Dr. Elizabeth Yurth is the Co-Founder and Medical Director of Boulder Longevity Institute. Dr. Yurth is double-Board Certified in Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation and Anti-Aging/Regenerative Medicine. She has a Stanford-affiliated Fellowship in Sports and Spine Medicine, and a dual-Fellowship in Anti-Aging and Regenerative Medicine (FAARM) and Anti-Aging, Regenerative and Functional Medicine (FAARFM). As an athlete herself who has dealt with numerous injuries, Dr. Yurth is thrilled to share with her clients all the innovative, life-changing treatments that are on the cutting-edge of medicine
Elizabeth Yurth, MD
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VIEW ALLDr. Seeds’ Office Hours – Episode 095
1. Sjögren’s, POTS, Mold, Biofilms & Lumbrokinase (0:45)
2. PMDD, Allopregnanolone & Mitochondrial Efficiency (7:28)
3. Retatrutide, Glucagon & Metabolic Flexibility (20:01)
Cellular Optimization for EDS Surgical Support
Dr. Seeds reviews peptide and supplemental considerations for cellular optimization in an EDS patient preparing for orthopedic surgery. (Question Link)
The Phosphatidylcholine Pathway
Dr. Seeds expands on Journal Club Episode 92 to explore the role of phosphatidylcholine in lipid metabolism, methylation, and mitochondrial integrity during aging. He also highlights how estrogen loss may impact this pathway, especially in pre- and post-menopausal women.
Aging-Associated Decline of Phosphatidylcholine Synthesis is a Malleable Trigger of Natural Mitochondrial Aging
Dr. Seeds explores how age-related decline in phosphatidylcholine synthesis may contribute to mitochondrial aging and why that matters in Cellular Medicine. This discussion connects membrane integrity, mitochondrial function, methylation, and metabolic resilience, while highlighting how this pathway may be more modifiable than we once thought.
1. Managing shingles outbreaks in GLP-1 patient through peptides (0:40)
2. Peptide strategies in suspected ALS (15:56)
3. Improving durability in dementia treatment (25:08)