Barbell Shrugged - Physiology Friday: [Immune System] Why Optimal Nutrition Starts with the Immune System w/ Anders Varner, Doug Larson, Coach Travis Mash and Dan Garner
Episode Date: August 8, 2025In this Episode of Barbell Shrugged: What is the immune system Why the immune system is responsible for building muscle How gut health impacts the immune system Understanding recovery and its impact ...on the immune system How to optimize your immune system for performance Visit https://rapidhealthoptimization.com Connect with our guests: Anders Varner on Instagram Doug Larson on Instagram Coach Travis Mash on Instagram Dan Garner on Instagram
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Shrug family this week on Barbell Shrug Physiology Friday is back and today Dan Garner is talking about your immune system. How you can optimize your immune system. And everybody loves to talk about not getting sick. They have a weakened immune system. Nobody knows what that means. They don't even know what the positive effects are outside of just keeping you sick. Maybe building muscle is a result of your immune system protecting your body against the weights that you lift. Think about that one. Let that brain teaser.
kick in for a little bit as Dan Garner waxes physiology over you for the next hour.
As always, friends, make sure you get it over to rapidhealthreport.com.
That's where Dan Garner, Dr. Andy Galpin, are doing a free lab lifestyle on performance analysis
and you can access that report at rapid health report.com.
Friends, let's get into the show.
Welcome to Marvell Shrug.
I'm Anders-Marner, Doug Lars, and Coach Travis Mash, Dan Garner.
Today on Barbell Shrug, we're digging into the immune system.
and if there's anything that's like the hottest topic of all of the people around the world
for the last two years, it's your immune system.
Like this cool new term that I'd never heard until two years ago, immunocompromised, right?
That's a real word now.
That's a real word.
Everybody knows.
Everybody has an opinion on it.
Nobody knows what the hell they're talking about.
You know who does?
Dan Garner.
Dan Garner knows everything about the immune system.
Dude, I'm super stoked on this because when I got my total physiological health score and you gave me a 68 out of 100, it was hard because then I knew for the first time in my life that I felt immunocompromised.
I felt like before you gave me a 68 and I got a D plus on my health score that someone could have coughed COVID right into my nose and I would have been like, get at me.
come at me COVID come at me right now and I would have just brushed it off no big deal next thing
I know 60 out of 100 now I'm wearing a mask all around town like what is the immune system like tell me
tell me what actually goes on in our immune system this like giant concept of the immune system
exactly so it is giant this is probably going to be the most complex topic we ever tackle on this
podcast. So, you know, we'll revisit certain concepts as the episodes continue to go on. But from like
a super, you know, bird's eye view perspective, the immune system, first and formal, 75% of the
immune system lies within or around the gastrointestinal tract. So the health of your gut plays an
enormous role towards the health of your immunity. And immunity is really, I think, a way in which
I've separated myself from everybody else, like in this industry, with my approach.
And really, you know, why, like, I'm on a podcast like this today, because a lot of people
just simply repeat the same things over and over and over again.
But immune system, that is going to govern many factors as far as your fat loss goes,
as far as stress management goes, as far as muscle building goes.
And the health of the body depends upon the health of the immune system.
And the adaptability score that you are going to get in my coaching program, like Anders, received a D plus in his total adaptability.
By the way, a D plus is very good for people out there wondering, like, I thought he was healthy.
He has like a podcast.
He talks about health.
Yeah.
Turns out a D plus compared to many other people that have been in our program and seen what can happen, D plus is pretty good.
Yeah, it's not bad.
It's not right.
He's like, I don't know about that.
Yeah.
You got to be a really.
I currently have the highest GPA of immune system.
You better, you got a, you better be a real good salesman to sell me on D plus, be an honest.
But in any, in any case.
A lot of people probably still are, they're thinking like, okay, immune system, I get it.
Like, I don't want to be sick.
Like, I don't want to die from COVID.
I don't want to, you know, get a cold.
I don't want to get the flu.
Like, I don't want to have a disease.
but they don't associate the immune system with training and especially not with training results.
Like they don't associate the immune system with putting on muscle mass with being lean, et cetera.
Like what's the connection here?
Sure.
So we've talked about a lot in podcasts before about the health.
The body is going to adapt to the degree that it is healthy.
That's something I am 100% certain.
I know that that is something that is one of the most important factors towards driving world-class performance.
The health of the immune system determines the health of the body.
body. The health of the body determines the degree of adaptability from your training. And the
degree of adaptability from your training is determining the results that you can expect to receive
from any pursuit that you're currently undertaking. So when you're looking at what's driving
stimulus and adaptation from training, you are looking at the immune system. And to kind of keep in theme
with the past several episodes we've done with respect to blood chemistry, your immune system
and output super simply is basically a function of what the white blood cells are doing in the body.
And with the white blood cells, you have five categories.
You have neutrophils, lymphocytes, monocytes, eocinophils, and basophils.
Those are five white blood cell categories that you'll see in your blood chemistry.
Your neutrophils are the most abundant, and they're like pit bulls.
They're not very smart.
There's the most abundant immune cell in the body, and it will go around, and I call it like a pit bull,
because it'll kill certain things, but then also leave a lot of debris, leave a mess,
leave some pro-inflammation.
They're not too intelligent.
And that's the most abundant one.
Your second is the lymphocytes.
Now, lymphocytes, they'll be elevated typically in response to, say, viral infections.
And we'll probably talk more about lymphocytes as episodes go on because they play a huge
role in inflammation.
So that's where a lot of that conversation will center around.
The monocytes, on the other hand, these are known as early macrophages.
Macrophage just means big phase, big eating.
These things actually eat certain cells of our own tissue or bacteria in order to get rid of them.
So like when I said a Nutriphil will kind of grab an issue in the body and shake it like a
freaking dog and then that's what's going to happen to it.
A macrophage is a more intelligent in its approach to where it will literally consume something.
So let's say a bacteria is trapped in a cell of your body, a bacteria infection.
a macrophage will actually consume that entire cell.
It will eat your own body in order to destroy that bacteria.
So that's what you're going to see on a blood chemistry with respect to monocytes.
And then the last two are eosinophils and basophils.
They are made in much less quantity.
Both of them react to allergies.
But eosinophils will be up in response to parasitic infections in the body.
So like super broad overview scope, you've got your neutrophils, which are the pitfalls,
respond a lot to bacteria. Lymphocytes, a little bit smarter, connected to inflammation,
but definitely connected as well to viral infections in the body. And then you have your monocytes,
which are the eaters of problems. And then we've got our eocinophils connected to allergies and
parasites. And then our basophils really just connected to allergies. So that's like your real
overview. And I think that's important to care about because when you look at a basic blood
chemistry. Now, you know, as everybody here is listening to this, if you've got a really high
distribution of neutrophils, well, it's an indication of a bacterial infection, because that's
what neutrophils will be elevated for. So if somebody has a basic blood chemistry and you've got
really high neutrophils, well, then it's probably a good idea to order a stool test to see
what bacterial infectious state is currently happening. Or if you're seeing a big elevation
in lymphocytes, well, then you may have a viral issue currently in the body. If eocinophils are just
erratically up at the moment, you could have a parasite problem right now. There's a lot of things
that a blood chemistry can tell you that a lot of people aren't looking deeper into because your
white blood cell count could be normal. But if you've got a big distribution of neutrophils
compared to everything else, we know, even though total white blood cell count is fine, you've got
a bacterial issue and we need to be looking into that. Because if we don't, there's a root cause
currently going unaddressed that's impacting your ability to burn fat and build muscle, period.
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Now, back to the show.
So as an example, like, I had a couple of different opportunistic bacterial overgrowth, but my neutrophils were very low.
and just like the, both of the percentage and the absolute amount, like, why would, why would
something like that happen then?
So you can have that, and you'll see different aspects in the literature on this, if you have
a neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio that's greater than three to one, it's associated with a
bacterial infection, or if you have a neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio of one to one, it's associated
Yeah, it's associated with both bacterial and viral.
So it's one and the same.
You just fell into that ratio category that you're currently in.
So that's why I said it from a simplistic perspective, lymphocytes will be up in response
to viruses.
But the one-to-one ratio of neutrophils and lymphocytes is representative of both viral and
viral and bacterial infection.
It's screwed.
Yeah.
So it's something that's just, that's got to get looked into.
And it plays, and this is kind of, I'll actually dip into stress a little bit in this topic
because this kind of follows that exact same pathway.
And Doug brought up his own labs,
but I think Anders is probably a good example for the immune stress connection.
He's already told you about his score.
And this is one of the reasons that played into that little bit lower score,
despite his, you know, doing tons of things correctly and coming to me very healthy.
There's still just hidden stressors that need to be looked at.
So, again, very big pitcher, made a lot more simple.
there's two branches to the immune system.
You have your TH1 branch and your THH2 branch.
Now, THH1 and THH2 don't stand for Tony Hawk 1 and Tony Hawk 2.
They stand for T-Helfer 1 and T-helper 2.
Your body will activate the THH1 branch of the system in states of infection
because it is going to activate what I talked about previously, macrophage.
It's going to activate macrophages so that macrophages can eat this bacteria problem and get rid of it.
That is something that the TH1 branch will stimulate.
The TH2 branch is only stimulated in response to extracellular things.
So allergies or parasites.
Hyper simple, you could think about TH1 like intracellular bacterial problems and TH2 like extracellular parasites or allergies,
things that don't actually fit inside of cells.
Now, this is something I've come across in my career a million, million times.
And I've actually got a cool story about this if we've got time.
But your TH1 branch will be stimulated in response to get rid of infections.
Now, many people are fascinated with cortisol.
Cortisol actually inhibits the TH1 branch of the immune system and stimulates TH2.
Now, something I probably should have mentioned is TH1 and TH2 are like a teeter-totter.
If you want to maximally support one, the other is suppressed.
Do you want to maximally support the other, then the other is suppressed.
Cortisol stimulates TH2, but inhibits TH1.
This is really important to care about, because if you go to a lot of practitioners
just make this huge mistake by not understanding the immune system, because the body will suppress
cortisol secretion in an infectious state. And it does that to maximize the TH1 branch because cortisol
stimulates TH2. You stimulate TH2, then you suppress TH1. We need a lot of TH1 in order to get rid of the
bacterial infectious state. But if you go to the average freaking practitioner who runs a salivary
cortisol panel and believes in dumb things like adrenal fatigue, well, they're just going to look at your
labs and say, hey, you've got low cortisol. We have to bring up cortisol. That's what you need
to do. It's not you have low cortisol. Let's bring it up. It's why is cortisol low to begin with?
Because low cortisol is actually a protective mechanism of the body to stimulate TH1 as much as possible
in a state of infection. So if I was to raise cortisol in this person with a bacterial
infection, then I would actually delay and prolong their infectious state and therefore delay and
prolong the root cause of the problem. And the reason I thought about Anders for this podcast is because
he had 7 million coffees a day before he started working with me. And then we got lowered the coffee,
I believe by like 50 percent. Anders, am I right? More than that. More, okay. It's a two thirds. Okay,
So, Anderson had 20 ounces a day.
Right.
And he also had an infectious state.
He had a gut infection.
So his body was purposely going lower in the overall cortisol perspective in order to
support the TH1 branch of the immune system because it was dealing with a gut infection.
I am getting rid of his gut infection.
So therefore, his natural energy is going up because his body doesn't need to suppress cortisol
as much as it used to because he's getting rid of the infection.
So if he came to me, and that's why he had to overcompensate with more coffee.
He was drinking tons of coffee.
And if I saw, okay, let's just raise your cortisol to give you more energy,
your gut infection would still be there and you would still be having a ton of coffee every day.
But now your gut infection is being eliminated.
So now you need 66% less coffee per day to have even more energy than you used to.
So you're both a healthier person and a more energetic person.
And that is what's going to freaking get you better results.
So stress, yeah, go ahead.
Go ahead.
No, I was going to say that everything you just said is 100% exactly what happened
in the first 30 days of all of it.
My sleeping, the other thing that I started to notice, and I'm not sure if it's 100% related,
but my sleep got significantly deeper.
Yes.
When, like, not only when I woke up did I need less coffee, but when I actually went
to sleep, it was like notice.
Like when one of my kids would cry and I'd wake up, I would just be like, holy crap, I am coming
out of like the cave right now.
Like I was just knocked out.
I have never slept this deep before.
Those were like the two things that I immediately noticed.
Like waking up, I did, I could literally go to like 10.30 these days where it was like without
coffee where before, I mean, both these guys have traveled with me multiple times.
And it's like, I am like, I was.
is like a lost person in the Sahara
looking for water like crawling to the coffee machine
to get some energy rolling for the day.
It happened like 30 days.
It was the very first thing that I noticed.
Like those two things,
I was like, whoa, they happen at the same time.
Just like, wow, things are changing.
For sure.
And for that, and that's a thing too.
A lot of people think this stuff takes forever.
When you have a targeted protocol
dealing with someone's true root cause issue,
doesn't take that long.
Like, my people routinely report
they feel better within two weeks.
And that's because we're getting to the actual root cause of the problem
because Anderous cortisol wasn't low
because he had some nonsense adrenal fatigue.
His cortisol was low because his immune system
wanted to stimulate a branch that the cortisol would oppose.
So his immune system was intentionally lowering cortisol
to support TH1 activity to deal with the bacteria,
but he was overcompensating by drinking way too much coffee
and also sleeping poorly, two things that elevate cortisol,
which essentially just prolonging and delaying his body's ability
to get rid of that bacteria infection.
And if that goes on for too long,
well, then that infection is going to lead to two.
And then two might lead the three or four.
And then that's when people start calling me.
Like, hey, something's wrong.
I don't know freaking what it is.
And now that's gone and you're sleeping better,
which means you're sleeping better is going to improve your immune system
and your infectious state gone is going to improve your immune system.
So you're going to get better freaking results from any program.
ram you do now you know how athletes at the very end of their training when they're about to peak
they you know their immune systems are taint do you think that if they like would pay more attention
to like you know the details that they could avoid that somewhat yeah so and i think that that's
kind of it almost goes in right to what we're saying right because bacteria are viral infections
these things are managed by our TH1 branch of the immune system but if
you're a bacteria, if you're a bacteria in training camp, I almost said that. If you're an athlete in training
camp, then you are making tons of cortisol every single day. And then the sooner and sooner and
sooner, you get to that event, the more nervousness and anxiety you have. So you're making you
more cortisol. So you're stimulating the TH2 branch and completely inhibiting the TH1 branch,
which is protecting you from getting sick before the event. So it becomes so, recovery becomes important
during training camp stress management becomes important and sleep quality becomes important
all of those things are independently important but they are maximally important for immunity
which is going to allow you to survive training camp and then go kick ass it'd be good time to use
some of the breathing techniques i would imagine absolutely yes for sure one more time we dig into
the relationship between between coffee or caffeine specifically and and cortisol for sure so
one of the ways in which coffee or the way in which coffee stimulates
your ability to have more alertness and more energy is it creates glucocorticoids secretion from
the adrenal glands. So glucocorticoids are just a selection of hormones coming out of the adrenals,
cortisol being one of them. Cortisol is a hormone of energy. So we are ticking in our caffeine,
creating an acute release in cortisol, which then increases energy and alertness. So that's
essentially how caffeine's giving us energy, but with an enhancement in cortisol, in an
infectious state that's also going to decrease your TH1 branch and therefore potentially prolong
that infection. And this kind of makes sense. Like even just think about this, you guys,
when you're really sick, is there a natural decrease in energy? There is a major natural decrease
energy. Why? Because it's suppressing cortisol. It is suppressing cortisol to maximize the
correct branch to get you over. Your body is smarter than we give it credit for. Your body is saying,
hey, sit in one fricking spot, let me maximize immune function, and then once we get rid of this
problem, I'll give you some more cortisol again to continue on with your day. And that's when you
wake up the next day and, oh, man, I'm feeling better. I've got more energy. So that's just because
the body has done its job and now you're back to homeostasis. Yeah. When you think about,
I don't know how anxiety on like maybe a low level or heightened levels of anxiety,
when Travis was talking about how athletes are peeking towards the like leading up to ramping up
to competition is anxiety.
Anxiety's effect on your physiology or on your immune system, it's kind of like a low level
every single day ramping up to some event that never actually happens.
How does anxiety play into the overall stress side of this?
Am I tracking that right?
Yeah, because stress in any form is going to take a hit on the immune system.
system, but stress in any form.
So if it's psychological, emotional, physical, environmental, these are all going to play
into your bodies, what I call your total body stress load.
And if we're getting multiple of these in per day, that's multiple insults to the immune
system, which is slowly and slowly going to whittle away at that immune system leading
up to competition day.
But anxiety, I mean, I don't know, if you like there's a difference between nervousness
and anxiety, because nervousness is when you're just, you're something, you care about something
a lot, but you're prepared, but you're prepared, but you care about it so much that you're
nervous. Whereas people who have anxiety, normally they have anxiety because they're not
prepared. It's a different feeling than nervousness. Nervousness means you care.
Exxiety means you're not sure if you're prepared for this thing. And that's why you have
this anxiety. So I really think the antidote to anxiety is maximal preparation.
That would definitely helps. I think there's like some, like there is a study out there that
would say that it's the interpretation is the key.
So, like, if I get, everyone is going to get butterflies, you know, every fighter,
every, every athlete.
It's how are you interpreting the butterflies as, like, excitement, or do you interpret it as,
oh, shit, I'm nervous?
So it's like, that's a big part of that as well.
I totally agree.
It's everybody's going to get butterflies.
So what separates the good from the great, as the great are allowed to get those
butterflies to fly in formation?
Sure.
Right. Yeah, you use those things. Exactly.
So if you, say you get in an argument with your, with your brother or something like that.
So you have like this, this psycho-emotional stress that's happening because you're in conflict with somebody.
Like physiologically, what's happening there? And how does that affect your immune system?
Well, your immune system, again, it's going to, that cortisol decrease over time.
And any kind of stress is going to lower your immunity over time. And if you take, if a lowered immune
system is going to impact fat loss and it's going to impact muscle gain. Like, for example,
if you're somebody who's chronically stressed, well, then you're going to have a disrupted
immune function. That disrupted immune function can lead to inflammation. And that inflammation
problem can definitely lead to problems with muscle building, without a doubt. And this is kind of
a really cool one, too, because there's something called IL-6 or interleukin-6. It sounds fancy.
it's not, inter just means between cells.
Lucan refers to leukocytes, which is a white blood cell, and six is the messenger code.
So just between white blood cell, messenger.
And IL6, and it just shows kind of the complexity behind the immune system, which is why
I'm so fascinated and curious with it.
IL6, when secreted from a fat cell, is a pro-inflammatory cytokine, but when secreted from a muscle
cell is an anti-inflammatory myokine.
So it has dual roles in inflammation. Yeah, it has dual roles in inflammation. And you actually see in
the literature that chronically high elevated IL-6 is negatively correlated with muscle, whereas
acute raises in IL-6 are positively correlated with muscle. So if you're chronically inflamed,
you're muscle degrading. But if you're acutely defamed, you are anabolic. And it's the
difference between IL-6 being secreted from fatty tissue or being secreted from muscle tissue.
mechanistically speaking, IL-6 has been demonstrated to recruit satellite cells and signal muscle
repair.
So IL-6 plays a huge role in your ability to adapt from exercise after the muscle damage that
stimulated, that adaptive response.
So when you ask me questions, like, hey, what about anxiety?
What about stress?
What's happening mechanistically?
It can go in many different directions.
And it kind of depends upon your goal.
Because if you have anxiety every day, but your goal is to gain muscle, well, then IL-6
is going to ruin you at the end of the day.
But if you have a goal of fat loss and you're stressed every single day,
well, then that chronic inflammation will make your fat loss a lot worse.
And that chronic inflammation can also lead to leptin resistance,
which is going to make your fat loss worse as well.
So it can go in a lot of different directions.
And leptin's kind of a cool one, too.
A lot of people know leptin as a metabolic stimulator.
It regulates appetite, and it also determines your basal metabolic rate.
to a large degree. But what many people don't know is leptin's actually immune stimulating.
So after a meal, and this is kind of cool, it kind of ties back to the beginning of the podcast.
I'm glad we're talking about this. I said at the beginning of the podcast that about 75% of our
immune tissue is in and around the gastrointestinal system. And the reason why it's there is because
the way in which we take in potential pathogens is via food. If it's going to be something allergic,
well, then our immune system's got to be right there in the gastrointestinal tract,
ready to deal with that allergen right away so it doesn't kill us eventually.
And also, if that food has, say, a fungus or a bacteria or something on it,
the immune system's got to be right there right away to deal with that problem
before it enters circulation.
That's why there's so much immune tissue in and around our gastrointestinal tract.
But leptin is secreted after meals to act as an appetite suppressant,
to signal that we don't need to eat much anymore because we have received sufficient food.
Leptin also is immune stimulatory, which makes sense because when leptin is increased after a meal
to suppress appetite, it also means that food just came in. And if food just came in,
then we have to activate the immune system to make sure that there is nothing in that food
that's possibly going to create a problem for us. And people who are obese become leptin
resistant and if you become leptin resistant well then you make a ton of leptin to try and overcome
your resistance but that leptin results in more immune activity and that more immune activity in the
wrong body will result in more inflammation and it ends up being a terrible cycle that you've got to get
yourself out of if you want to fix your health and body composition you mentioned obesity and i think that oh
go ahead Doug if you got a follow up there yeah i was going to say it's purely the fact that you have a lot of
body fat that somehow produces leptin resistance yeah you're going to say correct yeah so is leptin is
secreted from adipocytes or fat cells put simply so leptin secreted from fat cells to try and tell the
brain hey we've got enough body fat storage you need do you need to stop eating at this point in time
but as people become more and more obese and even just the way foods are designed high palatibility
with high salt high sugar high amount of fats they override a lot of our
regular appetite controlling mechanisms to where our body keeps making a ton of leptin,
but then our brain eventually becomes leptin resistant because of the amount of leptin
that's in the body from all of the fat cells.
In a similar way to where our muscle cells become insulin resistant when there's way
too much insulin around, our brain cells will become leptin resistant when there's way too
much leptin around.
The problem is that leptin, even though it's being resisted from the brain from an appetite
perspective, it's not being resisted from the immune system. The immune system is going to keep
activating that immune activity and in an inflamed overweight person that ends up being a problem.
So that person at that point, you know, it's important to really get them on an elimination
diet, get them back into a calorie deficit, get them resistance training, manage sleep, manage
stress, all the things you know that you know you would already do with that person. But mechanistically,
they're going to stay in that inflammation immune cycle. And that will
keep them obese until you unlock that and kill it.
Another word that's like super buzzword of the last two years is comorbidities.
And obviously, being obese is very taxed into your body.
Also having these gut bugs or bacterial infections or viral infections in your gut.
How does this whole thing kind of like, I guess, play together?
like is is when you think about obesity is just being overweight so bad or is it this
combination of all of it and your immune system is just operate like stressed out and
itself that it can't fight all of the things like I how how challenging is being overweight to
your immune system incredibly challenging because at being overweight you have endocrine
imbalances. Your hormones are completely thrown off. When you're overweight, you're also insulin
resistant. You're also highly inflamed. You're also leptin resistant. It's also more painful to do
exercise because your joints hurt. You may also have sleep apnea, which impacts your sleep
quality. Being overweight is also likely a psychological stressor because you don't really want
to live that way or be that way. It is an enormous combination of things.
But the way in which I've always coach everybody who comes my way, let alone overweight people,
is that a lot of people think you need to lose weight in order to be healthy.
But the reality is that if you get healthy, it will be so much easier to lose weight.
That's exactly what I was actually a way of putting it of like how, like the framework of obesity
and that you should just get healthy first.
By getting healthy, the weight has to come down.
Yeah, dude.
And that's actually kind of how I came across this philosophy.
I don't know if I've ever talked about this.
It's because I'm a functional medicine practitioner.
So there would be people who had come my way with just a migraine or just say bloating
or just constipation.
And then I would say do a protocol to fix their migraine and then they lose 10 pounds.
Or I do a protocol to fix their digestion and then this person lost 15 pounds.
And I was kind of like, hey, what?
I'm not actually focusing on body composition, but I'm getting body composition.
results as a byproduct of improving this person's health.
So it was like this big aha moment where I was like, man, we need to get healthy
and then weight loss comes naturally because the body's homeostatic.
Where it wants to be is at that healthy set point, but there is a current dysfunction
and a root cause issue going unaddressed that's keeping the body out of the set point.
It's keeping it dysfunctional.
But when we reinstate function, weight loss happens so much more naturally.
And that's when I kind of started combining because like in my earlier,
career and I was more of an amateur like I had fat loss protocols and and muscle building
protocols and they worked but they didn't work at a world class level until I combined them
with health promoting protocols and when I did health plus the body composition of stuff it was game
over that that's when my reputation started getting heard I feel like that the the idea or like
the framework of just feeding your lean body is something that it's like oversimplified but
it really is like the easiest one like let's just eat really well but feed the skinny person like
when I look at somebody that's obese or even if they just have like 30 pounds to lose I'm like
well inside you is like a normal skeleton with normal muscle and normal organs and normal all of this
stuff but on the outside there's all of this extra shit that you're carrying around and if you just
feed the skinny person inside there you don't have to worry about the perfect number of cows
like obviously there's there's a system to doing it but just get you healthy and i i guess in a way
how do we know like um how do people find out outside is is there a way to really start to
work on their gut health because that seems to be like you're obese you definitely have some
sort of infection or viral infection going bacterial or viral infection going on in your gut
which is also just hammering your immune system.
Is there any way that people can just,
they may not be able to go take stool tests
and go through this entire protocol that we have?
Like, how would somebody start to go, man,
maybe I have like, yes, I'm obese.
I'm guaranteed to have some sort of infection in my gut.
Where do we go to start getting healthy?
No, that's, if you think you have a gut infection,
then I would recommend referring out.
That's really how I would open this, yeah,
because it's not something you can really do,
part-time. That's something I say a lot, is like lab analysis and proper protocol design is not
something you can do part-time. So I would really recommend just seeking out a specialist at that
point because someone who with a lot of theoretical knowledge, but also a proven check record of
success, they're going to help you more than anybody else is ever going to help you. And you don't
want to make the, you know, make the wrong move. Like, so let's just, I'm really glad you asked
that. So curcumin is one of the most popular supplements, right?
curcumin is TH2 stimulatory.
So if you currently have a major gut infection, your body's trying to maximize TH1,
but you're pumping way too much curcumin every single day.
Well, then you're maximizing TH2, which is ultimately going to limit your ability to maximize
TH1, whereas Berberin, for example, is TH1 stimulatory.
So Berberin, in this situation, you're looking at, say, anti-inflammatory compounds, right?
Okay, berberin, curcumin, they're both great options.
But possibly, I've got some signs here that I've got a bacterial infection in my body.
So I should probably stimulate TH1 while I mitigate inflammation response.
So in that specific client, Berberant is the way more tailored and targeted supplement for that
person because it's going to act as an antimicrobial through activation of TH1, but it in
it of itself has anti-inflammatory properties.
So giving curcumin, which is everyone just thinks that you can, there's a list,
a supplement so people just think you can give anybody at any time for whatever reason.
It's just not the case. And that's a great example of, hey, maybe talk to a specialist
if you've got an infection because you might just screw this thing up.
Totally.
There's some studies that show that, you know, when people were about to do vigorous,
I'm sorry, vigorous exercises, like long distance running, or like MMA fighters,
by simply supplementing with like carbohydrates that it actually lowered.
cortisol, it attenuated like the IL-6 and the IL-1s.
So with something as simple as just taking carbohydrates, what do you thoughts on that?
Yeah, of course.
Carbohydrates, one of their prime mechanisms is they lower cortisol.
That's one of the reasons why they're good post-workout.
They're good post-workout chemically and structurally, because structurally they replenish
glycogen, but chemically, they lower cortisol.
So you're getting animalism and anti-catabolism.
at the same time. And with that protection of animalism and anti-catabolism, you are going to have
a mitigated and managed immune response because you are getting help from an exogenous source
that's contributing to the positive outcome of your current immune state. So yes, carbohydrates can
absolutely help in that respect. I'll see. All the people who have said negative about carbohydrates
after post-workout, they were only looking at one, like the old Charles Polack, you would say
you needed that to spike insulin or whatever, but there's more than one reason why you would want
that then.
Yeah, I mean, it's going to, structurally for glycogen, chemically for a reduction in cortisol,
which will also create a production of testosterone because the ratio is going to help
because cortisol and testosterone have an antagonistic relationship with one another.
Furthermore, one of the biggest things that happen during training is dehydration.
And it's in the name itself.
Carbohydrate.
carbs actually draw carbs draw both water and electrolytes out of the small intestinal
track and deliver it to the muscle cell faster than if you have water and carbohydrates alone
that's why when you look at something like pediolite it's given in hospitals to save people's
lives who have diarrhea that won't stop like some crazy infections you people are given pediolite
for maximum hydration in minimal time it includes sugar because it sugar is more effective at
uptaking water and electrolytes and water and electrolytes alone. So carbs for glycogen,
for insulin, for hydration, for the testosterone and cortisol ratio, there's a lot of reasons.
It continues going on. So it's just a very wise thing to do. And I always look at everything
as a cost-benefit analysis. And in the case of post-workout carbohydrates, the benefits outweigh
the costs in almost all physiologic context. Is there a rationale then there for
for not eating carbs right away early in the morning
because it'll depress what is supposed to be
a rise in cortisol in the morning?
So this is where it kind of gets strange again.
There's a, yeah, the body is fascinating.
When you have carbs determines the degree
of excitatory mechanisms in the body.
So having more carbs at nighttime
is actually more suppressive,
but carbs in the morning aren't as suppressive.
Circadian rhythm nutrition is something
that's slowly unfolding and it seems to be very,
cool in that carbs in the morning aren't nearly as inhibitory as they are later in the day.
So carbs in the morning are still A-OK, and we're still learning a lot more about that in the
data.
Cool.
So fruit loops are cool.
I can still eat fruit loops in the morning, right when I get out of bed.
Okay.
Any other questions here?
Cool.
You're good.
Yeah.
You're like, wow, he didn't hear anything I've been saying on any of these shows.
how so the kind of the third bullet that we wanted to get to is on building muscle and i think
we laid out in the very first show that we were talking about how actually building muscle
is an immune response which is something i have been lifting weights for 25 years now and never
heard somebody present um how does how does the immune system uh really get into being the reason
for hypertrophy.
Sure.
So when you are driving hypertrophy, you're really looking at mechanical tension,
metabolic stress, or muscle damage.
Those are the three main pathways you want to hit.
Mechanical tension, metabolic stress, or muscle damage?
Damage being actually damaging the protein structure,
forcing an adaptive response.
Metabolic stress being pumping the muscle up,
just put very simply.
And mechanical tension stretching the heck out of the muscle
under a heavy load does forces of chemical secretion response,
inducing an adaptive response.
all three of those are stimulated by immune function.
All three of those create localized inflammation via like the IL6 pathway that I just talked about,
which stimulates the adaptive response.
So we have the stimulation of hypertrophy coming from mechanical tension, metabolic stress,
or muscular damage.
Those are acute inflammation.
When the adaptive response is also mediated by the immune system because the cell signalers
and messengers that are telling the body, hey, bring amino acids over here, bring electrolytes over
here, bring hydration over here, bring glycogen over here. Those are all immune system signalers
as well. So in the gym, we create localized purposeful inflammation so that outside of the
gym, we have localized purposeful adaptation. The immune system is what governs both of these things.
It is the ultimate determiner on whether or not you are going to maximally stimulate or inhibit
training. And this, actually, there's a, there's a relationship between chronic and acute
inflammation, like I talked about a bit with the IL-6, that chronic inflammation is associated with
suppressing muscle growth, whereas acute inflammation is associated with driving muscle growth.
And it's basically creating a signal in the noise, because if you have normal levels of
inflammation throughout the day, when you're in the gym, your high level of inflammation
creates a large spike relative to your normal inflammation level.
But if you have high inflammation all day, every day,
well, then your spike gets lost in the noise of the other existing inflammation,
and therefore a stimulus is never really seen.
So chronically high individuals, it's known as anabolic resistance,
is something that people can check out.
Your body is resistant to the anabolic adaptation of exercise
because there is simply too much inflammation present that the acute stimulus got lost in the chronic
noise.
Since chronic inflammation, as well as acute inflammation, and all of the adaptive processes
are 100% mediated by the immune system, we need to have a healthy immune system to have a
healthy stimulus, and if we have a healthy stimulus, we'll have a healthy adaptive response.
And what people don't understand is that this chronic inflammation can have nothing to do
with your training.
It can come from chronic stress.
It can come from chronic emotional trauma.
It can also come from a gut bacterial infection or a gut parasitic infection.
It can come from so many different things.
And that's why I like to look everywhere with my clients to identify, okay, where is there
the hiccup in immune function so I can eliminate it at the root causal level so that this
person's stimulus and adaptive processes can function optimally rather than just average.
And that's what's going to take them past their current plateau.
I feel like I knew so much about lifting weights and like eating well and now I know nothing
like it's it's not even like a um like I feel like I still know a lot about getting people
really healthy and getting them great results but like to actually really get it you got to go
do the tests like we've I feel like we've all along the way met somebody that's like in the gym
they're trying to eat really well or they've been in the gym their whole life and they're like chronically
have low testosterone or they like chronically are like getting results but you just look at them and
there's just something wrong and you're like what like you kind of do all the pieces but for some
reason none of it seems to be coming together in like a picture of any sort and it comes down to
their immune system it's so weird to me like I really like never understood that those
two things correlated to each other at all.
For sure.
And I mean, just to kind of add some light onto that, some people will just say,
ah, yeah, it's my genetics.
I'm just not a muscle builder.
It's just my genetics.
I just hold body fat.
Really?
When was it last time you did lab work?
And it's almost never.
It's like, oh, okay, so why did you count yourself out?
Because I'm not counting you out.
You need to do your lab work.
You need to figure out what's currently holding back your ability to maximally adapt.
And then take action on it.
because so very one percent of people probably do regular lab work let alone the the amount of
lab work that that I do on my clientele to get to get so it's just those those two questions
I think really shed a lot of light stop stop blaming yourself until you get all your lab work done
you don't know if it's your genetics or not yeah I feel like you went through this like
massive popularity like I don't know three years ago four years something like that like
gut health was like this huge thing and now we don't hear like anything about it but it
everything that i'm learning from you and through our clients and uh when we go and do
everyone has this thing not not everyone but everyone's got something going on because they've
just accumulated it over the years and then all of a sudden you become like a professional and
you have kids and your sleep goes to crap like i would love to know like your even your labs
after having a baby in the last, how old is she now?
Like three months, four months?
Three and a half months almost.
I would love to see the difference between what your labs looked like
four months ago and today to know what happens to somebody when they have a kid.
Like the amount of stress that builds up in your life that you just assume as normal life.
Like sometimes I think about like healthy people or like way back in the day.
Before we had all these stressors in life, it's like, you know how much time?
like humans especially dudes just like spent walking with their bros hunting food like that's like all
they did they just walked and tried to find some some poor deer struggling to hang out and then they go
eat like that's now we have all this other crap and it's like that's breast is so brutal on your
body and like now that i see labs and now that i see results and i see you break it and diagnose them
and like or not diagnosed but break them down like i feel like i i feel like i
I'm exposed to a world that is like, it's, I know people should lift weights.
I know people should eat well.
I know you should get your vegetables.
But now I'm looking at it and going, holy crap, we also have to have like a really big
conversation about so much other stuff that's going on that like, yeah, you might have all
that right.
But check this out.
This is like a really important piece of this puzzle that you didn't even know existed.
No.
And I mean, I got a story.
I'll tell kind of a quick, cool story here.
I'll begin it with asking you guys a question.
How many people wish they had more energy every day?
Yeah, totally.
Pretty much everybody, right?
Okay.
And what we learned in this podcast is that if we have an infectious state,
we will suppress cortisol in order to deal with the infectious state.
Cortisol is a hormone of energy.
Many people are walking around with asymptomatic infectious states,
which is suppressing cortisol and therefore lowering their energy on a day-to-day basis.
So if somebody simply has low energy, that could absolutely be a symptom of a gut health
disturbance.
The symptom is energy.
The symptom doesn't have to be loose stools and massive bloating.
The symptom can be low energy because you're currently in an asymptomatic infectious
state that the TH1 branch of the immune system is trying to work on to eliminate that
bacteria.
So this actually, and this is where I'm going to tie into the story, I had a girl come to me
once and she had chronically low cortisol levels and very, very much.
very, very low energy.
And she had worked with a bunch of people, the same old story, she worked with a bunch of
people before me.
Everyone wanted to give her a bunch of herbs to stimulate her cortisol and give her a bunch
of these energy teas and like nonsense, right, B vitamin, nonsense stuff just to try and get her
energy up.
And all I did was give her TH1 supporting compounds.
And then she came back 60 days later, and her cortisol curve completely regulated herself,
itself. I gave her zero supplements for adrenal glands and zero supplements for her cortisol,
and yet her cortisol curve, and for those who are unfamiliar, it's the measurement of cortisol
throughout the sleep wake cycle, it completely corrected itself because cortisol wasn't the
problem. Cortisol was being suppressed due to the TH1 branch of the immune system's inability
to properly dispose of an infectious state in her body. So I gave her immune supporting
immune-supporting protocol specific to the TH1 branch,
which then allowed cortisol to come back up to its natural levels
because the infectious state had been eradicated.
So that's just something I think is a cool kind of send-home story for everybody
that I think a lot of people can relate to with low energy
and stop just blaming everything on the adrenals.
And I can actually, this weekend,
I had to wake up Saturday morning at like 5.30 so I could go write a presentation
and I drank my old amount of coffee because I got five and a half hours of sleep the night
before between waking up with kids and doing it.
And the very first thing I thought was, holy shit, this is how I used to live my life three
months ago.
It was an absolute disaster.
I literally had the exact same amount of coffee that I used to have.
It was like, I was foggy all day.
I kept, like, complaining, which is something I try very hard to never do, because I know my wife has like, like, real being up in the middle of the night all the time with a, with a seven-month-old.
Like, I try not to, I'm like, I just feel like dog shit today.
And all I could think was, this is how I operated for like multiple years every single day just felt like this.
And it's a massive difference once you get that stuff.
I haven't even redone the labs.
but I know I can tell the difference.
Day one was Saturday.
It's like, this is how you used to live.
Today is how you normally live.
You don't need the caffeine.
Your body just like handles it for you.
You don't need all the extra crap.
The body just handles it for you.
Right.
Yeah.
You eliminate problems at the root causal level
and allow physiology to take it from there.
Physiology knows what to do.
You just have to get rid of certain dysfunctions
that are offsetting its normal function.
And once you get rid of that,
physiology will take the ball from there.
Biology is incredibly intelligent.
We just got to go there, but there are certain dysfunctions because we add all kinds of crap
on top of our life in the form of stress, bad diets, or traveling and getting an infection,
all those kinds of things.
So we got to look under the hood, just like you wait in your car once a year.
You've got to look under the hood of the vehicle of your body once a year and make sure
there's no dysfunctions.
And then once you get rid of those dysfunctions, you're back to normal function.
And I think it's cool that in this podcast, you were actually a perfect case study of this Anders.
of impacting immunity and how that can have a huge impact on your energy.
When people think about energy, they want to take neutropics, they want to have coffee,
they want pre-workouts.
Some people will all like, hey, maybe if I had to get a great sleep, you know,
like that you'll hear a lot of these things, like stimulants.
Like obviously, you know, take them or leave them.
But people will say like good things about like sleep and stress management.
And these will definitely help.
But how many people have you talked to who have referred the immune?
system with respect to restoring daily energy.
And yet, and yet it's of primary importance.
And I think a lot of people stay away from the immune system.
And I don't blame them.
It's ridiculously, it ridiculously complex.
And it's an immune system, right?
Like if I wanted to cut out your gastrointestinal system, I could.
If I wanted to cut out your nervous system, I'd just be cutting out your brain,
your spine, and the periphery, and we would get it out there, the thyroid system.
All those things that can be cut out.
you can't cut out the immune system it's on every single cell of the body working 24-7 so if you wanted to
remove one's immune system you can't so to gain knowledge on it becomes very complex because you're
simply learning about the chemical signalers that every organ is secreting and if it's doing something
for one organ at one time it might be doing something for another organ at a different time with opposing
you have to you're basically researching chemical signulars and messengers and their
relationships from every organ. So it becomes extremely complicated. But then once you got it,
it's like the light came down from the heavens. And you're like, wait, this is going to be so
helpful and helping people. And it is. I feel like if people understood this too, we could
eliminate so many of these like ridiculous thoughts about strength training. Like what I think about
like, it's like, am I over training? And you go,
No. The problem is your freaking immune system is so whacked out. You're fighting bacterial infections. You sleep like shit. You're chugging coffee. You actually are like eating in a caloric deficit. So there's zero energy left over. And you think doing an extra set of back squats is the problem? You think that like all those lateral raises you threw in at the end are really the problem. No, dude, freaking go to sleep, figure out how to be healthy.
get some lab work done so you can just you can actually like move the ball forward in your overall
health and then you don't have to worry about like oh well i did 25 working sets today and science
says 20 is optimal so am i overtraining no you're not you're not at all you're not even close
like you're it's it's it's it's it's like a mute point there's no reason to even talk about it
because there's so many other things that people should be worried about so far before like
over-training. Like, I can't even believe that I thought I ever got there. The problem was
is I wasn't sleeping for 10 or six years while owning a gym and trying to compete in CrossFit and
trying to go do all the stuff. It's like, uh, why don't you just get healthy first? And a lot of
other problems on reaching your physical potential become a lot easier. For sure. Yeah. I mean,
Travis, you've probably come across a million people who, whose stimulus is just fine. It's just
their adaptation is what they need the most work on. Right. Yeah.
I had a girl on Saturday, and she was, she's beating herself into the ground.
And her face was dripping.
And she's like, you know, what should I do?
Should I go do a lot more?
I'm like, I was like, how does that make any sense?
What you just said?
Like, no, you're a wreck.
You can't keep eyes up.
And you're going to ask me, what an extra should you do to get you out of this?
Yeah.
No logic whatsoever.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
Go to bed.
Get out of here.
is what you should do, yeah, eat, do something, but don't do more.
Your homeostasis is wrecked.
Yeah.
Yeah, we're all on this one side.
That's it.
Yeah.
Dan Garner, tell the people, where can they find you?
You can find me at Dan Garner Nutrition on Instagram.
There he is.
You actually really should go do that.
Not only does he crush it on this show, but he crushes it on the Instagram, too.
The new study you put up, we're going to have like a Dan Garner science.
Like most exciting science study that he's read of the day.
The one on negativity, if you have not read that negativity is killing you,
like literally it's killing you.
You got to go over to Dan Garner's, Dan Garner Nutrition
and learn all the new studies that are super cool coming out.
Travis Mash.
Mashlead.com.
You can go to Instagram, Maschleat Performance or Twitter,
where I really prefer at Massey League.
If you want to get slaughtered by Travis Mash.
You better bring your A game, yeah.
Dude, you got a new project coming out, too.
We're going to talk about kid weightlifting.
I want to hear about all this, too.
It's been going well, yeah.
I love it.
Doug Larson.
I'm on Instagram.
Douga C. Larson.
I am Anders Varner at Anders Varner,
and we are Barbell Shrugged at Barbell underscore Shrugged.
And make sure you get over to aretea Lab.com.
That is the signature program inside Rapid Health Optimization,
where you can go and experience all the lab lifestyle performance.
testing, analysis, and coaching to help you optimize your health and performance.
And you can access all of that over at Aretelab.com.
Friends, we'll see you guys next week.