Barbell Shrugged - [L-Carnitine] Protocols to Improve Heart Health, Performance, and Turn Fat into Energy w/ Anders Varner, Doug Larson, and Dan Garner #701
Episode Date: June 28, 2023L-Carnitine is a naturally occurring amino acid derivative that plays a crucial role in energy metabolism within the human body. It is synthesized in the liver and kidneys from the amino acids lysine ...and methionine. L-Carnitine is primarily involved in the transport of long-chain fatty acids into the mitochondria, the energy-producing organelles within cells, where they can be oxidized to generate ATP (adenosine triphosphate), the body's main energy currency. Â Here are some key aspects and functions of L-Carnitine: Energy production: L-Carnitine facilitates the transport of fatty acids into the mitochondria, enabling their breakdown and subsequent conversion into ATP. This process is essential for maintaining energy levels throughout the body. Fat metabolism: By aiding in the utilization of fatty acids as an energy source, L-Carnitine contributes to fat metabolism and can potentially support weight management and fat loss efforts. Exercise performance: L-Carnitine has been studied for its potential benefits in enhancing exercise performance. It may help improve endurance, reduce muscle damage, and enhance recovery by optimizing energy utilization during physical activity. Heart health: L-Carnitine plays a crucial role in maintaining cardiovascular health. It assists in the transport of fatty acids to the heart muscle, providing a valuable energy source. L-Carnitine supplementation has been studied for its potential benefits in various cardiac conditions, including heart failure and angina. Brain function: L-Carnitine is involved in maintaining healthy brain function. It can cross the blood-brain barrier and acts as a neuroprotective agent, potentially supporting cognitive health and neurological well-being. Â Anders Varner on Instagram Doug Larson on Instagram Dan Garner on Instagram
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Shrug family, this week on Barbell Shrug,
Dan Garner is diving deep into L-carnitine.
Quite simply, the biggest catchphrase
that you can have for this is
how to turn body fat into energy.
But we're also gonna dig into the protocols
for heart health, for performance, for fat loss,
for muscle gain, androgen receptors.
We're gonna dig into all the possible protocols
that you could use, how to time L-carnitine in your diet and supplementation to get the exact result
that you are looking for. As always, friends, make sure you head over to rapidhealthreport.com,
rapidhealthreport.com. That is where Dr. Andy Galpin and Dan Garner are doing a lab lifestyle
and performance analysis for everybody. Well, not for everybody, for one client, but what everybody gets inside
Rapid Health Optimization and your optimization plans, protocols, et cetera. You can see that.
Go watch the full hour-long video for free over at rapidhealthreport.com. Friends, let's get into
the show. Welcome to Barbell Shrugged. I'm Anders Barner, Doug Larson, Dan Garner in the house today.
Today on Barbell Shrug, we're going to be digging to L-carnitine. Many people may not know what L-carnitine is.
Guess what? You're going to be super, super interested in this because everybody wonders how to mobilize stored fat into energy.
And right now, you should listen because Dan Garner is going to drop all the knowledge on exactly that process.
Dude, I'd love to really start this thing off just at the highest level.
What is L-carnitine? And what is its role in the body?
Yeah, man. So L-carnitine, I'm actually really excited to talk about this today,
because I just found kind of recently on a lot of podcasts, I'm almost always talking about the
inside out stuff. So when I'm looking at labs and making decisions based on the microbiome or vitamins and minerals
status or electrolyte status or hormones or something like that, I'm almost always
discussing and referring to things from the inside out that I think people kind of forgot.
I program a lot from the outside in with the athletes like I'm working with, say, Sean O'Malley
and his performance outputs and protocols from the outside in Mark Bell with the marathon, the bodybuilders I work
with all these people I'm doing outside in and inside out. So I'm actually really excited to
talk about carnitine here today, because this is something that I program from the outside in
quite frequently. And it's something I really don't need lab work for. So this is something
that like, I think it's very podcast friendly because sometimes on podcasts it's kind of like well i don't know the
answer of what you should do until i do your labs and then the listeners can be like well
that's not totally helpful but it is interesting
sounds like this guy knows about big words for sure right wait can you wait can you further
define the the outside in versus inside out
aspect of people that don't know what we do at Rapid, how you're kind of the inside out guy and
Andy's the outside in guy? Like, can you just define that so people understand what you're
talking about? Well, that's a philosophy I've been doing since like 2014. So this is something
that I've been doing for a very long time. I teach the inside out and the outside in in my
mentorship courses that I created many, many years ago. So essentially, what I wanted to create was a true holistic and systemic approach
to coaching that doesn't leave anything unchecked, because I've always felt that the subjective is
as important as the objective. So when I'm looking at labs, or I'm looking at things very objective,
like the microbiome, hormones, immune markers, blood work, urine, saliva, stool, these things
are very much from the inside out. And you can also pick up subjective things from the inside
out as well regarding adrenal measures, inflammation, if somebody's got sore joints,
digestive issues, if they've got loose stools, constipation, these things are all very much
from the inside out. However, you also want to utilize and encompass an outside-in approach because somebody's
environment around them matters as much to their results as their environment within
them.
Somebody's psychological health, somebody's emotional health, somebody's sleep status,
somebody's stress in life, somebody's relationship with their partners or with their boss or with their
colleagues or with the teammates on their team. These are all things I would very much consider
outside in that are of equal importance as the inside out. The inside out is always very fun
and sexy to discuss because it involves complicated and sophisticated things such as the mitochondria,
the density, the efficiency, having micronutrient availability, these protocols always
seem very, very, very like this is my aha answer. But unless you have your outside in figured out,
none of that stuff really matters your routines, your rituals, the way in which you view and
approach health, if it's too complicated, if it's too simple, if you like details, if you want
simplicity and big picture stuff, this is all going to move
in one system moving forward. So from the inside out and the outside in, I think that everybody
would have a true approach to what is going to actually allow them to identify the rate limiting
step or the constraint, like we call here a lot of rapid, the constraint that's actually holding
them back. Because as much as you can have a constraint being low testosterone, you can have
a constraint with your morning routine, throwing off your entire day, and ultimately wrecking the
results that you're getting or having a constraint with the way in which you approach the weekends,
rather than approach Monday to Friday. A lot of people have this stuff from the outside in. So
that's kind of like how I
approach outside in and inside out. And outside in stuff is very much applicable to be prescribed
in the absence of any kind of lab work. So this is basically how I operated the majority of my
coaching career before I started working with clients who could afford lab work. And before I
had the education to even interpret lab work. So I've had a ton of experience purely doing outside in stuff before I was able to do the
inside out stuff.
And I'm excited to talk about it.
So I had to talk about carnitine.
So with that little segue at the top.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Let's rock.
So carnitine, honestly, carnitine is something where like it's been around forever.
So this is this is a product that's been around forever. And I kind of just wrote it off in the beginning. If you've been taking supplements as
long as me, like 20 years or so, odds are you've wasted as much money as me on supplements.
Back in the day, I mean, we had stuff not only did it not work but it tasted horribly yeah it's a weird just in the name of
being a meathead this label says it'll get me jacked so let me just try this yeah and then
you find out it's like 500 milligrams of like arginine you think that you're gonna get gigantic
off of it you know everybody that takes organifi or athletic Greens should learn what those greens tasted like a decade ago.
Oh, man.
Yeah.
Just the raw extract.
Yeah.
Even whey.
Whey protein.
Whey was disgusting.
Go ahead.
I could talk about those.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
The cement mixer that we're supposed to drink post-workout.
And we still did.
But yeah.
So like back in the day, I kind of wrote it off. A, cause I felt like I had wasted enough money on stuff that didn't work.
And there was kind of like a red flag from the marketing people.
It was like, carnitine will get you ripped.
Carnitine is going to get you lean.
You'll get a six pack with carnitine.
So I kind of wrote it off and I especially kind of wrote it off because it came at a
time when I was starting to read a lot more real research and develop my own opinions
on things rather than just listen to experts. And when I was reading the research, I identified that the
oral bioavailability of carnitine, it's only 14 to 18%. So I'm like, oh, the oral bioavailability
is quite low. The marketing seems insane. Let me kind of stay away from this thing for a while.
And then I did. Stayed away from it for a while. And then you end up kind of making your way back into it, not necessarily through marketing
or even a lot of like research studies, because I wasn't necessarily getting into a bunch
of those.
I actually learned about it getting through the back way of learning nutritional biochemistry.
So looking at cellular responses, how beta oxidation works, how enzymes work, and then
you start to just see like, man,
so carnitine is involved in energetics. It's involved in recovery. It's involved in
androgen receptors. It's involved in cardiac health. It's involved in potentiating growth
hormone. It's involved in fat loss. It's involved in glycogen sparing. It can be used not just as
a glucose disposal agent, but really like a food altering
agent. It's involved in, you just start seeing it so many places and you're like, holy crap,
like this is actually popping up in a lot of different areas and it is amino acid,
just like any other amino acid. So despite being plagued by marketing in the past and plagued by
some dumb things that you see in the early 2000s, you actually start to see like carnitine is an umbrella term.
Like it is an amino acid.
Sure.
A lot of people kind of end the conversation there.
But there are long chain carnitines.
There are medium chain carnitines.
There are carnitine transferases.
And that's really what you want to leverage.
You've got to you want to leverage carnitine transferases and that's really what you want to leverage you've got you want to leverage carnitine transferases and that's kind of how i want the listeners
to listen to this podcast is that you are utilizing carnitine as your ability to leverage
carnitine enzyme activity and we can get into that when we kind of get into fat loss because
there's a carnitine acetyltransferase or CAT you'll see in the research.
There's carnitine palmitoyltransferase or CPT that you'll see in the research.
These are things that you really want to leverage.
Shrug family, I want to take a quick break.
If you are enjoying today's conversation, I want to invite you to come over to rapidhealthreport.com.
When you get to rapidhealthreport.com, you will see an area for you to opt in, in which
you can see Dan Garner read through my lab work.
Now, you know that we've been working at Rapid Health Optimization on programs for optimizing
health.
Now, what does that actually mean?
It means in three parts, we're going to be doing a ton of deep dive into your labs.
That means the inside out approach.
So we're not going to be
guessing your macros. We're not going to be guessing the total calories that you need.
We're actually going to be doing all the work to uncover everything that you have going on
inside you. Nutrition, supplementation, sleep. And then we're going to go through and analyze
your lifestyle. Dr. Andy Galpin is going to build out a lifestyle protocol based on the severity of
your concerns. And then we're
going to also build out all the programs that go into that based on the most severe things first.
This truly is a world-class program. And we invite you to see step one of this process by going over
to rapidhealthreport.com. You can see Dan reading my labs, the nutrition and supplementation that
he has recommended that has radically shifted the way that I sleep, the energy that I have during the day, my total testosterone level,
and just my ability to trust and have confidence in my health going forward. I really, really hope
that you're able to go over to rapidhealthreport.com, watch the video of my labs, and see what is
possible. And if it is something that you are
interested in, please schedule a call with me on that page. Once again, it's rapidhealthreport.com
and let's get back to the show. To your point about that, I know we're going to talk about
fat loss, which I'm really looking forward to, but like in exercise physiology in graduate school,
when we were learning about beta oxidation and transferases and how fatty acids move in and out
of mitochondria, et cetera, and we were talking about L-carnitine.
My professor said,
even though like biochemically,
like this is the mechanism,
this is how it works.
When you take L-carnitine as a supplement,
it doesn't seem to promote any additional fat loss than people thought it
would.
Cause it seems to kind of logically make sense,
but then the studies like didn't really shake out as any actual real world
benefit.
And so to your point about like writing it off,
I kind of wrote off L-carnitine as well for a long time. And so when you brought up wanting to do
this show, I was like, oh, like I thought that was something that I didn't need to pay attention to.
So I was actually really excited to do this show specifically because I decided many years ago
that it was something that didn't warrant any further attention.
Yeah, yeah. And so there's a couple of reasons for that. And I'm glad you brought that up. So basically, like, this is audio only. So basically, you can imagine the mitochondria
on the left. And then in the center, you've got your inner cell membrane. And then on the right
side, you've got your cytosol that contains all these nutrients. Well, that inner cell membrane,
that's actually what we want to leverage from a carnitine enzymatic perspective. And the
reason why a lot of research studies don't work, A, because bioavailability is poor. So you need
to either A, inject it, which is actually 100% bioavailable. So you can inject carnitine. And
for people who are saying, wait, inject carnitine, are you out of your mind? It's actually legal.
It is an amino acid. So you could walk up to the police station with a needle in your
belt and be like, what's up, man? Yeah, this is just carnitine. So this is, this is, it's
a 100% illegal.
Assuming they believe you. It's carnitine. Oh no.
It might be a suspicious activity, but it is something you can actually inject carnitine
for 100% bioavailability.
Or you can just purely do the math.
So if you inject carnitine at about 500 milligrams of carnitine, typically 500 milligrams per
one mil is a concentration you'll see a lot.
And that's available in many places because it is legal.
That is an efficacious dose for many, many, many things. But when you do the
math and you kind of average it out, okay, bioavailability is 14 to 18%. So even on the
low end, if we say 15% to make the math easier, three and a half grams of carnitine supplementation
is 525 milligrams of bioavailable carnitine. So we can just override that. Because the thing is,
injectable carnitine must be a pain in the ass, because daily administration will be required,
and it's intramuscular. So it's not even like those little insulin needles that you see
50% of the American population need to use because of type two diabetes, those little
things that could just go right in your stomach, hyper easy, right? Or the longevity crowd, they're super into growth hormone. That's just a little tiny insulin needle
as well. That's something that's hyper quick. Carnitine is intramuscular. So to do an
intramuscular injection daily, even for the most hardcore people is a real pain in the ass. Yeah,
it's a lot, right? So you can actually just kind of flip that and utilize three and a half grams
of carnitine.
Now to kind of pull all the way back to Doug's statement about a lot of these things didn't shake out. Number one, oral bioavailability and what we know more about that now. Number two,
to gain the benefits of carnitine, just like creatine, you need to increase carnitine
muscular saturation. So creatine muscular saturation is going to take
about a month at about five grams per day. If you're less than 200 pounds, it's going to take
about a month. Carnitine is very similar. In order to start maximizing the benefits of carnitine,
you're going to need to increase intramuscular concentrations of carnitine. And that's not a
one-time event. It's not like caffeine. People want to take things and feel something right away. You need to increase muscular concentrations of carnitine. So if it's a short study,
you're not going to get that effect. And last but not least, and one of the most important
components of this podcast is that if anything was timing dependent, it's carnitine. It is such
an environmentally specific supplement that if you do take it at
an incorrect time, you will get the incorrect output. Like it is carnitine is very, very,
very input output in terms of when you're going to use it for fat loss, when you're going to use
it for recovery, when you're going to use it for growth hormone potentiation, when you're going to
use it for glucose disposal. These are all different things and really different amounts of carnitine as well.
So you guys want to explore some of those concepts?
Yeah, I want to dig into this.
How is that consistent with like needing a month or whatever to be fully saturated,
but it still matters when you take it if you've reached saturation?
It does seem to matter. So you need
muscular saturation over the course of time, but timing and an immediate event still seems to
matter. So although enzymatic activity seems to get upregulated with saturation over the course
of time, there is a timing dependent effect based upon the environment for which you're doing it. So
fat loss is a pretty good example. So getting into fat loss and upregulating these enzymes in the acute sense,
what you're doing is getting back to my previous point regarding enzymatic flux.
Fat loss, when you are utilizing carnitine,
typically 30 to 60 minutes prior to training,
you're going to want about 500 milligrams of bioavailable
carnitine.
So this is going to be three and a half grams of oral for most people.
And for the record, I typically like L-carnitine, L-tartrate for this purpose.
It's one of the cheaper carnitines that you can buy.
So it's something that is going to be very available for people.
But it's also one of the better researched ones as well.
So just throwing that out there, L-carnitine, L-tartrate is very effective. But what you're doing is getting that
inner cell membrane and lubing the flux of what's happening with carnitine acetyltransferase and
carnitine palmatyltransferase. So carnitine acetyltransferase, taking place.
Then with carnitine palmitoyltransferase, carnitine palmitoyltransferase is what actually increases
mitochondrial activity in and of itself. So where acetyltransferase is getting things in and out,
palmitoyltransferase is accelerating carnitine activity or rather oxidation activity happening inside
the mitochondria. So from a fat loss perspective, taking this at the right time prior to training
is upregulating these enzymes to upregulate beta oxidation, which also is preserving glycogen
because you're liberating as many free fatty acids as possible
to support your activity that you're involved in, which means that you're preserving glycogen
for when you only need it most. So during say low intensity activities, you're going to be able to
utilize a lot more fatty acids. And then when it's time to turn it up, you're able to tap into that
glycogen only when you need to.
Yeah.
I don't know if this digs into like too much minutiae, but over that month, we'll call it just like loading phase.
Does the timing specifically matter during that month or is it after that month?
Now we have to time it specifically with whatever the goal is.
I would still always time it with whatever the goal is. It seems to be wildly, it seems to be extremely timing dependent,
even regardless of saturation. Oh, that sounds weird. But there are certain types of like,
even just to jump ahead, like I wasn't going to get into this just yet. But like with the heart,
the carnitine is actually a very beneficial for heart health, but it seems to be most beneficial
for heart health in a de-energized state. So when you are actually at your most parasympathetic and
lowest energy output, that is when carnitine is most bioavailable, sorry, most beneficial for the
heart, A, because it's actually an iron chelator for the heart. So it actually helps chelate iron,
which reduces heart specific oxidative stress, but then purely as a byproduct of also improving
your lipid management, which carnitine does with beta oxidation, that's what also improves heart
health as well. So carnitine, being beneficial for heart health, being beneficial via iron chelation
and reducing heart specific oxidative stress and lipid
management. This is maximized benefits. And this is research all the way back into the 60s.
It's done in a de-energized state. So it's actually recommended to take carnitine pre-bed.
So taking carnitine pre-bed is what leverages this de-energized state and what leverages
enzyme activity that only happens when you sleep. So since enzyme activity
specifically related to the heart only happens when you sleep, that's when it's best leveraged
for that certain timeframe. So actually a pretty good heart protocol for people take to change the
cardiac architecture would be citrus bergamot plus carnitine pre-bed. In that situation,
the citrus bergamot is really working towards aiding in cholesterol profiles. Your carnitine pre-bed. In that situation, the citrus bergamot is really working towards aiding in
cholesterol profiles. Your carnitine is aiding in beta oxidation. Your carnitine is aiding in
heart-specific oxidative stress. It's aiding in iron chelation of the heart. And you can actually
have a damn good heart protocol taking some carnitine pre-bed with some citrus bergamot.
So this kind of timing thing is not just relevant to the carnitine itself,
but relevant to the current, say in this context, circadian enzymatic activity of when you're
utilizing it. Yeah, that's awesome. I love that because every time some shouldn't every time,
many times people go like the example used with caffeine, it's like I drink this, I feel great.
Having having that month loading phase and knowing that the actual benefits are 30 to 45 days out,
there are very few supplements that actually the information and education is
out there like that on something specific. As far as fat loss goes, did we get to all of that? I
know we jumped ahead to the heart health thing. Is there anything that we As far as fat loss goes, did we did we get to all of that? I know we jumped
ahead to the heart health thing. Is there anything that we missed in the fat loss side of this?
Yeah, well, you can definitely add in other situations, because it can absolutely be
utilized as a type of glucose disposal agent. But I also said kind of just like a food altering
agent as well. And the reason why I say that is because when you are taking carnitine,
say before a cheat meal, or just kind of in general, if you have a greater saturation of
carnitine, you can utilize and utilize those free fatty acids from your higher meal to just be going
on the beta oxidation wheel that should already be turning purely from the increased amount of
carnitine transverse activity that you're having. And that's what's going to allow your current activity to be beta oxidation dominant, say
during that meal or during that high calorie day.
And then also because you are utilizing beta oxidation and free fatty acids for your fuel
use, you are able to better store carbohydrates as glycogen because they're not going to be currently used as a type of fuel source since beta oxidation is going
to be more dominant for it.
So purely from your ability to utilize fats more effectively by dominating them into the
beta oxidation chain, your ability to preserve glycogen and therefore store glycogen more
effectively since you are using beta oxidation a lot more effectively in your daily activity.
This is something where I think that through the back door, it can help you in the fat loss
argument as well, purely because you're utilizing your meals better and not just utilizing fatty
acids better during certain activities. Yeah. So if you're more,
if it's easier to, to burn fat, so to speak, and they're thereby preserving glycogen,
is there endurance benefits to this for endurance athletes? Yeah, I think that there's benefits
actually, if for any kind of athlete from for the purpose of carnitine, because when you're
looking at energetics, so basically, you kind of got your spectrum, right? You've got the beginning of the spectrum,
where you're hyper parasympathetic. So this is like me, posting the Instagram story of me walking
Lucy at the end of the day, when I'm done work, done work at 4pm. No matter what I have boundaries,
I cut it off. And I go I walk Lucy. I'm in the sunlight, I finished work, I've accomplished my task,
and I'm relaxed, I'm happy, heart rate's coming down, ventilation's coming down, everything's
relaxed, and I just feel better. In this process, quarantine will be upregulating beta-oxidation,
even in this super parasympathetic state. And then about midway through, we've got our lower-ish
intensity cardio. Now, since this is middle of
the spectrum, we're still going to get a benefit from carnitine in this perspective because it's
still playing a role in energetics on all level. So even though my ventilatory changes are going
up, there's a little bit more ventilation, my heart rate's a little bit higher, my tissue
temperature is a bit higher, my sympathetic activity is beginning to take place in this lower intensity cardio zone, there's going to be some combination of glucose
and fatty acids being used now. But it's still going to be very efficient in terms of the fatty
acid department compared to non-carnitine saturated. And you're more adept to utilizing
glucose really only when you need to. And this, of course, is going to depend.
There's a lot of individually specific energy system conditioning effects happening here
as well, depending on how conditioned you are, what your level of fitness is.
And then at the end of this spectrum, you've got something like weight training.
And when it comes to weight training, I think that carnitine will shine here as well, because
you're going to have
a situation where you're preserving glycogen more efficiently for when you really need it during
your sets. And then in between sets, if you do optimize nasal breathing, and you do really try
to calm down and rest and recover in between sets, you will be able to more effectively switch over
to beta oxidation in those rest periods. And in those
rest periods, the the level of aerobic fitness that you have is going to determine the level
of recovery of your a lactic systems. So this is something written in actually, Joel Jameson's
eight weeks out conditioning book that I believe everybody should read. This is something I read
so long ago is one of the best energy system books of all time. But essentially, something I really picked up in that book,
and that I thought was fascinating, was the fact that the aerobic system is what repairs and
recovers and restocks the fuels utilized in the anaerobic systems. So when you have greater
aerobic efficiency, you are able to more quickly restock things like ATP, like creatine phosphates, like these things
that are going to be used in your next bout of anaerobic output. So when you have something
like carnitine that's more effectively boosting one's aerobic output and aerobic efficiency
during your rest periods, you will be more recovered for that next set moving forward.
And at the very least, you're going to be burning more fat
during your rest periods with that nasal breathing. But with all that said, you've got your full
spectrum, right? You've got your low intensity, your medium, and then your ultimate high, high
intensity. This is why I think carnitine is best used for multi energy system sports. So like a
power lifter, I don't think is going to get like
this giant advantage from carnitine. I think bodybuilders could get some advantage, say,
from in the fat loss department, for their say, their fasted cardio, they could also get some
benefits from the antigen receptor stuff that we can get to in a moment. But I think like,
the athletes, like soccer and mixed martial arts require a lot more energetic diversity.
Yeah. You know, so I just think that the actual athletes are going to get in trouble for that.
Actually, I think actual athletes are the ones that move.
Yeah. The ones that need coordination, you know, that don't just actually squat down and squat up.
Sit and stand.
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
I'm totally going to get flamed for that.
Sorry, Matt isn't here today.
You're free.
You can say whatever you want.
Not just free.
I'm safe.
We, I totally want to dig into the androgen receptors.
And maybe this, I hope this is a quick answer. It sounds like many of the benefits that you're
talking about also come from like caffeine or other stimulants. Is there one, is there a
difference in how those are processed in the body? Are those, am I, am I reading that correctly or
listening to that correctly? And that kind of on the fat loss side of things, there is like a low level, um,
like the, the way that they're giving you energy processing energy.
Um, it just sounds like some of the benefits are very similar and I may be not correct
on that.
Well, you're going to get a certain, you know, you're going to get the adenosine effect from
caffeine.
You're going to get catecholamine effects from caffeine to where they are
liberating free fatty acids, but not necessarily upregulating the enzymes responsible for dealing
with those fatty acids. Gotcha. Yeah. So that would be the big difference. So one is stimulatory
and one's not. Gotcha. Fantastic. Glad that was a short answer. Let's dig into androgen receptors.
Absolutely. So when it comes to androgen receptors, that there was a super cool study
actually done by Robert Morton in 2018, I believe. And it was a 12 week resistance training study.
And it was identified that androgen receptor amount and sensitivity was more predictive
of muscle growth across 12 weeks of resistance training than hormones.
So it's actually androgen receptors and not the hormones itself that was more predictive
of muscle growth over the course of a 12 week period.
And this was in natural athletes.
Okay.
But there are some people say similar like from like a
anecdotal perspective like just like the athletes that respond best to the drugs it's not the drugs
it's the athletes who respond best to the drugs who do the best because a lot of the athletes that
just fucking look like freaking nature think they're taking all the drugs they might be taking
like a normal amount of drugs they're all i mean drug geared bodybuilding is just everyone's doing
it so you gotta just assume everyone's doing it But if like some of the guys are not taking these crazy amounts, some like non-professional
recreational just bros at the gym might be taking more androgens than some of these pro
bodybuilders that look insane just because they respond so well to the drugs.
Yes.
And I have that on direct one-on-one authority.
So I work with pro bodybuilders who use doses less than guys at the gym. There are guys at the gym who absolutely believe that being a pro is just one milligram away,
10 milligrams away, 500 milligrams away.
And I promise you, that's not the case.
There is a trend-
I bet that even shows up even more in the female side of things.
Yes, there's a lot of fat loss.
There's a lot of fat loss abuse on the female
side of things and there's a lot of uh trend below and abuse on the male side of things
but it's the amount of milligrams that they feel is required to turn pro they would be
fucking heartbroken at the olympia cycles that i've seen that are not even close to what they're running. So androgen receptors count, genetics count.
Yeah, like these things, a lot of the pro bodybuilders, they, a lot of these guys,
natural, are going to be way bigger than the guys who aren't natural, purely due to their ability to
be hyper responders. And then this study was a pretty cool example of that to where antigen receptor
in natural athletes was it was a greater predictor of muscle growth over the course of time
than than even hormones themselves. So antigen receptors are super important. And carnitine
is a way in which to increase antigen receptor count and increase antigen receptor activity,
which is pretty damn cool. So this is something that
is not just applicable for performance enhancing drug users. Of course, it is applicable for them
because if they've got more sensitivity and amount of antigen receptor,
drug docks on receptor A, it does something, and then it leaves and docks onto receptor B,
and it does something. And then it continues to do that until it degrades and eventually gets
excreted by the body. Carnitine increases the sensitivity of that docking. So it actually
reduces if you are say a drug using athlete, it reduces the amount of drug that actually one needs,
which is a which is a decently fascinating concept all by itself.
If somebody is familiar with the power lifting world, the power lifting world is quite big on
anadrol. Anadrol is something that gets you strong, fast, typically something that's used
near the end of a peaking phase. But it's typically used in high milligram doses,
because its bioavailability sucks. So if you see something like Superdrol dose between 5, 10, 15 milligrams, you see Anadrol
between 50, 75, 100 milligrams.
And the huge difference in bioavailability and outcome, when somebody has more sensitive
antigen receptors, then they're able to get more out of less.
So they're able to actually take the same drug, but less of it due to increased sensitivity and count of engine receptors. So that's a pretty
cool and fascinating thing. But from a natural perspective, it is operating on the same outcome,
you are increasing engine receptor for the testosterone that you have, which is already
predictive of something that's going to help you build muscle, get stronger, do that entire deal.
So angiogen receptors is actually a huge component of what makes carnitine very effective
in a different way, just because I think a lot of people only think about carnitine with respect to
fat loss. I don't think people think about it with respect to heart health, or muscle building,
or angiogen receptors, or any of this other stuff. So it's kind of a cool way
to, to kind of, you know, give people the insight as to why I get excited about this thing.
It's like food altering agent, plus engine receptors, plus fat loss, you know, plus
energetics and sports performance, plus heart health, like there's a lot of different
things going on here for something that has no negative side effects.
Yeah.
On the performance side of things, can you dig into a little bit of the energy system side?
You just talked a lot about if you're just a pure strength athlete, it's kind of a no-brainer.
But on the energy system side, you mentioned how real athletes, like people that run around and have to transit, I think soccer is like, if it works in soccer, it should work for everybody. Cause
there's, you're going to have to run like eight miles. That number's probably not right, but it
seems about right. And mixed in there with, you know, 30, a hundred meter all out sprints built
into the middle of it.
Where does L-carnitine fit into just performance,
we'll call it performance enhancement side of this?
Well, I think it fits in and through some of the ways we've discussed.
I do think it fits in
through leveraging the energy system stuff we've discussed.
I do think it fits in
through leveraging engine receptors that we've discussed.
I do think it fits in via fat loss that we've discussed. And then I also think it fits in through leveraging angiointerceptors that we've discussed. I do think it fits in via fat loss that we've discussed.
And then I also think it fits in when someone hits the wall.
If you're out there playing soccer, hitting the wall is your inability to get pyruvate
into CoA.
That's what hitting the wall is.
Hitting the wall is your inability to get pyruvate into CoA.
But carnitine is what allows you to jack up the pyruvate
by jacking up that enzyme activity.
So it delays fatigue, I guess we'll say it.
It delays the onset of fatigue
because you're creating an ability
to convert more pyruvate into CoA.
And I think that that's a giant way,
on top of the energy system stuff your ability to
purely make uh the enzyme reactions take place to accelerate pyruvate into koa to avoid and delay
hitting the wall i think that's a giant potentiator of performance on top of everything else but i
think potentiating performance should actually just kind of lead into our other conversation
of potentiating recovery yeah you're only ever going to perform to the degree that you are recovered. If you play soccer today,
and then you're supposed to play soccer tomorrow because it's a tournament, and then you go into
tomorrow's game 80% recovered, how well do you think you're going to play to 80% of your potential?
The answer is very straightforward. You're only ever going to perform to the degree that you are recovered. So I think that carnitine through its ability to help you recover will
ultimately help you perform way better beyond all of its energetic stuff. But this is where
kind of the environment thing happens. And this is where like things kind of just get cool for
a nerd like me, because like heart health, carnitine pre bed is ideal for fat loss and energetics, carnitine, pre workout or
pre game is ideal. But for recovery, and depending on when you take it, if you are utilizing it as a
growth hormone potentiator, then before bed is ideal, you would actually take it with your growth
hormone at about five to 10 milligrams per unit of growth hormone. And this is for all the longevity
people out there. Longevity is like one of the most popular topics right now. And everybody seems to be taking growth hormone because of it.
But the carnitine is a very fascinating thing. Like you look at, it's like this whole world
of pharmacokinetics, and how these things works. And you're looking at basically a drug timeline
to make something this is hyper complex, made super simple. When you're looking at a drug timeline, you basically have a pharmacokinetic, and that is from drug to receptor. And then you
have pharmacodynamics, which is from receptor to excretion. So kinetic drug to receptor, dynamic
receptor to excretion. When you're looking at parallel timelines, when you actually know
half-lives and when certain things peak and when certain enzymes are supposed to happen,
you can actually take certain things to leverage certain things at a certain time based on the
pharmacokinetic and the pharmacodynamic of what's happening with the thing that you're taking.
Carnitine actually has this beautiful and totally underrelated, underrated,
I'll say, relationship with growth hormone to where they run parallel. You're going to have
this parallel benefit to where you're going to have hepatic activity, growth hormones benefiting
the liver and creating the liver is creating growth factors from growth hormone
stimulating that liver. Growth hormone is also going to be liberating free fatty acids. Carnitine
is going to be able to leverage that. Carnitine is leveraging the growth factor potentiation.
Carnitine is leveraging the mTOR potentiation of growth hormone. It's doing all of these things
in parallel, in unison with growth hormone. So if somebody wanted to leverage recovery
and they were taking growth hormone,
then they could take five to 10 milligrams of carnitine
with their growth hormone
in order to leverage that component of it.
Or if there are somebody who is purely using
the natural pulsatile release of carnitine pre-bed
and they're not actually on growth hormone,
take carnitine pre-bed.
You're still going to be leveraging certain aspects of that pathway.
So taking carnitine pre-bed can leverage and potentiate the growth hormone pathways based
on kinetics and dynamics.
But from a recovery perspective, carnitine seems to shine in the recovery perspective
from neural fatigue.
So if you beat yourself down with
like powerlifting doubles and triples, or if you're doing extended rest pause sets or
stretch, we've done a brutal workout. If you're just killing yourself in there,
these types of workouts create a bunch of acetyl groups that bind to your muscle cells post-workout and do a lot of things that are
unfavorable to recovery. And the real problem is your actual recovery process will not begin
until those acetyl groups have been cleared. Those need to be cleared. They need to be removed from
the system. And those acetyl groups create a ton of neurological fatigue. That's where you're going
to see it the most, the type of what, you know, it's oversimplification, but everybody calls it central nervous system
fatigue.
So if you're the type of person, I know, it pains me to even say that.
I specifically remember an entire episode of Barbell Shrug where Galpin just annihilated
that specific thing.
It was like the first time I ever heard Galpin many, many years ago.
Dude, the first time I ever heard it was like in the early 2000s. And Louis Simmons said,
oh, you've got central nervous system fatigue. I was like, oh shit, that sounds smart. He's probably right. That's got to be it. That's 100%. That's why I'm not strong.
Everybody that has ever lifted the weight started saying it dude i swear it came from louis simmons it was so he was the first guy i heard it
from and it was so long ago um but essentially if you're the type of person who um like your
joints aren't sore and your muscles aren't sore but like you just mentally don't really want to
go to the gym or if you're the kind of person who maybe you're deep into a diet you know you're deep into the rapid transformation contest
you're deep and you can just feel that neural fatigue accumulation just telling you to stop
going to the gym starving yourself and overtraining we have no energy left there's
nothing to use yeah exactly so if you're deep in hypocalorism, or if you're
somebody who's just kind of maybe on a brutally heavy, neurologically fatiguing program,
then carnitine actually post-workout seems to be ideal. And from an, this would be a lower dose,
actually. So this would be, if it would be injectable, it would be 200 milligrams from an oral perspective
that works out to 1.75 grams of L-carnitine, L-tartrate.
So in the post-workout period, to more effectively and accelerate the removal of these acetyl
groups that are connected to neurological fatigue, then carnitine post-workout seems
to be ideal.
And actually, when you look at the research, carnitine post-workout is actually where the
angigen receptor stuff was done as well.
So as far as that fatigue and the angigen receptor activity, that carnitine post-workout is actually where the androgen receptor stuff was done as well. So as far as that fatigue and the androgen receptor activity,
that can be taken post-workout.
But for the other purposes, environment,
as you're kind of seeing, really matters here.
So between the growth hormone potentiation,
between the neural fatigue, between the acetyl groups,
I think that that just adds a huge strength
to the argument we've created
towards carnitine and performance.
So I probably need to lose a little bit of fat. I would definitely want to get stronger.
I need a healthy heart and I'd love to increase recovery. L-carnitine sounds like
the thing that I need to be working on for a month. And then I'll start to see some benefits
there. But at the very beginning of this, we were talking about how do we implement it for the specific goal? Is there like a broad
brushstroke that we can make using L-carnitine? Or does it need to be specific to each of those goals
in order to achieve that goal? I would want it to be specific to those goals in order to achieve
the goal. Yeah, it is something that's environment dependent. So if you're somebody who is interested in heart health, I would have it pre bed. If
you're somebody who's interested in energetics and fat loss, I would have a pre workout. If
you're somebody who needs recovery support, I would have a post workout. If somebody wants
androgen receptors support, I would want to have it post workout as well. If you're somebody who's
interested in growth hormone potentiation, I would have it before bed. Um, these are situations where I absolutely think timing
matters. Um, lots of times timing doesn't, you know, beta alanine timing doesn't really matter.
Creatine timing doesn't matter. Multivitamin doesn't really matter. Carnitine seems to really
matter. Yeah. So it's definitely something that, that matters. And it's definitely like you were saying,
it's something that's wildly well rounded, man. Good for the heart. Good for fat loss. Good for
recovery. Good for growth. I don't want to put off the idea that anything's magical here. But
it just impacts so many proteins in the body. It impacts so many enzymes in the body. And, you know,
don't take my word for it. Just go look into nutritional biochemistry, please. It's something
that's this information is already out there. I'm not talking about nothing i've said here is theory
it's tactics everything i'm talking about is tactical this is something you can go do you go
try um it's actually also an antioxidant for the brain on top of that and um more important than
the brain it increases sperm motility oh swimmers swimmers more important than the brain, it increases sperm motility. Ooh, swimmers, swimmers.
More important than the brain, it increases sperm motility and it actually increases sodium,
the sodium potassium pump activity in spermatogenic cells.
So it's actually been demonstrated to increase sperm count and increase sperm motility.
If your son needs that help, it is a fertility thing too.
Yeah, I eat an enormous amount of red meat.
Is this something that I would need
to supplement on top of red meat?
Or is eating roughly
one and a half to two pounds of red meat a day sufficient?
I would still supplement on top of it. I would absolutely
supplement on top of it. Yeah. I don't eat that much, by the way. Yeah. Yeah, that is quite a bit.
So I would definitely still supplement with it purely because it's non-toxic and I would want
you to stick to the research rather than us kind of guess. Yeah, fantastic. Dan Garner, where can the people find you?
My man, you can find me at Dan Garner Nutrition on Instagram.
I love that.
Doug Larson.
Also on Instagram, Douglas E. Larson.
I'm Anders Varner at Anders Varner.
We are Barbell Shrugged to Barbell Shrugged.
I just made my first two Instagram posts by the way in like two
years what i know right i feel like me too yes yes i will go along with that for right now um
if you want to hang out with dr andy galpin and dan garner and see them do a lab lifestyle
and performance analysis,
make sure you head over to rapidhealthreport.com. That is where you can see a 60 minute video of
those dudes breaking it down for one of our clients that was nice enough to let us post
their lab video up there. So get over to rapidhealthreport.com and everybody that comes
into rapid health optimization is going to get one of those plus some additional pieces.
So rapidhealthreport.com
and you can also get in there, set up a call with me,
see if you are the right fit for Rapid Health Optimization.
Friends, we'll see you guys next week.