxides and that's the reason that you would want to potentially avoid something like heated and processed seed oils. So when you say you've got a capsule and it's not technically ozone, it's peroxide. Describe that to me. What exactly is a peroxide and why would it be beneficial?

Micah Lowe [00:25:30]: Yeah, in this context, you know, my range of understanding on peroxides is as an antiseptic. So clinically what they see is that chronic wound care, even things like gangrene. I have this physician over in Iran that does limb bagging and that kind of thing. And they'll get really severe cases of like there was one person in particular that needed an amputation due to their gangrene and they just throw a bag on there and, you know, got rid of it. So you can use ozone oil on the skin for severe infections, chronic wounds, things that are not healing up and all that kind of stuff, but has a two fold reaction. One, it stimulates growth, and this is all research, but stimulates growth factors so it speeds the healing time. And then it's an antiseptic on two levels. One, that the peroxides themselves are an antiseptic.

Micah Lowe [00:26:20]: And then number two, it stimulates the skin to create more. You actually create hydrogen, hydrogen peroxide within your skin as a part of your immune response. So it stimulates the skin to create more of that. And what they see though, there was, I was recently reviewing this and I think it was seven or eight clinical trials. So it was a systematic review on ozone bagging, ozone oils, et cetera. It was about 60 to 70% and I can't remember the exact figure. That's why I'm giving ranges 60 to 70% more effective than the traditional method of dealing with those chronic wound closures, really with none of the negative downside of using antibiotics and that kind of thing. 60 to 70% better in the sense that it was way faster and wound closure happened way more often.

Micah Lowe [00:27:06]: So it's really effective as far as like wound care and that kind of thing. But I mean, we really haven't seen much negative effect with the ozone oils. And you're also not taking a ton, you know, so if there is, I don't think that, you know, in this context, like peroxides are all that bad, or reactive oxygen species for that matter. They do kind of get a bad name. But you need reactive oxygen species for signaling, for immune response, for all sorts of stuff. And that's the ecosystem of your body. If I had to boil ozone therapy down into one word, I would say balance or homeostasis, because it's not really that the ozone is going in and doing the work. It's actually just causing a stress to your body.

Micah Lowe [00:27:51]: But your body then responds to that stress by causing homeostasis, a balancing mechanism. And it's not perfect, but, you know, in the case of, like an autoimmune disorder, it quiets it down. Or on the other side, if somebody's immunosuppressed, it brings it up. Well, how does it do that? It's not the ozone. The ozone is a catalyst. It acts on the body. But then your body's intelligence is able to kind of take over from there and cause a balancing mechanism.

Ben Greenfield [00:28:16]: So with the oral consumption or the rectal insufflation of ozone, literally filling a bag with ozone and using a catheter to squeeze ozone into the butt and cause capillary absorption of ozone. I don't do that on a super regular basis. I. Well, people are going to laugh because my definition of super regular, But I would do something like two or three times a week. Or if I'm sick or I know I've been exposed to a lot of viral particles during travel, I'll go more often than that. But my theory is that excess use of ozone could have a deleterious effect on the colonic flora or on the microbiome if you were to use it too much. Is that, in your opinion, a credible theory?

Micah Lowe [00:29:02]: I think the way you're doing it sounds right, especially for somebody of your health, your stature, that kind of thing. In certain cases, I think more can be warranted. Um, but there's also always some sort of cycling going on. So it's never every day, indefinitely. It's like all the protocols are going to have a cycle built in there because we are causing a stress and we need the reparation process to happen. That's the whole point of it. So the max that's ever recommended is five days a week. But they have done some research on the case of, like, dysbiosis, where your microbiome is out of whack.

Micah Lowe [00:29:36]: So you have overpopulation of certain species and underpopulation of others. And the interesting thing is when they introduced ozone therapy over a control, they were drinking the ozone water and doing rectal insufflation. They saw mostly a resolution in dysbiosis, which is kind of interesting because you would think it to just like, nuke the flora that's there to nuke all the population that's there. My theory on why that outcome might happen is that it is a stress response, but it's small enough to where it creates a beneficial response. So it's not going through and just like nuking the entire thing. But it is helping with the immune system, it is helping with the other aspects that are necessary to create a good terrain for the good, good bacteria to grow back. That being said, you know, if you don't need to do it five times a week, in the case of people that are really sick, you know, like, I'm really trying to get some sort of immune response from it because that's my number one. I'm really trying to get some sort of, you know, anaerobic threshold up or whatever it is.

Micah Lowe [00:30:44]: I think two to three is kind of the perfect regularity for athletics and for maintenance.

Ben Greenfield [00:30:50]: Yeah. Considering that some beneficial bacteria thrive in an anaerobic environment and the treatment with ozone would create a more aerobic scenario. Akkermansia is one example. I think that it is prudent if you are using ozone regularly, either rectal or oral, to supplement with specifically an Akkermansia based probiotic. I, I just think it, it's, it's a theory not proven by science, but I think you could risk decimating some of the anaerobic bacterial population. And so supplementing with that, I think would be a good idea. And you mentioned the oil and man, your, your ozonated oil. I put that on cuts, scrapes, bruises, you know, wounds, et cetera.

Ben Greenfield [00:31:37]: And I mean, it's one of the top things in my first aid kit at home here. But then you also have the oil designed. I think it's a little weaker and with some essential oils and stuff added to it for oil pulling. I've been using your oil for oil pulling for like three years. You know, I used to use coconut oil and olive oil to clean the mouth upon waking. You know, I swish and spit after about five or 10 minutes. But tell me about the oil pulling with ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:32:04]: Yeah. So again, we've infused ozone gas into an oil. The thing that we made different about the oil pulling solution, and I can't remember, this might have actually been born out of your use for it and other people asking for it and that kind of thing.

Ben Greenfield [00:32:18]: Oh, well, by the way, I think it was because originally when I first started, I was using your regular oil and then I told you how I was using it and you guys eventually came out with the oil pulling version.

Micah Lowe [00:32:27]: Yeah, I remember sending an email and saying like, hey, that might be a little bit strong. And you're like, I'm fine.

Ben Greenfield [00:32:33]: You know, and then, and later I discovered the importance of not having too clean of a mouth. Right. You do not want to nuke the oral microbiome.

Micah Lowe [00:32:41]: Yeah, yeah. So what we did is like that, that's made for the skin and it's. And primarily for wounds care. Right. So a lot of wound care, physicians and clinics are utilizing that for diabetic ulcers and all sorts of stuff. And so that's what that line was made for. The idea with the mouth is that you do have an oral microbiome. Your microbiome starts there and that's really important for your overall health.

Micah Lowe [00:33:03]: A lot of people don't know, but actually over 50% of the metabolites in your system have been modified or synthesized by the microbiome. So even though it's kind of not parasitic parasitic, but para host like ecosystem, that it's not us, it's still really, really important to our health. And so you don't want to be disrupting that in a negative way and building a negative microbiome or associated with some sort of negative state. So anyway, the idea and a lot of this needs to be fleshed out on the scientific ends because there's like we've alluded to, we don't understand exactly everything that's going on, but there's clinical experience and logic that we're utilizing. And in this event, the idea was that, hey, if you use a peroxide value of 1200, which is what we use for wound care, that might be too strong for the mouth because we do have a microbiome there and we don't want to wipe it out. Maybe in the case of a severe infection, dentists use it, osteonecrosis of the jaw, all sorts of stuff. But let's make a weaker one. So we made it 10 times weaker.

Micah Lowe [00:34:08]: A peroxide value of 120 for oil pulling. That way at least we're not at the 1200 space. And then what you can do is you can take a tablespoon, a teaspoon, put that into the mouth and swish it around for 20 minutes. The idea of oil pulling is that we're using that oil to drive it deeper into the tooth. And the reason it's ozonated is to get rid of bad microbes that are going to be causing tooth decay and things like that. So the oil draws it into the tooth. That's why you got to switch it, swish it for like 20 minutes. Because the teeth are not just like this porous substance.

Micah Lowe [00:34:42]: There are these little tubules that connect and weave together and so that 20 minutes is needed to be able to drive it down further. And then ozone being an antiseptic is going to help with killing off the infection and hopefully preventing tooth decay. I mean, I don't want to make too bold of claims, but I mean we've had a lot of people say that got rid of their cavities and that kind of thing. And I don't know if that's 100% accurate. It's not validated, but it's, it's really good for active infections and being able to wipe those out. That's. That's well understood.

Ben Greenfield [00:35:13]: Yeah. None of this is medical advice. Speak to your medical professional. But I can tell you when I went in for a cleaning, I don't do a lot of dental cleanings, but it'd been like three years. And I went in, they were terribly impressed. Like no gum bleeding, really clean teeth. And besides brushing, one of the main things I was doing was oil pulling every day for about 10 minutes. Now, quick shout out here.

Ben Greenfield [00:35:35]: Speaking of the oral microbiome, Super Teeth is a great company. They have a prebiotic based toothpaste and these little oral probiotic dissolvable lozenges. And so if you want to maintain your oral microbiome and you are concerned you might beeping and I'm affecting that somehow with even a reduced concentration Ozonated oil for oil pulling, that's a good company to look into for the oral microbiome. Now what about water, Micah? Drinking ozonated water? I think that was one of the first ways that I used ozone when I started to set up this, this home ozone kit that you sent to me. Walk me through why someone would drink ozone water and maybe this would also be a good time to kind of introduce how you could do something like that using a kit in your own home.

Micah Lowe [00:36:21]: Yeah. So I've only ever talked about it in the context of active infections in the stomach because I think that's where it's really. Well, it's well shown to be really good for that. So like we said helicobacter pylori and things like that. Nonetheless, I have like a couple hundred reviews on my website of saying it helped with my energy or whatever it is. So it's like it's definitely doing something. But yeah, so you can infuse ozone gas into water. You do want to use distilled water because you want the least amount of minerals within the water for it to retain the ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:36:55]: As you know, you're not supposed to drink a lot of distilled water. You're not drinking much of the ozone water, but people will drink anywhere from 4, up to 16 ounces a day. And that is a form of ozone therapy. While the research kind of shows that it's primarily utilized in, like I said, stomach infections, parasites, and things of that nature, it does seem to have a positive effect. And I don't know exactly what it's doing. Maybe it's having a similar mechanism as the IV ozone or the rectal insufflation. But I've seen everything from people who have, like, chronic fatigue. I don't really want to say cancers, but people with cancer might have alleviation of certain symptoms.

Micah Lowe [00:37:35]: Specifically, like, the negative symptoms they get from chemotherapy is big. So you get a huge antioxidant response, cell protective response that seems to make people feel better when they're going through that kind of stuff. So those are. You know, I don't have a great answer, because my answer is primarily around the stomach infections that are there. But a lot of people find benefit for other stuff. I just don't know where to place that exactly and. And how to categorize it.

Ben Greenfield [00:38:03]: Ozone and heat and hyperbaric all increase the cytotoxicity of chemotherapy. And in many cases, people use those as adjuncts to increase the efficacy of chemo or even decrease the required dosage. Again, not medical advice. But those are two things, oxygen and heat, that increase the cytotoxicity of chemotherapy to cancer cells. So I think you could be onto something there.

Micah Lowe [00:38:27]: That's. That's why I got into this industry, is because my brother had cancer. So I was just trying to find things that would be helpful for him. Hyperbaric oxygen was the first thing that came across from a guy at our church that, you know, he was using it for his wife was really helpful, and so started to do hyperbaric oxygen. And he was at Johns Hopkins, too, which is kind of the poster child of cancer care.

Ben Greenfield [00:38:46]: Oh, wow. I didn't know that.

Micah Lowe [00:38:47]: Yeah. Yeah. And, you know, at the time, I wanted to become a physician. So that was kind of my plan is like. So I looked up to these people. But, you know, we said that, you know, we've been doing the hyperbaric oxygen. We've seen, like, a significant improvement and critical thinking. His energy, his sleep, his pain has been reduced, all this kind of stuff.

Micah Lowe [00:39:07]: And they're like, oh, that's a nice placebo effect you have over there. That's kind of their attitude towards it. And this was 11 years ago. And this again, how I got into ozone but it was kind of like a little bit. You tilt your head and like, what? Like, this was hugely helpful for them. And you guys don't care. You're kind of like, oh, well, you're doing some fake stuff over there. And it's like, well, no, he's had like an actual outcome from this.

Micah Lowe [00:39:31]: And at that point had had many open brain surgeries and various things. And so it kind of got me thinking, is there other stuff out there that would be really helpful for Matt that we don't know about? Anyway, long story short, that's how I came into ozone.

Ben Greenfield [00:39:49]: Wow, I didn't know that. That's interesting. You know? Yeah. Hyperbaric exercise with oxygen therapy, intermittent hypoxic therapy, and ozone would all be ways that you could increase the oxidation effect of oxygen or ozone. So that's interesting. The water. Let's say somebody wants to make it at home. Walk me through the equipment necessary.

Micah Lowe [00:40:10]: Yeah, so if you're just doing water, they don't actually need to buy from me. You can go on Amazon and just get an ozone generator for like 50 to 100 bucks. Somewhere in there. I haven't checked the prices lately, but you can take that machine and then put it into distilled water and then ozonate it for 20 to 30 minutes. But essentially it'll be a little machine. It has a tube attached to it that goes into glass. It does need to be glass. So you don't want to use plastic or anything like that.

Micah Lowe [00:40:40]: Because ozone would break down the plastic and then ozonate it for a period of like 20 minutes. And then you'll have ozone water that you can then drink. You do have to drink drink it pretty much. Maybe not right away. Usually when I drink it, I'll ozonate it and then I'll wait for 20 minutes. Because the half life of ozone at room temperature is approximately 30 minutes. Which means after a couple hours, there's not going to be much ozone in there. So you have to use it quickly.

Micah Lowe [00:41:04]: That's why you can't sell, like bottled ozone water. They'll use it in like a purification process, but there's no ozone in it by the time it gets to you. So that's why you have to make it on site in all situations, whether it's gas or water. Ozone oil is the exception because it stabilizes. But yeah, the reason you can just get that on like Amazon and do that is because you don't just to make ozone. Water doesn't require like a laboratory grade piece of ozone equipment. Like we use you know, and that's used more as the therapeutic stuff, like the insufflations, the IV ozone, all that kind of stuff. You want something that's really, really pure.

Micah Lowe [00:41:45]: The thing with those machines that are 50 to 100 bucks, one, they don't use pure oxygen, which is required for all ozone therapies. Fine for water. But number two is they, you know, their criteria for the components that are within the machine is really low because it's just intended to be water purification. So they'll put all sorts of components in those machines that are not actually compatible with ozone. So in the instance use like a brass fitting, which is pretty common in those machines, there might be a little bit of brass that's coming off as that gas is going into the water. So while not ideal, it is a really expensive way. If I had an active infection and I had 50 to 100 bucks, you know that, yeah, I'm going to go ahead and do that because that's what, where my capacity is.

Ben Greenfield [00:42:31]: Yeah, but you also need anybody who's been in my living room, my downstairs living room. They walk in, there's a giant canister of medical grade oxygen on the counter connected to one of your units. But even for these Amazon units, you still have to also, somewhere in your local area, purchase a medical grade oxygen canister that feeds into the unit. And then the tube coming out the other end, the unit makes the ozone from the oxygen and then the tube coming out the other end. That's what would go into water, for example.

Micah Lowe [00:42:57]: Well, those ones actually, they just like your laundry unit, run on ambient air. So they have a little pump inside that pulls because the air is 21% oxygen.

Ben Greenfield [00:43:05]: Like you said, you don't need it super concentrated for something like just water.

Micah Lowe [00:43:10]: I mean, if there's an active infection and money's not, you know, an object. Yeah, I'm going to get the more pure, stronger one because the machines that we make are pure, pure, more pure. They're stronger than what you're going to get out of that. But again, going back to that $50 to $100 price point is kind of tough to beat. So you can get a really inexpensive. It's not going to be as strong, definitely not going to be nearly as pure. But you can get an effect there.

Ben Greenfield [00:43:38]: If somebody ordered one of your home kits because they want to do, let's say, some of the more advanced protocols we'll talk about here in a second, they would still need to go to their local medical supply outlet or anywhere else that would sell medical grade oxygen canisters and get one of those, right?

Micah Lowe [00:43:53]: Yeah. Anytime you're doing any sort of ozone therapy outside of the water, you need like a pure oxygen. The reason for that is because, like I said, the ambient air is 21%, which means that 79% of the air is not oxygen. And then within the generator, we have what's called a reactor. And that puts a really high frequency into the gas. And basically what it's doing is it's deconstructing the molecules in there and then recombining them. So in the case of when we're using like a pure gas, like 99.9% oxygen, it's just deconstructing oxygen and then combining it back into ozone. And we can control the rate at which that happens.

Micah Lowe [00:44:31]: But when you introduce ambient air, you're doing that with all the molecules in there, not just the oxygen. So you're creating some mixtures that wouldn't be ideal to put. Not only not ideal, just not safe to put directly into the body. Going into water and drinking the water, you know, that's a little bit of a different reality because we're made to be able to consume a lot of stuff that isn't. I mean, people are eating cheeseburgers every day for years and they're still, you know, still kicking. So there's a little bit more resilience there.

Ben Greenfield [00:45:01]: Yeah, yeah. We are not endorsing the frequent eating of cheeseburgers on this show, but. But you made a good point. The depending on the homemade burger with grass fed grass, finished beef, and some real cheese, I'm all over that. Yeah. So the insufflation, we brought up that word a few times. And in celebration of this podcast and also as a part of my regular health routine, I got up this morning, I went into the basement, I flipped on my oxygen canister, I turned on the unit, I set it for the proper amount of ozone, which I'd love for you to get into at some point. And then I filled a bag with ozone.

Ben Greenfield [00:45:39]: Took about 60 seconds. And then I connected that bag to a rectal catheter. I squeezed the ozone into the rectum, did my rectal insufflation, and that absorbed ozone into my bloodstream. And then I'm off to the races, and sometimes I do fart and it smells like ozone afterwards, which is nice, clean, fresh fart smell. The insufflation that you can do, from what I understand, nasal ear insufflation, my wife, or yeast in the past has done vaginal insufflation. So insufflation, if I'm not mistaken, does that just mean you're taking ozone and you're putting it into a hole in the body?

Micah Lowe [00:46:19]: Yep, into a body cavity.

Ben Greenfield [00:46:21]: Okay, so besides rectal insufflation, what are some other ways that someone could insufflate, if that's a word?

Micah Lowe [00:46:29]: Yeah, I think he named them, which is ear insufflation, nasal insufflation, vaginal insufflation, rectal insufflation.

Ben Greenfield [00:46:35]: Okay, so vaginal and rectal is pretty straightforward. You just fill up the tube and you use the catheter. How do you do the ears?

Micah Lowe [00:46:41]: Vaginal has a little bit of a different protocol than that because the epithelium line, it's a little bit different. So the absorption rate is different. So they actually do like a consistent. You can do it with just a catheter.

Ben Greenfield [00:46:52]: I don't know. I don't have a vagina. My wife does it. So I might be misunderstanding the way that she does it. So you can describe if you want.

Micah Lowe [00:47:00]: I've gotten flack for talking about this stuff before because I also share that in common with you. I do not have a vagina either, or uterus. But I've read a lot of research on it, worked with a lot of clinicians demonstrating what it is that they do. But. Yeah. So I mean, I hate to say this, but it kind of looks like a little dildo. It's like this little piece that goes into the vagina. It's small, but that essentially stays in there.

Micah Lowe [00:47:28]: And then they continuously put a small amount of ozone gas. So this is not like a large volume, but a small amount is kind of pumping in there. And that take. That's a process of like 4 to 10 minutes. Again, this is best practice versus, like, what you said, using a catheter. That's fine. You're probably just not going to get as much of the intended effect as you're looking for. And then you asked about nasal and ear insulation, too, right? Yeah, yeah.

Micah Lowe [00:47:53]: So nasal inflation. I never teach anybody how to do that because, again, you can't breathe ozone gas. And the likelihood of you breathing it in when you're doing an insufflation is really high. But I can explain how I personally have done it.

Ben Greenfield [00:48:08]: There's a trick. There's a trick. You taught it to me. Fill us in.

Micah Lowe [00:48:12]: Yeah, yeah.

Ben Greenfield [00:48:13]: So how.

Micah Lowe [00:48:14]: I have personally used insulation. And again, this isn't my favorite thing because it's. It's kind of. It's an irritant. Right. So when I'm pushing it into the nasal cavity. For me, it does not feel good. Other people love it, and that's.

Micah Lowe [00:48:28]: That's fine. I. I think there's just the reality of some different responses there. So my response is that I usually get draining then thereafter, so. And if I have a cold, that's really the only time that I do this. If I had a nasal infection, this would be my number one thing to go to.

Ben Greenfield [00:48:46]: Or mold issues, right?

Micah Lowe [00:48:49]: Yeah. If there's mycotoxins and various things that are in the nasal cavities, this is a really good way to get it up there. So anyway, I taken a deep breath, fill up my lungs all the way so I can't pull in any more air. And then from the ozone generator, I extract into a little syringe. And it doesn't have the needle on it. Syringe is just the part that actually holds the gas, not the needle. And then that I put into one of my nostrils. And again, I have my lungs all the way full, so no more air can come in.

Micah Lowe [00:49:23]: I'll push half that syringe in one side and then half in the other. And then I wait like, five to ten seconds, and then I just blow out all the air from my lungs, through my nose, through my mouth, both at the same time, just blow it all out. And that way no ozone is getting breathed into my lungs. And that's how I mitigate it from going into my lungs.

Ben Greenfield [00:49:45]: Right. By the nature of holding your breath, you're essentially closing your glottis. And so the. And then once you breathe out, essentially the ozone is hitting the nose. And how long did you say you retain it for?

Micah Lowe [00:49:55]: 5, 10 seconds, because that's my personal comfort level. I've seen some clinicians do it for, like, 30 seconds, but, you know, I'll. I'm a little bit more sensitive when I drink the ozone water. I do that. So that's why I'm a little bit shorter on my time frame with it. It's just how my body responds to it. So I. I generally do not very strong ozone water.

Micah Lowe [00:50:16]: And I don't hold it for very long, but people will hold it for longer again. That might cause you, especially if you have some buildup in there, to drain for a couple hours. So you'll be blowing your nose afterwards, though, it feels pretty dang good because all of a sudden, things are cleared.

Ben Greenfield [00:50:30]: Out clean as a whistle. Clean as a whistle. I actually hadn't messed around with ear insufflation much, but I was at a health event And a nurse practitioner was administering ozone, and she did ear insufflation. It's kind of like when you don't realize what feeling good actually is. And then you do something to feel good, and you're like, oh, this is what having energy actually feels like. She did both my ears, and all of a sudden, my hearing went clear as a bell. It's this feeling like a warm sensation going into your ears. I believe all she did, you can correct me if I'm wrong, is fill a syringe with ozone from the ozone generator.

Ben Greenfield [00:51:04]: And then once that syringe was filled with ozone, she just injected it into either ear. That's how you do it, right?

Micah Lowe [00:51:10]: That's one way you can do it again. You talk to a hundred ozone practitioners. There's going to be a hundred different ways to do it. So we actually, like. You have your headset on right now. We have a set that looks like that, except it can connect up to the ozone generator. And then that way, you're getting a small amount of gas going in, but continuously going in. And then the reason that it's a headset, like what you have is because we actually have a destruct built around it.

Micah Lowe [00:51:35]: So the ozone goes in, and then that excess ozone, as it's coming out, it's going through this carbon material and turning it back into oxygen so that you're not breathing it.

Ben Greenfield [00:51:44]: Oh, interesting. So you literally have a set of headphones. They're like ozonating headphones.

Micah Lowe [00:51:49]: Yeah, yeah.

Ben Greenfield [00:51:50]: I didn't know that.

Micah Lowe [00:51:51]: You just do that two to four minutes.

Ben Greenfield [00:51:52]: Is that like, a new addition to the homekit?

Micah Lowe [00:51:55]: I mean, I've had a variation of that for eight years, Nine years. But the headset is newer. I think we've had that for, like a year. That actually has the carbon material on there. That was a big upgrade. Because the number one complaint is, like, I like doing it. It's helpful, but I can smell it. So I have to have a fan on, you know, window open, that kind of thing.

Micah Lowe [00:52:14]: So we. I just didn't want to hear that complaint anymore. I got annoyed.

Ben Greenfield [00:52:18]: What's the main reason someone would do a. An ear insufflation?

Micah Lowe [00:52:21]: Ear infections are. Gets rid of them like that, number one. But just head, nose, and throat infections. Because the ears are connected to the eyes, connected to the nasal cavities, connected to the throat. There are little tubules in there that connect everything up. And so you do kind of get a head response to it. But a lot of people. So the number one, like, benefit outside of active infection that I hear about is people with Lyme, like brain fog and that kind of thing.

Micah Lowe [00:52:49]: It's a little bit tough to say though, because Lyme is. I think the diagnosis of it can be challenging. But brain fog, I've had a lot of cases. There was one guy who did a study on, I think it was, I can't remember the cause of the hearing loss. I think it was not age related, it was something else, but some sort of hearing loss that he actually saw a beneficial response on hearing loss when he utilized ozone. So again, it's one of those things where we're just causing that stress and the body seems to respond. There's actually even a cool study on IV ozone where they're looking at microcirculation in the brain and hypoxic parts of the brain. And so they're just doing IV ozone.

Micah Lowe [00:53:33]: But then what they saw was like the part that was hypoxic and needed the oxygen, actually the microcirculation got better. But then you would go, well, what about. Although it didn't respond, the other parts of the brain that didn't need it didn't have that like vasodilation, improvement, oxygen delivery, all that kind of stuff. And it makes it look like ozone is really intelligent. It's not the ozone, it's you that's intelligent, your body. But it does seem to be a really good catalyst for a lot of stuff.

Ben Greenfield [00:53:59]: Yeah, and a lot of the stuff we're talking about as far as things you can easily do at home relatively safely, that's way different than these blood treatments you get at a clinic. I mean, I did, I think it might have been with your unit. I had a doctor come over and he just basically put a catheter in my arm. He drew a few 30cc syringes of blood out. He then passed it through ozone and then put it back into my body. It's almost like a home ozone treatment, which you could technically finagle together with your devices, if I'm not mistaken. But of course I do not recommend doing something like that at home. Like a lot of these more hefty blood based treatments we briefly mentioned, you know, where literally the blood comes out, gets ozonated, sometimes passes through a filter, you know, goes back into your body, or they draw a syringe of blood out, ozonate that, and then put it back into your body via catheter.

Ben Greenfield [00:54:49]: Those are more of the type of things you definitely would want to do at a medical clinic. But I'm assuming that you're not opposed to blood ozonation treatments, right, Micah?

Micah Lowe [00:54:58]: No, not at all.

Ben Greenfield [00:55:00]: Okay, so the thing with these home units is the actual amount of ozone you're using. You know, I have an adapter tax, my oxygen tank. When I do rectal insufflation, I think I just use the number you sent to me. I put it like 1 quarter, and then I turn your unit up to 8 and go for 60 seconds. I think that gives me a value of 40. What's imagining gamma units?

Micah Lowe [00:55:26]: Gamma is the word that we use. It's actually micrograms per milliliter.

Ben Greenfield [00:55:29]: Okay, so gamma is equivalent to mg per L. Yeah, yeah. Okay, so how do people know what gamma unit to use? Whether they're doing ear, rectal, nasal, et cetera?

Micah Lowe [00:55:40]: Yeah, just go to metaskill.com slash guide and there's a guide that you can download.

Ben Greenfield [00:55:45]: Like meta. Like medical. Like Metaskill.

Micah Lowe [00:55:48]: Yeah. So it's M E D I skill.com slash guide.

Ben Greenfield [00:55:53]: I'll add it to the show notes. I'll put it in the show notes. Okay, so you go there and it tells you what. What gamma choose.

Micah Lowe [00:55:59]: Yeah, Even, like, for different things. So if it's like biohacking versus like a chronic issue versus, like ear versus rectal. All the different things are in there. It's a really nice protocol guide. Has access to videos, QR codes, links directly in it if you're looking on your computer. Further resources for reading. When you want to understand something that goes through all the different specs on what to do when, how, et cetera.

Ben Greenfield [00:56:25]: Okay. Super useful. Another term people might not be familiar with that you mentioned earlier is bagging or limb bagging for whatever. Athlete's foot, fungal infections, topical wounds, et cetera. How do you do that?

Micah Lowe [00:56:38]: Yeah, that one's super easy. So it's a bag that's specifically made for this. But I've even known there's this conference. I always kind of giggle at it because I love those guys, but they're kind of old school. Meaning that 80's 90's, et cetera, it was really hard to get good ozone equipment. So what did they do? They made it in their garage. I remember this one guy, really, really nice guy, you know, he's like, I got this new ozone analyzer that I'm selling. I'm like, oh, cool.

Micah Lowe [00:57:06]: I'd like to see it. He brings up this toolbox that had this LED screen. So he had rigged up this toolbox to be his ozone analyzer.

Ben Greenfield [00:57:13]: Sounds like your hot tub experiment.

Micah Lowe [00:57:15]: Yeah, yeah, kind of. And then. Yeah, so they would just use like actual trash bags and things like that. You know, we have better stuff now where it's like Ozone resistant, easier to use, more comfortable, nicer, all that kind of stuff. So anyway, these bags are especially made for it. Not 100% necessary, but definitely an improvement. And you put those over the area that's affected.

Micah Lowe [00:57:41]: So whether that's an infection on healing wound graft versus host, whatever it is, you put it over that area and then that's connected to the machine and it just blows the ozone gas right in there. Now in the case of if it's like on the torso somewhere that you can't put a bag over, we have these cups that if you've ever done cupping, kind of look like that, but they're not creating a negative pressure. You just put it on the affected area and it does the same thing. It just blows the ozone gas right over it. And again, that's doing a couple of things. That's growth factors, so speeding healing time and cutting infection. And it does that like tremendously. Like if it gets approval at some point, it's probably going to be up that alley because that's like it's just poster child for wound care.

Ben Greenfield [00:58:24]: Amazing. And how long do you leave that bagged around a limb?

Micah Lowe [00:58:28]: Like 20 to 30 minutes, typically if there's an active infection.

Ben Greenfield [00:58:32]: Okay, so let's say I have athlete's foot. Having been wearing my sandals in the shower at the gym, I could literally just bag my foot and leave it on there for 20 or 30 minutes.

Micah Lowe [00:58:39]: Yeah, personally I probably use the ozone oil, but if it was bad enough, I probably would throw the bag on there too. And you know, I. I'm just kind of impatient. I don't like running errands and that kind of stuff. So I don't want something around me for 20 minutes unless. Unless I have to.

Ben Greenfield [00:58:54]: Yeah. I'll include information at BenGreenfieldLife.com/O3podcast but these home kits like some of yours, that what I get the headphones, I assume the water generator. The owes pretty much everything except the oxygen tank. And if I wanted the full setup at home, how much am I looking to spend?

Micah Lowe [00:59:14]: Around 1,800 all the way in. For everything that's going to last you, like indefinitely. There'll be some small stuff here and there that you might have to replace, like the catheters. You probably are not going to use the same one for the rest of your life.

Ben Greenfield [00:59:28]: Yeah, you're not going to use the same rectal catheter for 10 years.

Micah Lowe [00:59:30]: I mean, I'm not going to stop you either. I'm not the police on that.

Ben Greenfield [00:59:34]: Proceed at your own risk. Okay, so that's honestly considering you'd be using this on a regular basis for you and. And your family, if you have one, is kind of like a pretty potent addition to a home first aid kit. I mean, like I said, I use mine weekly. I think it's a pretty good investment. And then you have the ozone for the washer too, so this is fantastic. So.

Ben Greenfield [00:59:55]: BenGreenfieldLife.com slash O3 podcast to check out Micah's website and what he does. And like I said, I've learned most of what I know about ozone from Micah and he's known for making pretty good products. So SimplyO3 is the name of the company. Anything else you want to mention or share with people, Micah?

Micah Lowe [01:00:13]: No, I appreciate it. You know, I. I really enjoy ozone. Like, ultimately what I care about is. Is, yeah, it's not because, I mean, I do nerd out on it, but I want to see people get better. You know, I'm here to move the needle on medicine. And I feel very, very strongly about that, that that's what motivates me because it means that my brother lives 16 years beyond projection, so I've had him for a lot longer than anticipated. And I'm really, really thankful for that.

Micah Lowe [01:00:44]: But, you know, for me, this work and all the other stuff that I'm doing, you know, I want grandparents to be around for grandkids, parents for kids, and ozone is in the cure all. But it's one tool in the toolbox. And I'm working on a lot of stuff within ozone, outside of ozone that I think could help people. So, yeah, people can check out my Instagram too. It's Micah for Health, if anybody's interested.

Ben Greenfield [01:01:07]: Micah for Health. Check them on the instas and I'll link to that too. Micah, thank you so much, man. You're doing good work.

Micah Lowe [01:01:13]: Yeah, yeah. Thank you. I appreciate it.

Ben Greenfield [01:01:15]: All right, folks, the show notes again are a BenGreenfieldLife.com/O3 podcast, not 03 podcast. Zero is not oxygen. O3 podcast. Check it out. Have an encouraging week to discover even.

Ben Greenfield [01:01:28]: More tips, tricks, hacks and content to become the most complete, boundless version of.

Ben Greenfield [01:01:34]: You, visit BenGreenfieldLife.com.

Ben Greenfield [01:01:43]: In compliance with the FTC guidelines, please assume the following about links and posts on this site. Most of the links going to products are often affiliate links, of which I receive a small commission from sales of certain items. But the price is the same for you and sometimes I even get to share a unique and somewhat significant discount with you. In some cases, I might also be an investor in a company I mention. I'm the founder, for example, of Kion llc, the makers of Kion branded supplements and products, which I talk about quite a bit. Regardless of the relationship, if I post or talk about an affiliate link to a product, it is indeed something I personally use support and with full authenticity and transparency recommend. In good conscience, I personally vet each and every product that I talk about. My first priority is providing valuable information and resources to you that help you positively optimize your mind, body and spirit.

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