The Tiny Implant Replacing Life-Changing Drugs | Biohacking Tools

Dave Asprey

18 nov 2025

Episode description

Bioelectronic medicine is changing how we treat inflammation, autoimmunity, and chronic disease, and this episode shows you exactly how nerve stimulation could redefine human performance, longevity, and brain optimization. You will learn how electricity, neurotransmitters, and targeted neural pathways can replace drugs, control inflammation, and help you hack the vagus nerve with precision instead of guesswork. 



Watch this episode on YouTube for the full video experience: 

https://www.youtube.com/@DaveAspreyBPR 



Host Dave Asprey is joined by Kevin J. Tracey, MD, president and CEO of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research at Northwell Health, pioneer of vagus nerve research, and author of The Great Nerve. He is one of the world’s most cited scientists in inflammation and neuroscience, and his discoveries created the field now known as bioelectronic medicine. He identified the therapeutic action of anti TNF antibodies, mapped the inflammatory reflex, and revealed how vagus nerve signaling controls immunity. With more than 450 scientific publications and over 120 U.S. patents, he is a trusted authority whose work drives the future of anti-aging, functional medicine, metabolism, and neural therapies. 



Dr. Tracey and Host Dave Asprey explore how the vagus nerve truly operates, why it contains 200,000 fibers with different functions, and what happens when you stimulate specific pathways that regulate inflammation, HRV, neurotransmitters, and immune signaling. You will learn how nerve impulses transmit information, how voltage gated ion channels shape behavior and biology, and why certain forms of stimulation create measurable improvements in mitochondria, metabolic control, sleep optimization, and emotional regulation. 



They break down the science behind surgical vagus nerve implants, focused ultrasound, gamma entrainment, cytokine control, and real neuromodulation. They also explore why cold plunging, breath work, HRV training, nootropics, and consumer devices vary so widely in their effects, and how to evaluate these tools with practical biohacking frameworks. You will hear what actually works, what remains experimental, and what the next decade of nerve based therapies could unlock for brain optimization, longevity, ketosis, fasting, supplements, and AI guided interventions in human biology. 



You’ll Learn: 

• How vagus nerve stimulation reduces inflammation through the inflammatory reflex 

• Why bioelectronic medicine can replace drugs in autoimmune conditions 

• How nerve fibers relay electrical and chemical signals inside the body 

• Why cold immersion, breath work, and HRV training activate specific vagal pathways 

• How 40 hertz gamma entrainment may influence cognitive decline 

• Which stimulation methods have clinic

Episode description

Bioelectronic medicine is changing how we treat inflammation, autoimmunity, and chronic disease, and this episode shows you exactly how nerve stimulation could redefine human performance, longevity, and brain optimization. You will learn how electricity, neurotransmitters, and targeted neural pathways can replace drugs, control inflammation, and help you hack the vagus nerve with precision instead of guesswork. 



Watch this episode on YouTube for the full video experience: 

https://www.youtube.com/@DaveAspreyBPR 



Host Dave Asprey is joined by Kevin J. Tracey, MD, president and CEO of the Feinstein Institutes for Medical Research at Northwell Health, pioneer of vagus nerve research, and author of The Great Nerve. He is one of the world’s most cited scientists in inflammation and neuroscience, and his discoveries created the field now known as bioelectronic medicine. He identified the therapeutic action of anti TNF antibodies, mapped the inflammatory reflex, and revealed how vagus nerve signaling controls immunity. With more than 450 scientific publications and over 120 U.S. patents, he is a trusted authority whose work drives the future of anti-aging, functional medicine, metabolism, and neural therapies. 



Dr. Tracey and Host Dave Asprey explore how the vagus nerve truly operates, why it contains 200,000 fibers with different functions, and what happens when you stimulate specific pathways that regulate inflammation, HRV, neurotransmitters, and immune signaling. You will learn how nerve impulses transmit information, how voltage gated ion channels shape behavior and biology, and why certain forms of stimulation create measurable improvements in mitochondria, metabolic control, sleep optimization, and emotional regulation. 



They break down the science behind surgical vagus nerve implants, focused ultrasound, gamma entrainment, cytokine control, and real neuromodulation. They also explore why cold plunging, breath work, HRV training, nootropics, and consumer devices vary so widely in their effects, and how to evaluate these tools with practical biohacking frameworks. You will hear what actually works, what remains experimental, and what the next decade of nerve based therapies could unlock for brain optimization, longevity, ketosis, fasting, supplements, and AI guided interventions in human biology. 



You’ll Learn: 

• How vagus nerve stimulation reduces inflammation through the inflammatory reflex 

• Why bioelectronic medicine can replace drugs in autoimmune conditions 

• How nerve fibers relay electrical and chemical signals inside the body 

• Why cold immersion, breath work, and HRV training activate specific vagal pathways 

• How 40 hertz gamma entrainment may influence cognitive decline 

• Which stimulation methods have clinic

Mindsip insights from this episode:

Utilize electricity to reduce reliance on drugs for rheumatoid arthritis

An FDA-approved implant treats rheumatoid arthritis by stimulating the vagus nerve for one minute a day, allowing 75% of trial patients to stop taking powerful biologic drugs.

Utilize TENS unit to lower inflammatory markers

Despite his skepticism, the researcher uses a simple TENS unit on his ear because his own small studies show it can lower inflammatory markers in healthy people.

Understand vagus nerve complexity beyond simple stimulation

The vagus nerve is not a single wire but a bundle of 200,000 individual fibers, each with a specific job, so saying you're "stimulating the vagus nerve" is an oversimplification.

Understand ear's fish gill origin for sensory insights

The cartilage of your external ear is embryologically derived from ancient fish gills, which is why a sensory branch of the vagus nerve is uniquely accessible there.

Stimulate vagus nerve with surgical implant or focused ultrasound

According to the expert, the only two scientifically proven ways to specifically stimulate the vagus nerve are with a surgical implant or with focused ultrasound.

Utilize cold plunges to trigger anti-inflammatory response and stimulate vagus nerve

Cold immersion first triggers an anti-inflammatory fight-or-flight response, and only after a few minutes does it stimulate the vagus nerve fibers that slow the heart rate.

Avoid external stimulators for reliable vagus nerve activation

Consumer devices stimulating the ear are not specific to the vagus nerve and may also stimulate other nerves, leading to unpredictable and person-dependent results.

Utilize nicotine to reduce inflammation through alpha-7 receptor activation

Nicotine can reduce inflammation by activating the same alpha-7 receptor on white blood cells that the vagus nerve uses to stop cytokine production.

DESCARGA LA APLICACIÓN

Descubre la sabiduría de la longevidad

DESCARGA LA APLICACIÓN

Descubre la sabiduría de la longevidad

DESCARGA LA APLICACIÓN

Descubre la sabiduría de la longevidad