Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - How to Stay Mobile, Independent & “Unbreakable” As You Age with Dr Vonda Wright #588

Episode Date: October 21, 2025

Bone health is something most of us don’t think about until much later in life, but the reality is that the foundation for strong, healthy bones is built decades earlier – and what we do in our 20...s, 30s and 40s can make all the difference to our health and strength in later years. Today, I’m delighted to welcome Dr Vonda Wright. Vonda is an orthopaedic surgeon and internationally recognised authority on active ageing and mobility. She believes that with mobility, smart nutrition and building relationships, we can harness our own power to control 70% of our health and ageing. Vonda specialises in sports medicine and is one of only a few female orthopaedic surgeons in the United States. She currently serves as the inaugural Chief of Sports Medicine for the Northside Hospital Orthopaedic Institute and is the founding director of the Performance and Research Initiative for Masters Athletes (PRIMA). She is also the author of several books, including her latest, Unbreakable: A Woman’s Guide to Ageing With Power, combines cutting-edge science with practical tools to help us protect our bones and our future health. In this fantastic conversation, we discuss: Why osteoporosis isn’t just a disease of old age, but one that begins much earlier in life, often decades before the first fracture. The idea of the “critical decade” – why our mid-30s to mid-40s are such a pivotal window for building bone strength, especially for women approaching menopause. The key lifestyle factors that influence bone density, from nutrition and protein intake to resistance training and impact exercise, and why it’s never too late to start. How scans such as DEXA and REMS can give a clearer picture of bone quality and help us take action before problems arise. The cultural and societal pressures that shape women’s health behaviours, and how these can sometimes work against long-term bone resilience. Simple, practical strategies for protecting your bones at every stage of life, supporting independence, mobility and confidence as we age. Vonda also shares her vision of ageing with strength, independence and vitality, and why she believes we can all take proactive steps to remain “unbreakable”. As Vonda explains, we have more control over our bone health than we might realise - and that knowledge should feel both comforting and empowering. Caring for our bones is really about caring for our future selves. By taking simple, consistent steps today, we can build the strength and confidence to live the way we want for years to come. I hope you enjoy listening. Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/feelbetterlivemore. For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com.   Thanks to our sponsors: https://www.betterhelp.com/livemore https://www.vivobarefoot.com/livemore https://join.whoop.com/livemore   Show notes https://drchatterjee.com/588   DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I think the first reason people begin to decline is this bias or this myth we believe that aging is an inevitable decline and that there's something abnormal about it. If you believe that there's absolutely nothing you can do about the future, then you're going to resign yourself to the first time you feel an ache or a pain. That's just getting old. I guess I'll just accept it. But I say quite frequently that aging alone, is the most natural thing we do. And it's how we handle the passage of time that matters. Hey guys, how you doing? I hope you having a good week so far. My name is Dr. Rongan Chatterjee,
Starting point is 00:00:43 and this is my podcast. Feel Better, Live More. When was the last time you thought about the health of your bones? You see, bone health is something that most of us don't tend to think about until much later on in life. But the reality is that the foundation for strong, healthy bones is built much, much earlier. And the sooner you start to build this foundation, the better.
Starting point is 00:01:14 This week's guest is Dr. Vonda Wright. Vonda is an orthopedic surgeon, chief of sports medicine at Northside Hospital Orthopaedic Institute, and the founding director of Prima, the Performance and Research Institute for Masters Athletes. Vonda is also an internationally recognized authority on active aging and mobility, and the author of several books,
Starting point is 00:01:41 including her latest, Unbreakable, A Woman's Guide to Aging with Power. In our conversation, we discuss why osteoporosis is not just a disease of old age, but one that begins much earlier in life, often decades before the first fracture. The idea of the critical decade and why our mid-30s to mid-40s are such a pivotal window for building bone strength, especially for women approaching menopause. The key lifestyle factors that influence bone density, from nutrition and protein intake,
Starting point is 00:02:16 to resistance training and impact exercise, how scans such as Dexter and Rams can give a clearer a picture of bone quality and help us take action before problems arise, the cultural and societal pressures that shape women's health behaviors, and how these can sometimes work against long-term bone resilience, and of course we cover plenty of simple practical strategies that you can use to protect your bones at every stage of life. As Vonder explains, we have so much more control over our bone health than we might initially think. And that knowledge should feel both comforting and empowering. Caring for our bones is really about caring for our future cells.
Starting point is 00:03:05 And by taking simple, consistent steps today, we can build the strength, independence and confidence to live in the way that we want for many years to come. When you look around across society, what are some of the common things people are doing that are perhaps resulting in them neglecting their bodies and therefore increasing the speed at which they age? I think there are a couple factors that may be surprising and then several that are obviously not. But I think the first reason people begin to decline without even realizing it is this bias or this myth. we believe that aging is an inevitable decline and that there's something abnormal about it.
Starting point is 00:03:58 But I say quite frequently that aging alone is the most natural thing we do from the minute of our conception to the moment of our death. And it's how we handle the passage of time that matters. But if you believe that there's absolutely nothing you can do about the future, then you're going to resign yourself to the first time you feel an ache or a pain or the first time you come up against a no as well that's just getting old i guess i'll just accept it and what i find people doing is giving things up one at a time until they don't recognize it i'll give you some examples so believing the myth that it's inevitable is i think a primary motivator. The second motivator I see is that sometimes people don't believe they're worth the effort.
Starting point is 00:04:51 Maybe everybody else is worth the effort, particularly for women. Like the neglect, the self-neglect comes because we're not neglecting others. We're investing all of our energy externally and not redirecting anything internally. And so those being primary drivers I see in the stepwise allowing to climb. It's interesting this idea about mindset or beliefs. If we believe, if we get the message in the world around us that getting older means frailty, means weakness, means you have to give up the things that you don't want to give up necessarily, then of course your behaviors are going to follow your beliefs. And there's so many things about your new book. unbreakable that I really, really enjoy. I think it's beautifully written. And in the introduction,
Starting point is 00:05:50 you actually say, I contend that although we certainly undergo some life stage changes, what we call normal aging is actually normal aging that stressed out, undernourished people who are not intentionally building muscle, not attending to their hormonal health, and not prioritizing mobility. Exactly. And what I mean by that is if you go back to the medical literature, there was a study, and there are many studies like this, there was a study called the Health ABC in the United States, funded by our National Institutes of Health, that took a cohort of 70-year-olds and just watched them age over a decade. These were people straight out of the population. Well, what do we know about people in the world and in the United States in particular, is that
Starting point is 00:06:42 more than 70% of them do not invest any energy, any day in mobility or health habits. So if we're watching a population of people to see how they age, and they're truly just a random sample of the population, then you are sampling sedentary people who make very little effort to age in a different way. So I state that so clearly is because I content. and why we formed the research group at the University of Pittsburgh called Prima, the Performance and Research Initiative for Masters Athletes is because I wanted to see
Starting point is 00:07:23 what we were capable of if we took the variable of sedentary living out of the way. So we began studying active people, not professional master's age athletes, but people over 40 who were consistently active. many of them were podium-type age group athletes, meaning winning the 50-year-old podium. So they were invested but not pros.
Starting point is 00:07:50 And what we found was very different than we find in the population. We found over 15 years we can retain muscle mass and bone density and brain function. And so when I say that we don't really truly know the state of healthy, active aging, it's based on facts, not fiction. Yeah. So in terms of what people can do then as they get older,
Starting point is 00:08:18 we're going to get into all the detail, but top line, right at the top for people, what are some of the things that you want people to consider doing as they get older? As I say, we'll get into all the detail, but just top line, what are some of those things you want people to be focusing on as they get older?
Starting point is 00:08:35 Number one, mindset mobilization. We have to quit worshiping our youth. Number two, we have to work hard at building mental resilience. Aging is not for cissies. It can get hard. So we have to build the mental resistance to stay in the process. Number three, we need to build physical resilience. And part of this book is all about that.
Starting point is 00:08:58 How do we know where we are physically and then use the science-backed ways to build physical resilience? And then I firmly believe and encourage people to form groups of at least five to travel this road with you towards an aging process that is vibrant because, you know, experts in social theory and relationships will say that we are the product of the five people we spend the most time with. And if those five people are naysayers of health and aging, if they are naysaying in your ear, what are you doing out there trying to get healthier? It's going to hold you back. So as a broad outline, those would be the things I identify. I love those. This book is primarily focused on women.
Starting point is 00:09:53 I'm a man in my 40s. What is it you would like me to take? reading this book? You know what? This book is specifically through the vision and voice of women, but many of the principles are directly applicable, especially the mindset principles to men. But listen, all men are from women. All men were at one point in a woman's womb, right? So you must have a mother figure. Many men are partnered with women. You have sisters. You are in working relationships with women. The more understanding men have of the differences between what happens as a man ages and a woman ages,
Starting point is 00:10:36 there will be a greater understanding and ability to work together. And even probably save a lot of midlife marriages because of an understanding that women go through a completely tumultuous time that is of not their choosing. It's just biology. Yeah, I love that. I mean, I believe that to be the case. I believe books like this can actually save many marriages. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:10:59 And I think it is very relevant to men. Yes. Even though, you know, the strapped line is a woman's guy to ageing with power. I really enjoyed reading it. And, of course, I'm married. Yes, you are. I help look after my elderly mom. So some of these things that you talk about,
Starting point is 00:11:17 I have seen what happens if people don't pay attention. I have a daughter. Yes. And I've heard you talk about the importance of bone health and how we get to our peak bone density, maybe at 25 or 30. Yes. And so this book has already made me think about, well, what is my daughter doing right now at 12 years of age
Starting point is 00:11:38 that's going to ensure she's putting force and pressure through her bones to make sure she has the maximum bone capacity that she can have? So, yeah, yes, it's for women. It's also just as relevant to men. I love that you say that because, you know, particularly in reference to your daughter is it's my intention. I have two daughters and four daughters-in-law. It is my intention that they never suffer because you're, so that you're 12-year-old and my 17-year-old and my 31-year-old will know what's going to happen, build solid bases of muscle and bone and brain health in their youth, know what's going to happen as estrogen walks out.
Starting point is 00:12:21 the door and know where to have the resources because what's happened to certainly baby booming women, certainly Generation X women, which we do not want to happen to the oldest millennial women who are 43, 44, is the hitting the wall phenomenon, not being yourself, cataclysmic changes. So for your 12-year-old and my 17-year-old, my vision and motivating factor is that they will never feel this. Yeah. Let's take a big picture of you, right? You mentioned the differences between women and men. Of course, there are many differences. Completely. But I saw you speak a couple of days ago in London, and you put up some very provocative images. They're very, very thought-provoking. And one of them that I'm going to make sure we pop up on screen on the YouTube version of this conversation is how
Starting point is 00:13:16 men and women's hormones change through their life. And the thing that I really took from this image was this idea that men have a gradual decline in testosterone over a number of decades. Whereas women have this sharp precipitous decline in estrogen during perimenopause. That's right. Could you speak to that and speak to these more broad differences
Starting point is 00:13:45 and why so many women go through what you went through, I think, at 47, which you can perhaps explain at some point. But just take us through what those differences are and how they manifest for us in terms of the quality of our lives. So let's start back at the first big bump in the road for everyone who lives, which is adolescence, right? We come into our hormones. We all expect that to be an awkward stage.
Starting point is 00:14:09 We describe it as that. We describe it as all these body changes. It's something that we readily accept. And then after puberty, we enter our 20s, and by 30, our brains are fully formed, right? We mature our brains in our late 20s, same with bone and muscle, such that we reach peak all of those tissues by the time we're 30. At that point, we hit a little bit of a plateau, but then start for men to decrease their testosterone in a very slow, linear way. described. Now, at some point in their 50s and early 60s, I see this because I have active men in my orthopedic practice. Sometimes men do get low enough on their testosterone that they're like,
Starting point is 00:14:56 I am exhausted. I don't feel like myself. I'm popping tendons all over the place when I'm trying to do good work. And so we'll measure their testosterone and it may be very large delta's different than what it was when we know what younger men are. So even for men, for my sons in their 30s, I'm asking them to get their testosterone checked in their youth. Because when I test you again in your 50s, you may have a testosterone that's within the, air quote, normal range, which in the United States, the normal range is 250 to 1,050. That's a big normal range. It's a big normal range. And so you may find at 50 that your testosterone is 600, which is still normal, but you may have been a lot.
Starting point is 00:15:44 a thousand and you're going to feel that so even for men being aware of your hormonal change but that is not what happens for women women after we reach our estrogen every month we have this cyclical pattern of high and low estrogen that begets our menstrual cycle which is normal our estrogen uh plateaus in our 30s however by the time we reach 40 and this is why this all happens. Estrogen is predominantly made in women in the follicle or like the egg shell of our eggs, right? Here's the miracle of life. Every woman, your daughter, my daughter, me, your wife, were born with all the eggs we are ever going to have across our lifespan. So if we think about this in the universal sense, we're carrying generations of people at our, isn't that fascinating?
Starting point is 00:16:44 oh my god to think about it like that but when we're born we have several million and over time we lose a lot every month such that by the time we're 40 it's estimated that we have one to three percent of those eggs left so it's harder to produce enough estrogen so so women have lost 97 to 99 percent the eggs that they were born with yes by the age of 40 that's right and it and if the eggs are producing the estrogen that you need. Once you have so few eggs left, estrogen starts to decline, which makes our brain a little urgent to have more estrogen. So it produces a hormone called follicle stimulating hormone, which tries to ramp up this egg process. And it becomes hormonally a little chaotic. Like if you measured a woman's hormones in the morning on one day
Starting point is 00:17:42 in the morning of the next day, they could be completely in different ranges during the perimenopausal time. Well, that fluctuation in hormone levels is why women first start saying things like, I just don't feel like myself. Or they'll say things like, I am doing the exact same thing I've always done, but I'm gaining weight. Or I'm not able to progress in my workouts. or it's when the most common manifestations of perimenopause happen, night sweats, brain fog, can't remember nouns, these changes that are due to estrogen because here's what people forget. Not only are we at 1% of our eggs, which produce the estrogen by a time we're about 40, estrogen, progesterone, and testosterone are not sex hormones.
Starting point is 00:18:37 They are hormones, like thyroid-stimulating hormone, like growth hormone, like every communicating molecule we have. I say that to say there are estrogen receptors, like little baskets to hold the estrogen, on every organ system in the body, from the brain to the gut to muscle to bone. so if these receptors are not being filled with the normal estrogen nothing that they cause downstream is going to happen thus the brain fog thus the heart palpitations thus the night sweats or things that people don't consider but my group and i wrote a paper on last summer the musculoskeletal syndrome of menopause were women i had this their entire bodies hurt because estrogen is a profound anti-inflammatory. So it seems like a lot, and it is. And so men are slowly declining in their testosterone. Women have this precipitous drop. I kiddingly say estrogen walks out the door, she slams the door, she never looks back, right? And we feel
Starting point is 00:19:52 that. Until the time when the arbitrary day, I firmly believe, believe that the day of menopause, the 366th day after our last period when we say, oh, she's in menopause, it's an arbitrary number. It's just one day, isn't it? It's one day. You've been losing estrogen for five to seven years, sometimes a decade. And then after that day, you're post-menopausal for 40 years. And so this is the reason men and women age differently to circle the conversation back.
Starting point is 00:20:29 It's because of the differences in our hormones. Yeah. So essentially, are you saying that when a woman, of course, there's multiple possible factors that contributes here, but generally speaking, when a woman in her mid-late 30s, maybe early 40s, suddenly feels life is a bit more of a struggle. The things that they used to do are no longer working. well, you're basically saying that for some of those women, the precipitating event is that decline in estrogen. Yes. There is a normal, natural aging process. And in the book, I talk about what I call the time bombs of aging. They're actually the hallmarks of aging. We know aging happens at a cellular
Starting point is 00:21:20 level, but women have stacked on top the loss of estrogen. Do you mind if I give you a couple organ examples? Oh, take your time. In the brain, for instance, the work of Lisa Mosconi has shown that the brain is covered, literally covered, with estrogen receptors. The work of Robbie Brinton, a brain scientist, has shown that without estrogen sitting in those receptors, the brain literally starves and changes its chemistry. That's why it manifests as brain fog. We can't find our keys. We can't remember why we walked into a room. For me and many other women, I forgot nouns. Imagine this. I tell this story all the time and I want to tell everybody my brain is back. It's as good as it ever was because of the estrogen that I take now. But when I, in my critical decade, before I became
Starting point is 00:22:15 an expert on this, I would walk into the operating room and I would know exactly what I was going to do and I was going to know exactly how to do it. But I forgot the name of the piece of equipment that picks things up. And I would say to my scrub tech, I need the thing, for those of you listening, I'm doing a pinsing motion. I need the thing that does this thing.
Starting point is 00:22:38 I need an Atson, which is a force-up. I knew exactly what I was doing, but I lost my nouns and I frankly thought that I was getting dementia. So I start Googling early signs of dementia. Think how frightening that is
Starting point is 00:22:51 for a brain person. Yeah? I'm a brain person. My brain's the best part of me. there's that many women experience that and i don't think it ends there these mechanisms are not clearly worked out but there must be a reason that 70% of all people with alzheimer's are women it can't just be coincidence i think we're going to work out the mechanisms to find that although multifactorial it has to do with estrogen sharply declining so that's the brain the heart has an increase
Starting point is 00:23:24 of 30 to 40% of microvascular disease, when men's hearts have disease, it's in the big major vessels. For women, it's in the much smaller vessels, so it goes undetected a lot of times, but we know that estrogen plays a critical role in heart health. If we get to musculoskeletal health, which is obviously where I live, there's a natural rate of decline of bone for men and women of about 1% a year in their bone density. During perimenopause, that precipitously increases to 2 to 3% a year so that over 5 to 7 years, 10 years, you can lose 20% of your bone density. So if you've never built enough bone as a child, and now you're going to lose 20% of it predictably, that's why 70% of all hip fractures are in women. Muscle is the same way. We will lose 8 to 10
Starting point is 00:24:19 of our muscle mass in the decades surrounding perimenopause. The list goes on and on and on. And so when I say men and women age differently, the most direct contributing factor, lifestyles being equal, has to be, at least in part, due to our estrogen. Yeah, it's interesting. Simply calling estrogen a sex hormone is so limiting, isn't it? These labels we put on these things,
Starting point is 00:24:48 and I feel medicine's done this in many different places. Actually, there's been unintended consequences, right? So by viewing estrogen purely as a sex hormone, we therefore don't think about the effect of estrogen on the brain or the heart or the bone. And you can sort of make the same case, like, with exercise, right, or physical activity. How for many years in society it was about weight. Physical activity is what you need to do to maintain a healthy weight.
Starting point is 00:25:23 And I would say, I think over the last five or ten years, realizing that your muscles aren't just dumb muscles sitting there. They're also important for your hormones and all kinds of communication molecules around the body. And then yesterday, I was watching this beautiful 30-minute video on your YouTube channel about bone. Yes. And I was thinking, this is the same thing with bone, right? Like, Muscle has had a PR job over the last five years, where we now understand that muscle
Starting point is 00:25:50 is important for so much more than our physicality. Yes. And I feel with that video and in this book, you're almost giving this kind of new marketing to Bone saying, hey, Bone isn't just your structure. That's right. Bone does so many other things. Absolutely. And I'm so glad you're giving time to this on this podcast because it is now a vision and
Starting point is 00:26:15 mission of mind to help people understand and care about their bones. I mean, it's fashion week and around the world right now, and that's about the only time we think about bones, this oh, gorgeous cheek bones. Look at our wrist structure. Or when we fracture, obviously. Bones are seemingly silent until they break and then they're screaming because that's excruciating. But the reality is, bones have so many functions in the body from structure. Sure. they're structural. Otherwise, you know, think about it. I love to say this out loud that without bones, muscle that we're all in love with
Starting point is 00:26:52 is just this heaping pile of metabolic tissue like a chicken breast on the counter. It does nothing but lay there. But with bone, you have structure. It gives you human form. It gives you locomotion. But it is a master communicator. Bone produces a multitude of hormones, one of which I talked about on that video, you're referencing called osteocalcin.
Starting point is 00:27:16 Yeah. Osteo Calcin is released by the bone. It goes to your brain. It causes your brain to secrete bone-derived, neurotrophic factor, which builds better neurons. So bone is helping you build a better brain, yes. It goes to your muscles and helps with glucose absorption. It goes to your pancreas for insulin release and resistance. In men, it goes to the testicles and helps you produce.
Starting point is 00:27:44 testosterone, there are gut bone brain axes. There are bone gut axes that are only being worked out. And not only do they talk to the rest of the body, but they are intimately talking to muscle and fat because the musculoskeletal system, fat, tendon, ligament, bone, muscle stem cells are all from the same stem cell, originally the mesenchymal stem cell. They're all cousins. Why wouldn't they talk to each other? And do so in a way that coordinates the whole body. And so not only is it a structural, master communicator, it is the storehouse of all the minerals we need for our body to function, the calcium, the phosphorus, a lot of collagen, bone is made out of collagen. When your body needs it to live, it will take it from the storehouse. It's not
Starting point is 00:28:42 abnormal to resoor bone. What's abnormal is a disconnect between reabsorption and rebuilding because we use the products we store in our bone. It is also, believe it or not, the incubator of all of our blood cells. All of your blood cells are made in your pelvis and when you're young and your long bones. So if we were going to do a stem cell therapy on you, we would get your stem cells from your pelvis. Isn't that fascinating that bones are doing all these things? And listen, if I were designing a human being, why wouldn't I make bone the master communicator? Because we have bone from the top of our skull to the bottom of our pinky toe. It's a highway for communication. But you're right. We never think about it unless we're thinking about fracture. And it's
Starting point is 00:29:33 funny, people say bones are silent, bones are not silent, but we just can't hear them until they break. And I'm going to tell you from being in the trauma bay many years, it's excruciating and I never want someone to have to deal with it. But we think about it, especially bone health with aging, because as we lose our bone density and break big bones like the femur or the top of the femur is the hip, especially in women. Men break their bones too. Let's just talk about this. This is a paid advertisement by BetterHelp. October the 10th was World Mental Health Day and this year, BetterHelp wants to flip the script and focus their attention on thanking the therapists, people who truly make the world a better place.
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Starting point is 00:34:08 with full money-back guarantee. Visit Vivo Barefoot.com forward slash live more and start your Barefoot journey today. Two million men in the United States have osteoprocess. It's not just a disease of women, but more prevalent in women. 70% of all hip fractures, which is the biggest bone in the body, happen in women. The instant, literally, the instant, snap your fingers. The instant you break that bone, you have a 30% chance of dying in the next year.
Starting point is 00:34:46 I mean, that's grave, isn't that? That is a grave statistic that if we could think about our 12-year-old and our 17-year-old daughters that we have to get their bones so strong at peak mass that they never reach that point? Yeah. So 30% of the time, Aunt Miriam, who's a story I told her the FDA in the United States recently as we're trying to change the thoughts about estrogen, 30% of the time she's going to die. and if you live 50% of the time, you will not return to the home that you came from because you don't have the functional strength or you can't get up from a chair anymore.
Starting point is 00:35:29 So bone is, that kind of fracture is not only a personal pain, it's a family and social dilemma. What do we do with mom, right? Do we hire a full-time caregiver? That's expensive. do we have her move in, you know, in some cultures, and I'm Chinese and my culture, that's what would happen. I mean, my parents live with me because that's just what we do. But in many cultures, that's not what you do.
Starting point is 00:35:54 You find a place for your parents to live. Well, if you find a place for your parents to live, that is prohibitively expensive, many places. And so in the United States, you must use your life savings to pay for that at the rate of $5,000 to $15,000 a month until you're a pauper. And that's when the Medicaid... Who wants to be in that situation? The difficulty is Vonda is that... I mean, as you were talking there,
Starting point is 00:36:24 I got flashbacks to when I qualified as a doctor. So my first job at the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh in 2001, when I came out in medical school, was as a junior house officer, which is what we called it back then, in the orthopedic wards at the raw and infirmary. And I can still remember. I think the first two months of my placement
Starting point is 00:36:45 was doing orthopedics. And I can just remember the ward. And it was mostly women, frail, older women who had necathema fractures. Yes. Right? And I didn't know then what I know.
Starting point is 00:37:02 Now, of course, I was junior doctor just came out of medical school. But I can look at that now, you know, through a different lens from everything you just shared, why it affects women so much. This is huge. But how do you get a woman in their late 30s,
Starting point is 00:37:21 who is in what you call the critical decade, which you can perhaps explain in a moment, to actually care about this neck of fema fracture that they might get at 75? Because that seems like, oh, yeah, whatever, you know. I'm still active. I can still pick the kids up, and I can still see my girlfriends at the weekend.
Starting point is 00:37:38 And, you know, how do you get someone in their things? 30s or 40s to care about those bone density implications later on in life. It's difficult, isn't it? It's so hard because there's a temporal disconnect. There's this banking idea. I learned it from my bankers that they experience called temporal disconnect. On average, they cannot get the average person to save $10 for their pension, right? It's the same in health.
Starting point is 00:38:09 I cannot get people motivated in their youth for their old age. So for the women and men in the critical decade, which I call 35 to 45. I love that. Is it just for women that? Or is it for men, it is for men. It is time to get your proverbial health standards in check. Because if you build a lifestyle where you're eating a non-inflammatory, high-protein diets so that you're able to build, or if you're eating at all, many women decide not to eat enough. We can talk about that.
Starting point is 00:38:40 If you've got your food down, and it doesn't mean you can't live and have an occasional, you know what, I had a piece of chocolate before I walked in here. I'm not talking about austerity, the standards of nutrition, a muscle building practice, a cardiovascular building practice, it's a lifestyle to you. It is not a burden if that's just the way you live. The critical decade is the time to get that in order before you lose your hormone. right? For women, once you hit your mid-40s, now you're adding that burden that we already discussed. Yeah, it's almost as if we can kind of get away with things until our mid-30s, right?
Starting point is 00:39:22 So, yeah, there are health-promoting things to do. But even if you don't do them, you'll skim by. You still seem to get by, or a lot of us do, in our 20s and early 30s. But then there does tend to come a point in most people's lives where it's like, wait a minute. If I don't pay attention to this, there are consequences. And of course, hormones are one of the big reasons for that. I can't get this idea out of my head about how do we get people to care about their bones early on in life and build that foundation to protect them later on in life. And I know from hearing you speak that you do dexas scans with a lot of your patients. All of them.
Starting point is 00:40:05 Now, interestingly enough, in the NHS, the National Health Service here in the UK, it's not that easy to get a decter scan. It is not. You have to meet certain criteria. Yeah. But let's just flip it. If we were designing something from scratch and going, okay, bone health is important, but we need men and women to really focus on their bone health early on in life.
Starting point is 00:40:30 Yes. Teenagers, in their 20s, in their 30s. How are we going to get them to do that? Oh, well, what if every single 20-year-old got a day? dexas scan. And then we could show them this is the states of your bone health. Is that a good idea? Is it a flawed idea? How would you put all that together for me? I think in this day and age, data drives people. And so I have proposed that we get a dexas scan, which measures bone density, which is the mineralization. And if it's available where you are, which it is in the UK and
Starting point is 00:41:09 when we're getting them in the U.S. An ultrasound, which tells bone quality, and here's why that's important. Every time you take a step, the bone will bend a little. When you put more pressure on it and it bends too much, it'll break, right? So we need to know the quality of the bone. You tell that with a REM ultrasound scan, which are available here. We should have that in our critical decade. You know, we peak out at 30, let's get it between 30 and 40, just like you get a mammogram
Starting point is 00:41:43 so that we know where we're starting, because here's the deal. If I get these scans on people and I find 30-year-olds with very bad bone because they've never built it, well, then we can do all the things to build better bone, including hormone optimization, jumping around, muscle building, a smart high-protein nutrition, because research finds that you need, for the best fracture prevention, a 10-year lead. It's okay to start these things when you're 55 or 60, but it's better if it's your lifestyle. Is it like an MOT? Well, I don't know if you have MOTs.
Starting point is 00:42:25 An MOT is something we have in the UK. So if your car is over three years old, it has to undergo an annual MOT. Okay, so to check that it's roadworthy. And if there's anything, problems with your tires or, I don't know, the wipers, you know. Ironic that we do it for cars. Yeah. We do it in the United States when we, every year we get our new tag and you have to have any missions test. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:42:51 Yeah. So what I'm thinking is, I think I heard, did you say you've seen 24-year-olds with osteopenia? Completely. Okay. So this is alarming, right? So, and this perhaps goes into the more societal piece over what we're. conditioning women have been exposed to for many years and what women think they need to do in order to look a certain way. But why is it? I mean, do you remember that 24-year-old with osteopenia?
Starting point is 00:43:18 Why did she have poor bone density in her 20s? I've given this a lot of thought. And the first thing I'm going to say is that we think of osteoporosis and bone health as a disease of old ladies. Osceoprocess is a disease of young ladies that manifests when you're you're old. You begin this problem when you're young. And why is that? Well, number one, still, despite all the progress we've made, women are still taught to be teeny tiny and take up no space and not eat a lot of food. Women think that they're going to be healthiest if they don't eat a lot. And even though we've made progress, I am not against GLP ones at all. They have some profound metabolic effects, but I fear that we're tipping the needle back to skinny
Starting point is 00:44:09 is better without using those with high protein and lifting practices. And we can talk about that. But the mantra that women must be skinny and not eat leaves many women with not enough materials and maybe not menstrual cycles and estrogen production in their youth. So that's number one. And number two, on the other side of the coin, we have had 54 years of rising equality in women's sports. It's the World Cup right now, right? The rugby world cup in the world.
Starting point is 00:44:44 And we've got great athletes. But what happens, as a sports doctor, I'll tell you that if you're burning 10,000 calories a day as a woman on the soccer pitch, on the football pitch, that you have to replace that with something besides gummy worms. and you have to eat that many calories. And that's just not the culture of women to have training tables like it is for men. So maybe you're not eating enough and you're little. Maybe you're exercising so much and not replacing enough.
Starting point is 00:45:16 And then the third reason I think we're seeing it is everybody's a digital native right now. Gone are the days. We were not digital natives. We did not grow up with a cell phone. And it came later in our growing up. All of our children now are scrolling, despite our best efforts for long periods of time. We are no longer safe just to send our kids out to play for hours and hours.
Starting point is 00:45:41 They're more sedentary. So they're not bashing their bones and building bone. So you get to the peak building years, not having built peak bone. And then, so that accounts for the 20-year-olds and the 24-year-olds. I had a physics PhD student who was skinny fat, meaning she was thin as a rail, but she was sedentary and she did not have lean muscle mass and nor did she have high bone density. I have athletes in my clinic who are trying their best, but they're amenoreic, meaning no periods for six to nine months because they have relative energy deficiency. And with low energy, your body goes into survival mode and doesn't produce, I mean, you're not. Your body doesn't want you to have a child when you're starving, which is what your body thinks you are.
Starting point is 00:46:32 And so it doesn't cycle. I mean, does that make so much sense? Yeah, and I guess also one thing we're seeing across many countries now is a rise in eating disorders. Yes, in men and girls and men and women, but of course, if you're a woman and you've had an eating disorder and for a period of time have not been properly or adequately nourishing your body, for whatever reason, which of course we need to sensitively address, that's going to have an impact. Yeah. It's quite interesting that I think you mentioned there was a PhD student in a 20s
Starting point is 00:47:08 and she was thin, skinny fat, I think you described it, and she was performing well, right? So, you know, what's interesting about that for me is that that individual probably thinks life's fine. I'm skinny, I'm the way I want to look, I'm able to study, but perhaps my... lifestyle without me realizing it has neglected my bones. And as you say, of course, you know, the kids today are digital natives. And it's something my wife and I are constantly talking about with our kids. I mean, my daughter's 12 and she got into netball about three years ago. And so she probably plays five times a week. And I'm delighted because she enjoys playing. Her friends are there. So there's this big social component. I'm thinking, actually, you know what? If I think
Starting point is 00:47:59 about netball through the lens of bone health, there's a lot of impact, a lot of jumping, a lot of speeds. I think this is good. Multidirectional jumping. Perfect. Yeah. And I'm thinking this is good, right? Because there's a social component for her. And as a side effect, she's getting all of this great movement in. Yes. I think the difficulty for me would be is, well, if she wasn't internet ball, actually, I know a lot of parents face this, if their children don't enjoy a particular sport, they could hear a podcast like this and think, well, hold on a minute, what are my kids actually doing to build their bone density? I mean, they go to school, they come back, they're on screens, or whatever it might be. I mean, this is urgent, isn't it? It's critical. And to that, if
Starting point is 00:48:51 the parent is recognizing that their kid isn't playing netball or my youngest daughter was a ballet dancer. She's not in the studio 20 hours a week. I am a firm believer, and I say this with the most love in my heart for mothers and fathers. I am the mother of a blended family of six children, so I get raising children. From a very youngest age, kids will do what we show them. So if you want healthy children, you must be healthy yourself. They will grow up knowing that juice will rot their teeth and is bad for them. They will get down on the floor with you and play on a foam roller.
Starting point is 00:49:29 And I don't say that in any kind of judgment. I say that with the reality of that many children in my life and now three grandchildren who will do whatever I'm doing. So if we want healthy children, let's show them. So if your daughter's peers don't play this sport, which I think is, just so fantastic, maybe it becomes a family affair. Yeah. And it becomes what the family does. We do some kind of fun thing together that, oh, by the way, just happens to involve jumping and running and walking. Hey, kids love jumping and doing that stuff. Like, they don't necessarily
Starting point is 00:50:10 need to know that when you jump, you're putting sheer force to your bones and the osteoclasts are getting stimulated. And like, sure, some on the do. Maybe my kids have heard that for me. But in general, like kids like to jump around. And, you know, when I'm advising adults right now, one of the things when we're talking about building better bone is I'm encouraging people to jump. And when I'm talking about the cardio that I prescribe, I'm asking them to sprint.
Starting point is 00:50:36 Well, when we think of the passage of time, we were talking about this earlier, people give up one thing at a time and don't even realize they're doing that. And the fun play activities that kids just do, like jumping and running that are so healthy, they give up one at a time. But if it's a family affair
Starting point is 00:50:56 and it's just what our family does, maybe they won't give it up as soon and it'll get the parents back into those behaviors that will build their bones. Going back to this idea that women and men age differently, I'm really interested as to what happens when a woman gets pregnant. Oh.
Starting point is 00:51:17 Because I know that can, have an impact on bone health and breastfeeding can as well. So can you just talk us through that because, again, I think it's empowering to realize the impact of those things and therefore what we can do on the other end. Completely love that you brought that out because if we talk about that bone is a lifespan pursuit, we just talked about the young women. Then when women enter their fertility years, when they're choosing to have children, or if you don't, bones are still of concern to you but during pregnancy we are building a baby from ourselves the baby's not eating itself the baby is eating the mother either through the nutrients coming in or if there's not enough from her muscle
Starting point is 00:52:01 from her bone it takes about 500 milligrams of calcium a day to build a baby where are we getting that we're either absorbing it from the gut and then passing it to the baby or we're resorbing the mother's bone and just for people who don't know what resorb means yes It means that there's a, the way bone works, just as a bone building primer, how bones work. Our bones are constantly doing something called remodeling, meaning taking a little bit away, building a little bit up. It's two different cell types. The osteo-classed with a C is taking bone away, and then you use all the minerals that you've harvested. And then the osteoblast, B, blast, is building bone.
Starting point is 00:52:43 and in normal circumstances with enough hormones that is a pretty equal process homeostasis balance those are all synonyms if your body requires more than you're able to build or replace you will get in bone deficit that can happen during pregnancy if we're not getting enough nutrition the mother's body will prioritize the baby and resolve what it needs regardless of what happens to the mother, such that there is a phenomenon called the osteoporosis of pregnancy. It's a documented medical phenomenon because women can lose a significant amount of bone density. Now, here's the good thing. Our bodies know this is going to happen.
Starting point is 00:53:29 And we are designed to rebuild that bone post-pregnancy. But only if we eat enough, mothers get busy. Sometimes they don't have time to take a shower, let alone eat, right? pile on top of that breastfeeding. Now I always like to have the caveat based on responses I've got that I am all for breastfeeding for women who choose to do it. I breastfed my youngest child for a year. I think it was that important.
Starting point is 00:53:57 Again, it's the same argument. Where are we getting the nutrients from? It takes 500 milligrams of calcium a day to make enough milk for a baby. We're going to take that from our bones. So every time your baby latches on, in addition to drinking water, we have to be thinking about replacing our calcium, our magnesium, our phosphorus, so that we don't end up in deficit because now with women, millennial women delaying childbirth into their early 30s, mid-30s, we're entering the critical decade, right? So we have less time to build bone back. And then what if we're having children more rapidly at an older age? And so we may never have time to build back.
Starting point is 00:54:42 I just want people, women, to be aware, right? Because you can correct that. But if you never correct that, and then we've already talked about what happens in perimenopause, losing 15 to 20 percent of your bone density, do you see how this can add up across a lifespan such that it is even more common for women truly in their menopause years, at this conference we were at, I had many women come up to me afterwards
Starting point is 00:55:12 and say, you know what, I thought I was doing everything right. They're doing all the lifestyle things, but they go and get this Dexas scan or this REM scan and they're osteopenic or osteoporotic. And they're so disappointed because they thought they were doing everything right now.
Starting point is 00:55:30 Well, they may be, but maybe they didn't build enough voting. in their youth. Yeah, it's so interesting. You know, as you're talking now, I'm thinking about my wife. So my wife breastfed both of our kids, which is what she wanted to do and she was able to. I recognize that not every woman can. Or wants to.
Starting point is 00:55:50 But let's say there was four years of breastfeeding. Given what you've just said, that's four years where my children, our children, were taking whatever they needed from my wife's body. That's right. And potentially leaching her bones for calcium. It sounds terrible when we say it like this, doesn't it? In order to sustain theirs. That's right.
Starting point is 00:56:16 Right? Now, you know, in the context of you just saying what you said, which is at this conference, we were both at this weekend in London, we're both speakers at this conference, wonderful conference. So many women said I thought I was doing everything right. I didn't realize there was an issue with my bones until I got the dexas scan. So without knowing anything about my wife, would you say, actually, that's someone who might be a good candidate for a dexas scan? I'm going to order it for her myself.
Starting point is 00:56:48 Okay. So you think it's not important? I do. What is the downside of knowing where we stand? Yeah. Because it might serve as motive. We might find out she's perfect. Yeah. Good for her. We're going to keep going on the course. We might find out that there is an opportunity to get in front of this before she's 55. You know, this is the time to find out.
Starting point is 00:57:10 And that's what I want people to do, is find out. Here are all the reasons. I mean, there are dozens of risk factors for osteoporosis besides loss of estrogen and aging. But if your mother is shrinking, you know, my mother used to be as tall as me, and now she's down mid-mid. head, right? If your mother is shrinking, if you notice you're shrinking, if you thought smoking was cool and smoked at any time in your life, smoking is poison to bones. If you had an illness, a chronic illness where you were required to take a lot of steroids from asthma to cancer or any of the autoimmune diseases, there are dozens, or if you had a fracture after 20,
Starting point is 00:57:57 fracture is the number one predictor of future fracture. These are all risk factors for osteoporosis and poor bone health. Those are reasons to march into your doctor and say, I have a risk factor for a bad bone. And I want to know if you were skinny fat your whole life, if you have recovered from an eating disorder, these are all reasons. We do not have to sit idly by and cross our fingers and hope. Yeah. That our bones are going to be okay at 65 when finally a Dexascanor will be paid for, you know? I think we also have to look, I'm sort of semi-familiar with the healthcare system in America,
Starting point is 00:58:40 but of course I know the UK won much better. I'm really off the view these days that the NHS, our National Health Service, cannot and will not be there for all of these issues. It simply cannot pay for all. all of this stuff for everyone. That's right. And I think we're sort of waiting for this time where it gets funded well enough
Starting point is 00:59:03 whereby all of us can have this. I don't think that's coming. And I don't say that because I want it to not be there. Yes, it would be great if all of this stuff could be funded. But I think at some point we have to start recognizing that the NHS is going to be there and it's going to be fantastic at some things. Acute problems.
Starting point is 00:59:23 Or I shared with you, we were just from the fracture clinic this morning because my son fell a couple of weeks ago, well, four and a half weeks ago, broke two bones in his wrist. We got great care from the NHS. They ex-rode him, put him in a cast,
Starting point is 00:59:37 we've gone and had a review. That stuff I think the National House of us is this fantastic at. But I do think, and of course not everyone can afford this, but if you're someone who's concerned, it may be that we have to take this into our own hands to go, actually, what is the cost of me not doing a Dexas scan, right? Because you outlined it before. What if it's 72? You're with that break. And then it's your kids who are having to decide, are we going to put mum in a home, you're going to pay for care, are we going to decimate
Starting point is 01:00:10 all the life savings, whatever it might be. These are real things that are happening. And it's just going up, up, up. So this whole idea of cost as well, it goes back to what your banking friends we're saying, right? We can't really see it. We can't really see it. I don't know how much a debt to scan is here. Let's say it's 200 pounds, right? And of course, not everyone has 200 pounds.
Starting point is 01:00:30 But we don't see it where actually that 200 pounds spent could literally save you tens of thousands of pounds in the future. Exactly. So I always encourage people to do exactly what you've said. Well, I have a comment about your health system and my health system in the United States, I have come to understand, even based on the way we bill, the job by and large of the U.S. health care system is to get you out of the hospital alive, to make sure you don't end up dead in the hospital, and to take care of acute problems. There is not the time, I'm a
Starting point is 01:01:07 practicing surgeon. My practice is a third in terms of volume as it was, because I am trying to take whole person care. But the average doctor in a fast-running clinic does not have that luxury right so it sounds like here and in the u.s we're just doing acute care and catastrophic care i think people are responsible for their own health i think we can't leave all the decisions to a clinician or all the prevention to a clinician so this is one example for instance i encourage people in the united states you can get a dexas scan for about ninety nine dollars which is not a zero fund, is not a zero number. But think of how much we spend on a cup of coffee at Starbucks. And I'm not zeroing out Starbucks. But the fancy coffee that I no longer buy there
Starting point is 01:02:01 costs $7.18. If I do that every day, that's a Dexascan. Can we please stop piddling away and just save it for a month and you'll get yourself a debt? And I realize that that may be a privileged thing to say, but every single person has something. And save it for six months. But let's say, let's even say that someone cannot afford that, right? Let's go to the practical things because one of the, you know, I was, I went for a walk this morning. I was thinking about there's so much to cover from your book. And I thought, we'll never get through it all. But I thought, we must go into bone health because I think bone health has been undervalued. Completely. And even I've, I've heard a lot of your interviews. And I think
Starting point is 01:02:42 it's easy to focus on, you know, muscle and the strength training and the VO2. And that's It's all great, and we're going to get to that. But I do think bone needs to be raised in our awareness. I really wanted to make sure we focused here. A lot of this book is talking about the incredible benefits of movement. And of course, you have this wonderful acronym face, which is brilliant. Flexibility, mobility, aerobic activity, carrying a load, and equilibrium and fast speeds. But if we simply look at it through the lens of bone for a minute, And yes, for people who can get a dexter scan to see where they're at, great, even if you can't or you won't, there are things that you can do
Starting point is 01:03:31 to improve your bone health, right? So when it comes to movement, what kinds of things can we do that will directly improve the health of our bones? This episode is brought to you by Whoop. Now, you may have heard me talk about whoop on previous episodes of this podcast. But if not, Woop is a screen-free, wearable health and fitness coach. Now, I've been wearing a Woop band for over 12 months now, and it really has had a transformative effect on my health and well-being.
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Starting point is 01:06:00 That's join. Dotwoop.com forward slash live more. yes let's just assume you're losing bone density let's make it a given that's a good that is a good place to start men and women are going to lose bone density blah here are the top things to do for your bone number one optimize your hormones estrogen is so critical for bone health in the regulation of these two cells I was talking about earlier, that it will help rebalance the breaking down of bone and the building of bone. Number two, building muscle. Number three, and often forgotten, is the E of the face acronym, equilibrium and foot speed, because you may be fine sitting in a chair. You may be fine walking around. But if you lose your balance,
Starting point is 01:07:03 Our neuromuscular pathways controlling balance start to degrade in our 20s, such as your reach for something, you lose your balance, you topple over. In our 20s. Yes, but it can totally retrained. And we can talk about that. But we have to reestablish our balance so that we don't trip over our dog or our rug or just try to pick something up and fall over because you'll be fine before you fall. and then you have the fatal fall or the, you know, your child has had a month in a cast. It takes three months for an adult to heal a fracture because of our biology. Think of the inconvenience of that, even if it's a minor fracture.
Starting point is 01:07:42 So, retrain our balance. And number two, in that F-A-C-E equilibrium, is the long-forgotten foot speed, meaning we lose our type 2 muscle fibers, which is our fast twitch fibers. And so I train people in speed and agility. You know, it's all those things we see athletes doing, hopping over cones, jumping over little hurdles. Even I was teaching a U.S. celebrity how to do toe taps and heel taps and then alternate them really quickly because we lose the neuromuscular coordination that helps us jump over our workbag, that sits by our desk and trips us every day, right?
Starting point is 01:08:27 We may be fine until we lose our balance and fall down. Yeah. So we can't forget to do that in our general mobility, but specifically for bone if we're talking about it. Yeah. See, it's interesting. Things like swimming and cycling, a fantastic aerobic activities,
Starting point is 01:08:48 but I say personally in my own life over the last years, I've really been thinking about weight, bearing activities. And if I have limited time to move, and I'm making more and more time to move as I get older, I'm, let's, we'll come to strength shortly, but in terms of more, I guess, what you would call in inverted commas, aerobic activities, I really focus on walking and running. Yes. Don't get me wrong, I like cycling, I like swimming, but I'm thinking, yeah, but those things are not really putting load through my joints. They're not.
Starting point is 01:09:27 Right? So they're great, but they're not loading my joints, whereas walking and running are literally putting pressure through my joints. So I personally, my prioritizing those. As a sports medicine specialist, as an orthopedic surgeon, what's your take on that? I agree. I am not against swimming, great for aerobics. Yeah, for sure.
Starting point is 01:09:47 I am not against cycling aerobics and building buckhorn hips muscles. But if you're concerned about building better bones, not only is walking fine. It produces about 1.5 times body weight with the steps. Running is fine, about two and a half times body weight. To build better bone, we need four times body weight. Okay. So if we really want to get after it, we're going to jump. And we're going to jump at least off an eight inch step because that will produce
Starting point is 01:10:21 four times body weight and impact, because this is the way bones work chemically. The biomechanical impact of you landing hard on both feet from an eight inch height and then jumping up straight in the air and landing again, that biomechanical impact becomes through little channels of fluid in your bone, biochemical signal that tells the building cells, oh, I better lay down more bones. She's jumping around again. So the impact becomes the biochemical signal to build bone. But it has to be intense enough.
Starting point is 01:10:57 So when you jump off, when you're running, I would stop and jump up in town 10 to 20 times. Or you can do it all at one time. Three days a week, you can spend 10 minutes jumping in multi-directions. I just posted reintroducing hopscotch to the world, right? Because it's multi-directional play jumping. So that's what I would add. And there are lots of studies to substantiate that. In fact, one that I published in this research group looking at what kind of activity, number one, answering the question, can we maintain our bone density by being active across a lifespan?
Starting point is 01:11:39 The answer to that study was yes. The subsequent study was, well, okay, what kind of activity maintains bone density best? And it seems logical, but we were studying the senior Olympics, which is Olympics for people over 50. We found, not surprisingly, that the jumping sports, like volleyball, basketball, because of the impact, maintained bones better than the swimming, the running, the badminton, the bowling. That's really interesting. Isn't that fascinating? And just a point to clarify. So many people these days are jumping on tramping. Pallines or on rebounders. Now, what's interesting on those, of course, there's give when you land.
Starting point is 01:12:25 So I'm guessing that you're saying, no, no, you must make sure it's against a hard surface. If you have a choice, if you are not so arthritic that you can barely move, please impact on against a hard surface. That being said, NASA has some good evidence that when they bring astronauts back down from the space stations, they use rebounders. Right. You know, and it can be beneficial. But all things being equal, if you can jump on a hard surface, jump on a hard surface.
Starting point is 01:12:53 Yeah, okay, I love that. And, of course, skipping ropes are brilliant as well for this. Skipping, just skipping on a track. I mean, that kind of impact, getting your knees up really high, adds some impact. Okay. So let's zoom out again and go, well, one of the themes of this conversation is this idea, the central idea from your book, that our body doesn't fall apart with age, it falls apart from neglect. You've spoken about the hormonal changes that happen in a man's life and in a woman's life
Starting point is 01:13:22 and why in that critical decade, 35 to 45, particularly for women, hormones fall off a cliff and it has a consequential impact on multiple aspects of our health, brain, heart, musculoscalatal system, whatever it might be. We've just gone deep into bone health, the impact on bone health and the sort of things that we can do to help improve it. Okay. But then if we just take that broader theme in general about how we don't have to age with frailty,
Starting point is 01:13:55 we can age with vitality. Yes. A big part of your book is around movement. In fact, I think Chapter 2 is literally making the case for movement. So could you make the case for movement, explain to us why? We've all heard that exercise is good for us. But just build that case for us about movement. Why is it so important that we move
Starting point is 01:14:20 in a variety of different ways, particularly as we get older? So if we have hypertension, high blood pressure, there's a pill for that. If we have diabetes, metabolic disorder, there are a variety of pills for that. If there is heart disease, a pill for that. But there is one pill. One activity, one set of skills that treats everything, and that is movement baseline. In fact, it is so critical in so many diseases that I wish I had made this up. I didn't, but there's a professor out of Columbia University in Missouri in the United States that coined the word sedentary death syndrome. it is the 33 chronic diseases that we die from, including heart disease, that are directly impacted by the amount of movement we do. So how does that work? So let's just take skeletal muscle
Starting point is 01:15:24 contraction movement. Skeletal muscle contraction produces a cytokine, a hormone called ERISA that is directly related to glucose metabolism. insulin resistance. I've already talked about the way the bone talks to the brain and the muscle and the pancreas. So any time we're moving our body, it's not just locomoting us, it's changing us chemically on the inside. When I recommend people sprint at the end of their cardio workout, literally get your heart rate way up, that will change the number of mitochondria, which are the powerhouse units in our cells. It will help stimulate the division of something called satellite muscle stem cells, which are called satellite cells. Mobility in the form of exercise causes the transcription
Starting point is 01:16:25 and changing of body molecules of more than 9,800 molecules every time you go out for a run. It's signaling your DNA to express the genes that you need to stay healthy. it's just fascinating that that one modality, mobility, can change us at a cellular level. It can change us at a tissue level. Here's an experiment we did in the labs with my partners that I had at University of Pittsburgh. Mobility is actually the fountain of youth for our stem cells. So what the experiment was this, we took little old lady mice, a little old lady mouse is two years old. She's old.
Starting point is 01:17:07 She's just sitting back in her cage waiting for her next meal. So we sampled her muscle and we took out a few of her little muscle stem cells. And what did we find? We found that her muscle stem cells in sedentary living were dying. Dying cells, it's an active process. You turn on something called program cell death. They were dying. They had lost their round plumpness, healthy cells around like a grape.
Starting point is 01:17:33 They were more like a branch. They were spindly. And they were no longer reproducing or producing growth factors. That's what these little old stem cells were doing. Then we took these girls and I spent a lot of money buying mouse treadmills. It's unbelievable how much mouse treadmills cost. But I bought some and we put these girls on the mouse treadmills and they were just like the rest of us. They didn't want to run, but we encouraged them to do so.
Starting point is 01:18:01 Twice a day for two weeks, we ran. these girls on treadmills and then we resampled their stem cells. The spindly dying stem cells were now plump like grapes again. They were producing growth factors. They had turned off program cell death. So the simple act of mobility changed our stem cell function and rejuvenated it. It was a signal to these mice bodies, these murine model, that we're not dead. We're living and so down to the cellular level so and that's what i'm trying to read to explain to people in the book and give them i mean i think my readers are smart they need to know why not just go do this program we can change our mitochondria we can change the expression of our genes we can change the amount
Starting point is 01:18:51 of inflammation in our body by regulating glucose metabolism and insulin sensitivity and really have profound changes of the hallmarks of the hallmarks of of aging by simple activities that become how we live, not just programs. Yeah, I love the bit sort of halfway through the book where you move into the next section where you've covered exercise in detail. And there's this beautiful chart where you've got listed all the time bombs of aging, DNA change and damage, mitochondrial dysfunction, senescence, fuel gauge malfunction, and stem cell exhaustion. And then you cross-referenced. And then you cross-referenced that with different kinds of exercise. And basically, you follow that chart, you go, wait a minute,
Starting point is 01:19:39 if you do this hybrid training program that you outline in your book, you are basically going to make sure you've hit every one of those six. So all of the sort of physiological changes in your body that are driving aging in a perhaps unhealthy way or a faster than needed way, hybrid. training targets them all. It's very, very inspiring, isn't it? It is. You can hit all the boxes by doing this very simple lifestyle. You're obviously such a passionate proponent to this. You've, you know, you're really worried at 47 and what the hell was going on with your body and your brain. And you've really turned things around where, you know, I saw you at the end of the day in London. You probably had a jet lag, whatever. You were on fire on something.
Starting point is 01:20:32 stage, your passion, your energy. I think that's why you're having such an impact in the world. It's not just what you're saying. It's how you're saying it. So I guess my question to you is, at this stage in your life, are you able to share with us what a typical week of training or movement looks like for you? Sure. And I appreciate that may not feel achievable for someone who's about to start. But I wonder if we could start off with what you do. And then we can perhaps wind back to someone who's never done any of this before, where they can start. Yes. And number one, I want people to give themselves grace. Because sometimes when people say what I'm about to say, they're like, oh, I could never. It's not about that. Start where you are. And I'll give you the
Starting point is 01:21:23 example. I'm on a book tour right now. I am really busy in different time zone. So I am not doing everything that I would normally love to do. And I'm going to give myself grace. It's the period of life and not judge myself for it. But ideally, this is what I do. I have a flexibility and mobility practice, meaning I am trying to stretch out my tendon, ligaments, and muscles nearly every day. This is where I don't do Pilates or yoga, but if you do, this is where that comes in to be marvelous. I do a dynamic warm-up every day, which gets every joint, every set of tendons and ligaments
Starting point is 01:22:04 around my major joints moving, right? So daily flexibility and mobility. Ten minutes? You know, it's just a series, and it's outlined in the book, The Dynamic Warm-A, it's just a series of ten things that if I do the inchworm motion, it warms up my ankles, my knees, my hips. If I do hamstring extensions, it gets my hips and my knees. First thing in the morning? Is that when you tend to do it? No, I do it before I work out. Before you work out. I put it all together. Yeah, that's interesting. And the only reason I ask is
Starting point is 01:22:38 because I do mobility every day, but it's part of my morning routine. So I'll get up. At the moment, I'm really into meditation. So I'll meditate. And then it's in my living room, which has got a carpet on the floor. So it's straight afterwards. I'll probably spend five, minutes just doing a whole variety of mobility exercises. I almost feel like it's waking up all of my joints for the day ahead. So you do it before you work out. I do it first in the morning. It doesn't really matter. Yeah, some form of mobility to keep all the joints moving. Okay. That's right. And then when it comes to, and we'll just use this acronym that you mentioned F, that's F, A, aerobic. I used to be the marathon running, middle distance, getting my heart rate into middle zones all the time, as so many people did.
Starting point is 01:23:27 I now use an 80-20 method. 80% of the time I am in lower heart rate-based training heart rate zone, which is very metabolically efficient. It helps my mitochondria be flexible with what fuel source I'm using, whether it's protein, carbs, or fat. and it burns more fat than the middle distance, middle high intensity exercising that I'll talk about in a minute. So 80% of the time. So that is three hours a week, broken up into 45 minutes sessions. I choose to do mine either by walking home from work, which is two and a half miles, or I have a treadmill in my room upstairs. So four 45 minute sessions a week in what's typically these days called Zone 2 training, which is basically low heart rate training.
Starting point is 01:24:17 And I came to that based on the research of Enigo San Milan, who is a physiologist for the Tour de France. So he has a lab in my building, so I use his method. And I have the privilege of having my lactate threshold, which is telling me where my heart rate is done with finger sticks. If you can't do that, then you can estimate it. Many wearables estimate it, but you could take your age, 181 minus your age,
Starting point is 01:24:45 will give you a range of heart rate. But you also, and you do share this in the book, that for people who don't want to get that technical and don't want to do lab testing, it's basically a lot easier than you think. Oh, it's brisk walking. It's brisk walking. It's basically where you can still talk,
Starting point is 01:25:03 but if there was a person on the phone chatting to you, they would also know that you were working a little bit. Yeah, you would be breathless. Yeah. Yeah. And by the end of doing that, I break a little sweat because I can feel my metabolism revving up. So you're trying to do about three hours of that a week. That's correct. And that's when I listen to podcasts. Or I learned something. So it's relatively, in inverted commas, easy training, relatively. You're burning fat. It's good for your metabolic flexibility.
Starting point is 01:25:31 The other thing, which I think a lot of people don't realize about that form of training, is that it doesn't spike your cortisol. Right. And which is just incredible. I had Professor Stephen Silo. who's also the same elk of Inigo. Again, Stephen's one of the world's leading sports scientists, and I think he might have coined the 80-20 training term. Oh, good, yeah. From when he observed it in a lot of elite athletes.
Starting point is 01:25:55 Exactly. That's what they do. Yeah. But, again, he was just sharing me when he came on the show that actually you don't see a cortisol spike, so it's easy to recover from that stuff. That's right. Because you share in the book, actually, that in your younger years, you went all in on high-intensity interval training. Oh, yeah, because I'm impatient.
Starting point is 01:26:15 Yeah, and actually, you were sharing a lot of the research book where actually as you get older, you don't want to be doing that five, six days a week. It can actually start to be counterproductive. Well, because it's not low intensity enough to allow for recovery, and it's not high-intensity enough sprint intervals to really change physiology.
Starting point is 01:26:34 So my office is in this gorgeous performance, center, and I see class after class on the indoor football field of medium intensity circuit training where people are out there busting it. They are working really hard, but they're not high enough to be sprinting, and they're certainly not in a low heart rate cortisol state. And so what happens is they don't get the results they want. They're working hard. They don't get the results they expect, and they're injured a lot every three weeks or so. And then they have to take time off and their brains go crazy because they don't have the dopamine spikes. So 80% low heart rate. And then twice a week, I sprint. Sprinting is not running on a
Starting point is 01:27:23 track like Shakiri Richardson. Sprinting is a heart rate function, meaning getting it up as high as it can go, your own personal heart rate can go. So, but you do that for very short bursts for 30 seconds. complete recovery, whatever that takes you, it takes me two to three minutes, four times. That sprinting is so good for your muscle-derived stem cells. It's so good for your mitochondrial function. And it's high enough heart rate. That, frankly, it's great for your brain. You feel like kind of a, pardon me, but badass when you hop off the treadmill after sprinting, right?
Starting point is 01:28:07 So that's how I do my cardio. So hold on, 10 to 15 minutes maybe of this dynamic warm-up, so mobility and flexibility on most days. Most days. Three hours of this low-intensity aerobic training, either walking home or on a treadmill. Yes. Twice a week, you're doing SIT sprint interval training. After my walk. After your walk.
Starting point is 01:28:33 So I'm totally warmed up. Totally warm before you start sprinting. That's right. What I love about this is kind of echoing, particularly on this SIT point, what Stacey Sims said when she came on recently, I have some female friends and family members in my life, who I would say are active, who walk regularly, but don't do sprint interval training. can you make the case to me and hopefully then to them why yes walking and being generally mobile is very good but why would you say that they're not getting the full benefits of movement unless they're having
Starting point is 01:29:25 this stimulus to their system you know we it's just not intense enough to signal the the metabolic pathways to cause the muscle satellite cell replication and the burning of fat that you get for sprinting or the mitochondrial division. But if you want a purely aesthetic reason in my own life and in that of the people that I care for, it is the sprint intervals and the heavy lifting that recomposes you to lean
Starting point is 01:30:01 because if we're trying not to be skinny fat but lean it is the sprinting and the lifting that will get you there because working out in the middle zone is not going to get you lean interestingly it's why we have a lot of great marathon runners but they have a lot of fat mass
Starting point is 01:30:25 you actually said in the book actually I found this very honest of you you're open saying listen, I was doing the baseline cardio and I was doing strength training, but it was when you added in the sprint-insful training that you really saw the change in your body and you shared in the book that at that time, you think that is what got you down to 22% body fans.
Starting point is 01:30:47 Absolutely. I went from, when I was writing this book, I had come off the time when I gained 20, 30 pounds during perimenopause, which was unheard of for me. I was an athlete, and so I had always been so thin that I didn't have, I had 90% body fat. What's that hard for you? Gaining that weight? Yeah. Oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:31:09 I was at the critical decision point of whether I buy a new wardrobe. Could I still fit into all these things that I had invested in in a certain size? Or was I going to have to do what so many women decide to do, which is get the next two or three sizes up? And I just decided, I know the science, I am worth the investment, I'm going to get this. done. And so I did. And over about a six to nine month period, using the things you're asking me about is how I cite in the book. I gained eight pounds of muscle. I lost all this body fat. I was leaner. And aesthetically, I loved it. And you know what? That goes up and down. That's why give yourself grace. I'm on a book tour now. I'm not doing four or five days a week,
Starting point is 01:31:56 but I will again when it settles down. The sprint interval training is 30 seconds off something. Something. It doesn't have to be literally sprinting. It could be the battle rope or... Or vertical, or the alpine thing, or the rowing or... Something as fast as you can. Yes, to get your heart rate up.
Starting point is 01:32:17 30 seconds. And then what do you do? Completely recover. So I'll give you my example. So I do this on a treadmill. To do base training on a treadmill, I currently do four to five incline. four to five speed. And that will keep my heart rate about 130. When I am done, then I punch this treadmill up to 11. Now, I'm not a very tall person. So for me, I'm just trying not to fly off the back
Starting point is 01:32:44 of this treadmill, but I'm moving so fast that my heart rate goes up over 180. And I can sustain that for about 30 seconds. Then I'm grabbing the side rails. And I completely turn the treadmill down to two and I just walk and it takes me two to three minutes to get my heart rate back down to and I start again when I'm about 140 um and then I punch it up again and I'll do another 30 seconds that's how it goes for me and what how many 30 seconds just four times four I mean that's not that much is it terrible you can do anything for 30 seconds and once you've done two you're like okay I've only got two more yeah and you do that twice a week twice a week And I think the final part is resistance training.
Starting point is 01:33:30 Yes. So I think all kinds of resistance training can be helpful, but it depends what your goals are. So I often have women tell me that they've been instructed, and I often say flipply, put down the Mamby-pamby pink weights. Well, okay. So if someone has handed you a three to five-pound weight and said lift it 30 times, that is good for endurance. You will fail after 30 times of lifting a very small weight. If your goal is endurance, fine, you do that. That's not our goal in midlife and beyond. That is not going to help you live independently. If your goal is purely hypertrophy, which is what we tend to do when we're
Starting point is 01:34:15 younger, looking at our big muscle mass in the mirror and damaging our muscle enough that we grow and recover with bigger muscles. That is a failure range of 10 to 15 reps times four sets. There's nothing wrong with that if that's your goal. My goal in midlife is not to have the biggest muscles. Now, do I build muscle? Yes, I do. Can I get lean? Yes, I can. Our goal in midlife and beyond is strength and then power. Strength to be able to get up off the floor. Power, not to trip, to be able to catch yourself, to have some fast-twitch muscle, right? So, strength is built with higher weights, lower reps. And you probably heard this from Stacey Sims.
Starting point is 01:35:00 We agree on many things. So that means a rep range of three to six. Now, I've been a clinician a long time. I have found I cannot give people ranges. It's too confusing. They want to be really good instructions, so there's no confusing. So the rep range that I work around myself and with the people I work with is four reps to failure, four sets. Now listen, if you're starting from the couch, it may take you six months, nine months.
Starting point is 01:35:31 It may take you getting lifting lessons so that you're hinging correctly. That's how you move your hips. You're stacking your joints. You're giving your tendons and ligaments time to adjust. But once you get there, we're going to lift. heavy, which is low reps, four sets so that you fail at that high rep. That is in the four compound lifts, meaning a compound lift is using multiple joints. So upper body is some kind of bench press, it's some kind of pull, like a pull up. For the lower extremity, it's some kind of
Starting point is 01:36:09 squat and some kind of deadlift. That's not all you do, but that's the basis for what you do. So on a lift day for me, if we're talking about my lift, when I'm lifting four times a week, I'll do two to three leg days and I'll do a one to two arm days, depending how the week goes. So if it's a bench press day, I'm going to do four sets, four reps, heavy. Here's what it looks like. I can do it four times. I may be able to do five, but I'm not doing six without dumping the weights off. because it's just, that's when I fail.
Starting point is 01:36:49 And then you support that with the single lift, single muscle lifts, biceps, triceps, lads, darts, with slightly higher reps, 8 to 10. And then core any day of the week, right? So I usually do one body part. If it's a Saturday and I have hours that I can kill in a gym, then I will do both cardio and lifting on one day. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:15 Well, thank you for sharing that one day. It's very insightful to hear what you do. Yeah. What about a woman who might be listening to this and is thinking, well, I'm on board with what you're saying. I realize that I need to take ownership of my health and I need to move more than I currently do. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:37:33 But I can't stand gyms. Sure. Right? If they say that to you, what do you say to them? Well, if you're literally starting from the couch, then body weight will work for you, initially, learning how your body moves. And I put that in the book. I put a start program in the book because I realize people are starting from different places. If you're ready for heavy lifting, which we will all get to eventually, and you cannot stand to gym for whatever reason,
Starting point is 01:38:02 then that probably means you're going to have to buy a rack for your garage. Or, okay, let's, or unless you want to lift with logs in your backyard or filling up five gallon buckets of water and carrying it around, it's harder to get 45 pounds of weight in your garage without actual racks of weight. But I guess you could do, for example, you know, you're almost tripping up like me on the way into the studio, these sandbags I have, right? Yes, you could. So a sandbag, depending on how much weight is in there, of course, is heavy.
Starting point is 01:38:35 Yeah. You know, so one thing I'll often do is, you know, get the sandbag on my shoulder and go up and down, and then sprint up and down the garden, throw it up in the air, each to pick it up again. I also try and do that a lot when my kids are around. So they see it? Yeah, they see it. And often I go, oh, Daddy, can I, can I do it? So I'm like, yeah, yeah, sure, sure. Funny enough, I had bought two more and I've actually put the right amount of something for your weight. Not that I try and tell them that, but they just happen to be there. How clever of you? But that's, like, when we separate movement into all these different things, right? I think for people like you and me who are
Starting point is 01:39:15 super motivated around movement, that works. But I think for some people, I don't think they're going necessarily go, well, I'm going to go at the gym three times a week. I'm going to do this, two times. I'm going to do this. So I guess I'm trying to make sure that these core principles, which you write about so beautifully, I want to make sure that people listening actually take action even if they can't stand the gym So listen, I will take anything except sitting around So if you will never go to a gym
Starting point is 01:39:49 And you do not want to buy a rack For your garage, okay, I'll take a lot of planks I'll take sandbags across your waist with bridges That's great for your butt We just can't do five pounds We're going to have to get a lot big sandbags Which you can
Starting point is 01:40:05 I'll take you doing pull-ups on the bars In your backyard are your children's bars in the backyard. I'll take that. I'll take you climbing your stairs with your 40-pound sandbag on your... I'll take anything except sitting around. But what I've outlined is just things that scientifically
Starting point is 01:40:26 and with the people that I serve work to build muscle to increase cardiac health. But literally, I'll take anything other than sitting around. Because I know if anybody tells you just to sit around or rest to feel better. They're literally telling you to go die in a corner. Yeah. One of my favorite pages in your book is page 27.
Starting point is 01:40:51 And the reason why is that on page 27, you have three beautiful images. And they are MRI scans of people's thighs. Yes. Do you want to just talk us through those three images? And again, on the YouTube version, I'm going to try and pop that up on screen because I honestly believe that seeing those images will directly motivate someone to change their behavior. I really do. Certainly for me, I'm active, but I'm looking at that going, I need to be more active, right? Because I want a muscle like that when I'm 70. And that was the intent of this picture series.
Starting point is 01:41:31 And when I submitted the paper for publication, one of the reviewers said, ah, the picture's unnecessary. And I said, this picture is so necessary, I will not publish with you unless you publish it. So here it is. I'm glad you did. Yes. Because it wouldn't have had the impact just reading the words. No, it wouldn't. No.
Starting point is 01:41:47 So what the picture shows is if you imagine going to the store and buying a ham, like for Christmas, and it has a bone in the middle and the muscles surrounding it, that's what a slice with an MRI through a human thigh looks like. So imagine this round slice with perfect muscles. You can tell that there's gorgeous lean muscle like a flank steak across the top of the bone. Gorgeous lean muscle in the back, your hamstrings, with very little peripheral fat, you know, the pinchable fat on your leg, very little of it. When I looked under a microscope, the 40-year-old triathlete, and it wasn't just one picture, it was a whole series of people. But there was very little fatty infiltrate, or we call that marbling, you know, very little marbling. So essentially, if you have to summarize that picture, the 40-year-old triathlete was a flank steak. Lean.
Starting point is 01:42:51 Then in the control group, we had people that had sat around for a variety of reasons for 35 years. Listen, the central picture, you can barely tell their muscle. You lost all your muscle architecture. You lost muscle volume. They're grossly infiltrated with fat. You can see the white streaking. Yeah. And there is a thick rind of peripheral fat.
Starting point is 01:43:15 I call that a waggoo beef. Yeah. It's like the marbling you see in a waggoo beef. But that is not the story. The story is the third picture, which is a slice of a 70-year-old triathlete who, if you didn't know better, you would think I just took the next slice in a 40-year-old thigh. Beautiful architect. texture, gorgeous retention of muscle mass, very little fatty infiltration, and very little peripheral fat.
Starting point is 01:43:42 And here's the beautiful thing. When we tested the strength of these people, we did not find a statistically significant decrease in strength until mid-60s. So what this tells us, this study was trying to answer the question, can we retain our lean muscle mass with recreational type exercise across the lifespan? And the answer is yes. Yeah, it's remarkable that you cannot at first glance tell any difference between the MRI of the 40-year-old triathlete and the 70-year-old triathlete. And it goes back to what you said at the start, right?
Starting point is 01:44:19 But I quoted to you, what we call normal aging is actually normal aging for stressed out, undernourished people who are not intentionally building muscle. This shows very clearly that if you stay active, right, and you prioritize movement in your life, you can have very similar muscle architecture in your 70s as you can in your 40s. It is so inspiring to see that. And it's also actually at the same time, on one hand, it's inspiring. And on the other hand, it's depressing. It's depressing how many people. have that middle image, how many people in their 70s have lived a sedentary life and have got
Starting point is 01:45:08 this horrible muscle architecture? And here's the reality. People think that that just affects their muscles. No, that affects every single system in your body. It even affects, as you all know, your cognition. Yes. This person in the center that I've described has osteosarcobecy. let's break that down a person who has a lot of fat surrounding all their muscle is obese by definition a person who has lost their functional muscle they have low muscle mass they have lost a lot of their good function that is sarcopenia which kills people plus if you look at the bone the study was not looking at bone but the bone in this picture is very brittle looking it has a very thin cortex that's a very thin cortex that's osteoporosis. You can have each one of these in isolation, but what I find by taking x-rays of hundreds of people's legs a month is that people present with obesity plus low muscle mass, plus low bone density, and it's not one plus one plus one. It's one plus one plus one equals, me, I'm making this up, but a million because of the crosstalk between organs. Yeah. I want to
Starting point is 01:46:30 get to hormones shortly. Before we do that, though, I just want to finish off on movement. Yeah. And I want to talk about VO2 Max. Okay. Right? Because again, one of my other favorite chapters is this almost self-assessment chapter where I know we mentioned Dexas scans before and what people can do, but you go through the kind of self-assessment process that people can do on themselves, even if they don't want to see a doctor or pay any money for anything, which I think is really, with you awesome. But in terms of really trying to get this idea through to people that what you do in your 20s and your 30s and your 40s impacts your 70s, your 80s and your 90s, I love the way you've described V-O-2 Max and the frailty line. Yes. Okay, so could you just outline
Starting point is 01:47:20 what is VOTMX? What is the frailty line? Yeah. And therefore, what are the implications for us in our lives. V-O-2-max is the best measurement of your overall fitness. It's cardiovascular fitness. It actually measures oxygen diffusion, which means passage from the blood and your heart to your lungs, and therefore measures how fit you are. The higher your V-O-2 max, the more fit you are. And now endurance athletes like Tour de France athletes.
Starting point is 01:47:55 They're just genetically specimens. I mean, and their VO2 max is just outrageous, like 95. Most people, for their fitness level, to be great, it's considered in the 50s to 60s of this measurement. What happens is with time and disuse, our VO2 max will decline 10% a decade. And so you may think, great, I'm not trying to be an endurance athlete.
Starting point is 01:48:28 Why does that matter? Because there is a line which you have cited, the fragility line where you are too frail, you have so little fitness, you cannot take care of yourself. Meaning, once you have so little fitness, you cannot get up from a chair by yourself, you've got to live with somebody or you've got to move into a home. So our goal is to never pass the fragility line. So if we're going to lose 10% of our VO2 max, if we don't reinvest in it, now we can build real, but let's say you're not going to make the effort. You will lose 10% per decade.
Starting point is 01:49:04 So if you start out with a low VO2 max in midlife, say 30, 25, take 10% away per decade. At some point in your life, you are likely to pass the fragility line and not be able to get up from a chair and not be able to take care of yourself. For men and women, the line is 15 to 18. So, you know, grade is 50. If we pass 15 to 18, we're not getting up from a chair and living independently. We can work on that by a different type of exercising protocol called the Norwegian Protocol, which is going as fast as you can in an aerobic activity for four minutes and then recovering, but only for four minutes. And by using the Norwegian protocol one time a week, you can build your V-O-2 max.
Starting point is 01:49:56 So it's not that all hope is lost if you find yourself in midlife with poor fitness. But again, it's like, Bo, and you're starting behind the eight ball. Yeah. I guess the central message there is, is that although it's not inevitable that we're going to become frail as we get old, it is inevitable that there are going to be some changes in your body. Absolutely. And that's the normal process of ageing. And of course, there's many things we can do to improve things.
Starting point is 01:50:32 We can stay active. We can do it in this kind of hybrid-type training regime that you're outlining, which is going to reduce the rate of decline. But there is going to be some decline. You know, in your 80s, you're probably not going to sprint as fast as in your 20s. Yes. And when I describe this, it's not because I'm a Pollyanna that believes there's never going to be a decline, but I have plenty of individual patients and populations that I've studied. When you invest in your health and mobility every single day, you're going to age in a different way. Now, what happens if you didn't start until your mid-50s? There are also now more anecdotal examples all over the internet of people who have started in their 60s and 70s. and made profound changes in their body composition, in their health.
Starting point is 01:51:24 I think I've heard Inigo San Milan talk about someone in their 60s who started to do Zone 2 training in their 60s, but maybe six hours a week of Zone 2 training. And now in their late 80s, they're, I think, breaking world records. It's amazing. It's remarkable the body's capacity to change. Yes. But I guess the summary point of that VO2 matter stuff, for me,
Starting point is 01:51:48 is that there is going to be some decline. Of course. As you get older, there is something called the frailty line, and therefore, and you actually have a table in the book which shows people this, but you can actually just back-plot this and go, actually, if you want to be living independently in your 80s, you're going to need a V-O-2 max of this.
Starting point is 01:52:08 Yes. Therefore, in your 40s, your V-O-2-Mats should probably be in the region of this. It's like a DECIS scan. Let's find out where we are. Exactly. If we need the motivation and you're coming in
Starting point is 01:52:22 with a V-O-2 max of 25 when you're 40 or 50, we get a little bit of work to do. But it's not inevitable. We shouldn't use it as I'm never going to do it. It should be a motivating factor. So, face is a great acronym. There's loads there we've covered.
Starting point is 01:52:39 And, of course, the book goes to it in detail. And, of course, anything is better than nothing. There's perfection. And there's also make progress and where you are. Let's not talk about hormones. Okay. Because right at the start, Vanda,
Starting point is 01:52:52 you mentioned how there's a precipitous drop in estrogen for women in perimenopause. In your book, you also made the case that to you, estrogen is the elixir of longevity. Yes. Does it necessarily follow then that all women need to replace their estrogen? Here's how I position this. I believe that every woman is a sentient being with agency to make her decision. But I insist that that decision be made based on facts and not fear.
Starting point is 01:53:34 And here's what I mean. Prior to the 2002 Women's Health Initiative study, which was a study done by the National Institutes of Health in the United States, more than 40% of women in the U.S., I don't know the European numbers, but 40% were optimizing their estrogen by replacing it because of the known effects it has on bone and muscle and hearts and brain. After the Women's Health Initiative was published with the data that has been now strongly refuted as a travesty, the current numbers between 2 and 4%. Not because estrogen is bad for you, but because of the fear that was released from that study that made a blanket statement, which turns out to be nuanced and not true, that you will have a high incidence of breast cancer. You can't put that genie back in the bottle. Generations of women still today come into my office, and when I start talking about it, they just automatically say, I can't do that. it causes cancer, to which I have to walk back. Well, here are the data. You are free to make your own decision. So if we go to that data, do you mind if I name the one piece of data?
Starting point is 01:54:56 Please, take your time. This is really important. It's critical. And I know people listening are going to want to know your perspective on this. Yes. So the women's health initiative was designed. And a lot of good work has come out of it, but not this piece of work, not this particular question. The question initially was heart disease as it relates to giving hormones. Now, at that time, because of when it was, the hormone they used was conjugated equine estrogen, which is a synthetic form, or which is a form that comes from pregnant horse urine. Now what we're talking about when I advise people to consider estrogen replacement, we also have the options of transdermal using patches.
Starting point is 01:55:43 So it's not only these pills made out of horses urine. But in the WHA, they were asking the question, does estrogen replacement increase cardiovascular disease? So they recruited older women. The women in this study were in their 60s on average. Here's the data that they found. They stopped the study early, called a press conference, Dr. Rousseau, the head of the study,
Starting point is 01:56:13 called a press conference from reading about that time and talking to people who are actually there without consulting the study group of other doctors and announced that the study was being stopped because estrogen caused breast cancer. Here are the data. In the women who did not take estrogen, the incidence of new breast cancer diagnosis was three. out of a thousand three out of a thousand for the women in the study group who were given estrogen and sometimes synthetic progestins if they had a uterus the incidence was three point eight per thousand so the difference between control group and and study group was point eight women per thousand less than one woman per thousand was subsequently diagnosed
Starting point is 01:57:13 with breast cancer. Now listen, I am not making light because one is one. One woman is one woman. I was a cancer nurse. I get it. I was taking care of in my youth women struggling with this. But for one woman in a thousand, estrogen was taken away from generations of women, just blanketly taken away. And in this same study, there was no increase in cancer deaths. So instead of making this blanket statement, which has now affected women for generations, from which we have a high incidence of frailty in women and suffering for what? So I think every woman gets to make her decision. If 0.8 is enough for you to not want to be on it, that's your decision. but I personally and the women I take care of
Starting point is 01:58:11 I value my brain too much to let it starve to death I value my heart too much to allow myself to develop 30 to 40% more macovascular disease I don't want to lose any more bone than I've had to lose and I feel like myself again because my brain is back I am stronger than I've ever been
Starting point is 01:58:33 and it is all the things I'm doing but it's also because I've given my body back what it's always had, which is estradiol, which is the compound our ovaries make, progesterone because I have a uterus, and once we're settled out on that, I often discuss testosterone use with women because the reality is women make more testosterone than we make estrogen. It's a hormone, not a male hormone.
Starting point is 01:59:05 And so I think every woman has, has the right to make those decisions. Yeah. Thank you for sharing that. It's really interesting for me to hear your own experience and, of course, that of many of the patients you've seen over the years. Yes. And yes, the fallout of the WHOI study has had huge implications
Starting point is 01:59:28 across society and particularly for women for a number of years now. Going back to the start of this conversation, when you're explaining that estrogen declines. So every woman is going to have a decline in estrogen. It's inevitable. And there are estrogen receptors all over the body, including the brain. So help me understand this from your perspective, that on the face of it, that would imply that all women would benefit from, estrogen supplementation. At the same time, I think if we look around the world,
Starting point is 02:00:14 we see clearly that there are certain communities around the world where women don't seem to report the same number of symptoms through menopause and that there are women in their 70s and 80s who seem to be thriving, having not replaced their estrogen. And again, I've seen so many women have their lives transformed once they start taking hormones. But I find that interesting to go, what is it? It's a struggle. What is that?
Starting point is 02:00:46 What is going on? Because also you mentioned before about how women, if you're breastfeeding and you're not careful about replacing those nutrients, you could be losing a lot of your bone structure. And as you were describing that, Vonda, I was thinking about... the modern world and in particular the modern Western world where actually now women are having to do so much. Now, you know, there used to be a time in many cultures and even in Western culture where women would be supported during pregnancy and in the early years, right? While they were
Starting point is 02:01:24 breastfeeding, the family would support them. Actually, this is a time where we need to really take care of the mother and the baby, make sure the mother has time to rest, that we're also, do you know what I mean? I do. I've read about it in books, but I've never seen it in my life. Exactly. And of course, it's very hard now in the modern world where people are often not living near their parents or their family. Often two parents in a two-parent family are working. There's a pressure, particularly in the United States, for women to get back to work really, really quickly. So I wonder, and I have this question in my head all the time, what is it going on? Is it that in those other cultures, yes, we think they're doing well, but had they been given East Gen, they would be doing even better,
Starting point is 02:02:10 or is there something about the stress load in our modern Western world, which is exacerbating these issues? Interesting. I don't know. And I just want to put it to you very respectfully. Have you thought about that? Because I can't quite square the circle there. I think there are a lot of factors.
Starting point is 02:02:29 I love this conversation. When we talk about longevity, women are winning that race. In most countries, women live four to six years longer than their male counterparts. So in terms of sheer numbers of years, women win that race. But women suffer longer. Women are used to feeling pain such that women come to my office and without provocation. They say to me, you know, I didn't want to come here today because I have a really high pain tolerance. and like a badge
Starting point is 02:03:01 because we have pain and menstruation we have pain with child bearing we have aches and pains when we lose our estrogen and our whole body hurts and they can't get out of bed
Starting point is 02:03:10 we just assimilate that as the natural course of having two X chromosomes and they say I didn't want to come I have a high pain tolerance but I just couldn't take it anymore so maybe some of what
Starting point is 02:03:22 we're thinking of what we never used to feel menopause is just the natural acceptance of pain in women Yeah. Another part of it could be the modern stresses that we have. We don't live in the, at least in Western world, we don't live in the same kind of community that we used to. You know, we don't, many times we don't live with our parents or live in close proximity, right?
Starting point is 02:03:49 I'm going to tell you for sure that when I left home at 18 to go to university, I was gone for 22 years, not continuously. my parents, but I never lived with them again. And I falsely thought that when I had my daughter, my last child at 40, I used to say stupid things like, oh, it doesn't take a village to raise a child, blah, blah, blah. I was so wrong, such that when I had her at 40 and my parents retired and moved, that community of support was the only way I could have gotten it done. So I see what you're saying about the stress and the increase inflammation that comes with that that leads to pain and more brain loss and more bone loss. Maybe that's what we're seeing. But even in very supportive cultures, maybe women are just used to suffering and don't
Starting point is 02:04:46 want to mention it. Or there's a lack of understanding of what's going on. Because it doesn't mean that frailty doesn't exist. I see it in every culture that comes to see me. Because I live in a very diverse community. Every elderly woman I see is frail. I love that. I love that perspective. And I love the fact that over the last few years as a whole number of powerful strong female women like yourself, like Stacey Sims, and, you know, Lisa Moscone, Louise Newsome, you know, Anita you know, loads of people who are trying to raise awareness of the importance of female health. And actually, we put up with stuff for ages,
Starting point is 02:05:28 we don't need to anymore. And perhaps as a man, it's harder for us to see things like this because, you know, my experience of the world is through a male body. Sure. Right? So I can hear about the stuff that women have had to put up with and women have put up with. I can try my best at empathize.
Starting point is 02:05:44 I think I'm pretty good at empathizing. But, of course, I don't know what that's like. because I'm not a woman. Right. Well, I think for this understanding to become common to reach a critical mass, we must have the collaboration of the men that we work with and live with. I think the message will be spread more easily so much that, you know, my poor husband, I drug him on to my own podcast so that he could talk to the world about
Starting point is 02:06:18 what men need to know to understand the people they love to prevent midlife marriage failure after 25 years because unless we understand what's going on you may don't understand why your normally placid wife is suddenly enraged and
Starting point is 02:06:35 you know has a fork in her hand aimed at you or there has to be an elevated understanding well now I love chatting to you I really do think this book is fantastic It's such a thorough and well-rounded practical guide for someone who wants to empower themselves and take control of their health. One that we've not really gone into, which is when you arrived today, I sort of shared
Starting point is 02:07:02 was one of my favorite things in the book, is there's a chapter on mindset and a chapter on resilience. And just to sort of bring this conversation to a close, in the mindset section you talk about a vision statement and why you think it's really important for every woman who goes on this journey to have their own vision statements what's your vision statement
Starting point is 02:07:26 you know I have a vision for being able to do what I want to do when I want to do it at all times it doesn't matter if I'm my age now or if I'm 97 I want to have that independence because if I'm that independent, then I'm going to have the fullness of life
Starting point is 02:07:49 that I've worked for my whole life. I'm going to have the fullness of relationship in an equally giving relationship. I won't be just taking, you know, my children, hopefully I'll be giving back as much to them as they're giving to me in my old age, right? And so I just want that independence. And to have that vision, it takes active pursuit now.
Starting point is 02:08:13 it's just not going to happen and all the visions that and this is what I teach people have to be based on your values who are you what do you want to be what do you really value in life and from that you can build your vision because otherwise
Starting point is 02:08:29 if you don't have that these are just six week programs these are just more things to do without the end purpose yeah the book is called Unbreakable a woman's guide to aging with power
Starting point is 02:08:42 and right at the end of this conversation which I have thoroughly enjoyed oh thank you for that woman who has been listening who your words has sparked a little bit of interest they have started to see themselves differently
Starting point is 02:09:02 they start to go well wait a minute yeah Vonda's right actually I have neglected myself I have put everyone else first I've not looked at them my bone health I've not looked after my fiscal health. I've never done anything for me, but now I see Vonder why it's so important for that woman
Starting point is 02:09:23 who hasn't done much before but wants to get started, what are your final words to her? What I want you to know about this whole process and this book before anything else is that you are worth the daily investment in your health,
Starting point is 02:09:42 You have worth. That means that you can focus on yourself. You can prioritize these things ahead of everyone else you love and serve because you are worth it. You are created and made and have value. Until you believe that, you will continue to neglect yourself. Fonda, thank you so much coming on the show. My pleasure.
Starting point is 02:10:12 hope you enjoyed that conversation. Do think about one thing that you can take away and apply into your own life. And also have a think about one thing from this conversation that you can teach to somebody else. Remember when you teach someone, it not only helps them. It also helps you learn and retain the information. Now before you go, just wanted to let you know about Friday 5. It's my free weekly email containing five simple ideas to improve your help. and happiness. In that email, I share exclusive insights that I do not share anywhere else, including health advice, how to manage your time better, interesting articles or videos that I'd be consuming, and quotes that have caused me to stop and reflect. And I have to say, in a world of
Starting point is 02:10:58 endless emails, it really is delightful that many of you tell me it is one of the only weekly emails that you actively look forward to receiving. So if that sounds like something you would like to receive each and every Friday, you can sign it for free at Dr.chatsgeet.com forward slash Friday 5. Now, if you are new to my podcast, you may be interested to know that I have written five books that have been bestsellers all over the world, covering all kinds of different topics, happiness, food, stress, sleep, behavior change and movement, weight loss, and so much more. So please do take a moment to check them out. They are all available as paperbacks, e-books, and as audio books, which I am narrating.
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