Huberman Lab - Essentials: Effects of Fasting & Time Restricted Eating on Fat Loss & Health
Episode Date: August 28, 2025In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I explore intermittent fasting and time-restricted eating, highlighting the positive benefits for weight loss, metabolism, organ health, circadian rhythms and ...cellular repair. I explain a practical framework for designing a time-restricted eating window that aligns with your lifestyle, exercise schedule and social schedule. I also cover what breaks a fast, how to support fasting with tools like salt intake and post-meal walks, and the use of fasting-related supplements, including berberine and metformin. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Carbon: https://joincarbon.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Joovv: https://joovv.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00) Intermittent Fasting, Time-Restricted Eating (TRE) (00:50) Diet, Weight Loss, Calories & Hormones (05:50) Body’s Response to Eating vs Fasting, Fasting Duration (09:04) Sponsor: Carbon (10:50) Time-Restricted Feeding & Metabolic Benefits, Circadian Gene Rhythm (16:19) Optimal Meal Timing, Tool: Extend Sleep-Related Fasts (21:29) Sponsors: AG1 & LMNT (24:02) Eating Window Length, Tools: Adjusting TRE for Building Muscle, Regularity (26:55) Accelerate Transition to Fasting, Glucose Clearing, Tool: After-Meal Walk (28:36) Metformin, Berberine, Continuous Glucose Monitors; Cell Growth vs Repair, mTOR (31:46) Gut Microbiome; Transitioning to Intermittent Fasting & Individualization (34:03) Tool: 8-Hour Feeding Window & Weight Loss (35:25) Sponsor: Joovv (36:40) What Breaks a Fast?, Sugar; Tool: Using Salt to Support Fasting (39:42) Tool: Ideal Feeding Window Guidelines; Exercise & Social Considerations Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent
and actionable science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School
of Medicine.
What we're going to talk about today is how intermittent fasting, aka time-restricted feeding,
impacts weight loss, fat loss in particular, muscle maintenance and loss and gain, organ health,
such as gut health and liver health,
the genome, the epigenome, inflammation,
sickness, recovery, and healing from sickness,
exercise, cognition, mood, and lifespan.
So let's talk about eating and what happens when you eat
and let's talk about fasting or not eating
and what happens when you fast.
If ever there was a topic that is controversial,
especially on the internet,
it is that of diet and nutrition.
So I'm waiting into the,
this with a smile and in eager anticipation of all the but but but this and but that and wait,
but this showed that. Here's the deal. We need to precisely define what it is that we're talking
about when we talk about nutrition. I'm going to give you an example of a study that was
published a few years ago, 2018, by a colleague of mine at Stanford. Chris Gardner is a terrific
professor of nutrition and has done a lot of important studies on
on how nutrition impacts different aspects of health.
This paper, where Chris is the first author,
it's Gardner et al, 2018, JAMA,
looked at weight loss in people following
one particular diet versus another particular diet.
This was a 12-month weight loss study.
So it was focused specifically on weight loss,
although they looked at some other parameters as well.
And the basic conclusion of the study
was that there was no significant
difference in weight change between people following a healthy low fat diet versus a healthy
low carbohydrate diet with significantly more dietary fats in them.
This caused a lot of ripples in the world of nutrition and nutritional science and certainly
in the general population because anyone that understands diet and nutrition would immediately
say, but wait, there are all sorts of different implications of eating one type of diet, say low
low carbohydrate higher fats versus a higher carbohydrate lower fat diet.
And indeed there are.
This study was focused specifically on fat loss and on weight loss.
So as we discuss time restricted feeding, we need to be very precise about what are the effects
of time restricted feeding and of eating in particular ways at particular times.
We are going to emphasize again whether or not the study was done in mice or in humans,
And athletes and men and women are both.
But the study from Gardner and colleagues
is a beautiful study and really emphasizes
that if one's main goal is simply to lose weight,
then it really does not matter what one eats,
provided that the number of calories burned
is higher than the number of calories ingested.
However, anyone out there who understands
a little bit of biology or a lot of biology will agree,
that there are many factors that impact
that calories burn part of the equation.
Some of those are obvious.
So for instance, amount of exercise, type of exercise,
basal metabolic rate, how much energy one burns just sitting there.
I've talked before on this podcast about neat,
non-exercise-induced thermogenesis,
where if people bounce around a lot and fidget a lot,
they can burn anywhere from 800 to 2,000 calories per day.
So their quote unquote, basal metabolic rate
is actually much higher simply because they're fidgeters,
whereas people who tend to be more stationary,
have a lower basal metabolic rate on average.
There's great science to support this.
Metabolic factors and hormones are also very important.
Hormones such as thyroid hormone,
and insulin and growth hormone,
and the sextoride hormones, testosterone and estrogen,
those levels will also profoundly influence the calories out,
the calories a burned component of the calories
in calories out equation.
So if out there on the internet or in
listening to a particular podcast or speaker, somebody says, this is the ideal diet, or calories
in, calories out does not matter, or calories in calories out is the only thing that matters.
I think it's very important to understand that there are some foundational truths such as calories
in calories out, but that of course, hormone factors and the context in which a given diet
regimen is taking place are exceedingly important.
So there's no way that we can drill into every aspect of a
given feeding plan or feeding schedule
that would allow us to tap into every aspect
of the list that I read out before,
weight loss, fat loss, muscle, organ, genome, epigenome,
inflammation, exercise, cognition, mood and lifespan.
But today we're gonna be very precise about how
time restricted feeding, it's very clear
from both animal studies and human studies,
can have a very powerful and positive impact
on everything from weight loss and fat loss,
and fat loss to various health parameters.
This is a beautiful literature that's emerged mostly
in the last 10 or 15 years.
So there is a perfect diet for you
and today I'm gonna arm you with the mechanisms
and understanding that will allow you to define
what that perfect diet is
and will allow you to eat on a schedule
and to eat the things that are going to best serve your goals.
Some simple rules about eating.
First of all, when you eat,
typically your blood glucose,
your blood sugar will go up.
Also, insulin levels will go up.
Insulin is a hormone that's involved in mobilizing glucose
from the bloodstream.
How much your glucose and insulin go up
depends on what you eat and how much you eat.
In general, simple sugars,
including fructose from fruit,
but also sucrose and glucose
and simple sugars will raise your insulin
and blood glucose more than complex carbohydrates.
carbohydrates, things like grains and breads and pastas and so forth, and grains and breads and
so forth will raise your blood glucose more than fibrous carbohydrates like lettuce and broccoli
and things of that sort.
Protein has a somewhat moderate or modest impact and fat has the lowest impact on raising
your blood glucose and blood insulin.
So what you eat will impact how steep arise in blood glucose and insulin takes place and there
a number of factors that are related to your individual health that will also dictate
how steep and how high that rise in glucose and insulin will be.
The longer it's been since your last meal, the lower typically your blood glucose and insulin
will be and the higher things like GLP1, glucocon like peptide one, glucagon being a hormone
that's also secreted when you are in a fasted state or a low blood glucose state.
It's involved in mobilizing various energy sources
from the body, including fat through what we call lipolysis,
also using carbohydrates,
and potentially even using muscle as a source of energy.
So that's kind of a fire hose of information
about what happens when you eat and don't eat,
but just think of it this way.
Blood sugar and insulin go up when you eat,
they go down when you don't eat,
and other hormones go up when you don't eat.
So there are hormones associated with the fasted state,
and there are hormones associated with the eating
and having just eaten state.
Now, the most important thing to understand
is that like everything in biology,
this is a process that takes time.
So insulin and glucose go up when we eat
and it takes some period of time for them to go down.
Even if we stop eating,
they will remain up for some period of time
and then go back down.
It takes time.
This is very important because
if you look at the scientific literature on fasting,
on time restricted feeding,
it's absolutely clear that the health benefits,
not just the weight loss benefits,
but that the health benefits from time restricted feeding
occur because certain conditions are met in the brain and body
for a certain amount of time.
And that gives us an anchor from which to view what eating is
in terms of how it sets conditions in the body over time.
time. And if that sounds overly analytic, I promise you this is the simplest and best way to
think about any eating schedule or any eating plan. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge
one of our sponsors, Carbon. Carbon is a diet coaching app built by nutrition expert, Dr. Lane Norton.
I've used carbon for more than three years now. And I have to say, having been interested in fitness
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for a long time and trying to eat right, one of my goals is to hit 50 in the absolute best shape
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So I think it's fair to say that in the field of nutrition,
there are a few landmark studies that serve as really strong anchors
for building our understanding of what to eat
and what not to eat and when to eat,
depending on our goals.
The Garner study that I mentioned earlier
is one such study in that it says,
if your goal is weight loss,
it really does not matter what foods you consume
provided that you consume a sub-suffer
of maintenance caloric diet.
However, I wanna emphasize again,
that sets aside issues of adherence,
meaning how easy or hard it is to adhere to a given diet.
Some people find it much easier to follow a high fat,
low carbohydrate diet.
Some people follow a different diet
because it's much easier for them to follow.
And some people are concerned with mental performance
and athletic performance.
So that study doesn't say there's a best diet.
What it says is that what you consume
is less important,
than the amount of food that you consume,
at least for sake of weight loss,
not necessarily for sake of health.
Now, the study that I'm going to refer to next
is what I would consider the second major pillar
of nutritional studies.
This was a paper in mice that set the basis
for studies in humans that came later.
And the title of this paper is,
time-restricted feeding without reducing caloric intake,
prevents metabolic diseases in mice fed a high-fat diet.
So the title tells us a lot.
It says that what's varied in this study
is not what these mice ate,
it was when they ate it.
One of the most important things to take away from the study
was that mice that ate a highly palatable,
high fat diet, a great tasting diet,
but only during a restricted feeding window
of each 24 hour cycle, maintained or lost weight over time.
Whereas mice that ingested the same diet,
same amount of calories,
but had access to those calories around the clock,
gained weight became obese and quite sick.
And as an additional second point,
the mice that restricted their feeding window
to a particular portion of eight hours of every 24-hour cycle
actually showed some improvement in important health markers.
And what was even more incredible
is that mice that only ate during a particular feeding window
also experienced some reversal of some prior negative health effects.
Not only did restricting food to a particular phase of the 24-hour cycle
benefit things like lean body mass and fat loss
and a number of health parameters that I'll talk about in a moment,
but it also anchored all the gene systems of the body
and provided a more regular, stable, so-called circadian rhythm or 24-hour rhythm.
You may be surprised to learn that,
80% of the genes in your body and brain
are on a 24 hour schedule.
That is they change their levels going from high to low
and back to high again across the 24 hour cycle.
And when those genes are high at the appropriate times
and low at the appropriate times,
meaning their expression is high and low
at the appropriate times, and therefore the proper RNAs
and proteins are made because DNA encodes for RNA,
RNA is translated into proteins.
So when that happens, your health benefits.
When those genes are not expressed at the right times,
when they're high or low at the wrong times
of each 24 hour cycle, that's when you get negative health effects.
And while this was in mice, we now know
that this also occurs in humans.
So if you want to be healthy, you want your organ health,
your metabolic health to be entrained properly,
one of the most important things you can do
is to eat at the appropriate time of each 24 hours.
hour day.
When mice can eat around the clock, bad things happen.
And one of the bad things that happens
is that the liver suffers.
Fatty deposits in the liver, other factors in the liver,
essentially taking down the pathway of liver disease.
The time restricted feeding essentially reversed that
or led in many cases to even healthier liver condition.
So restricting your feeding to a particular window
every 24 hour cycle has clearly been shown now
in mice and in humans to enhance liver.
river health, which is wonderful.
How does it do this?
Well, it happens because food intake,
as I mentioned earlier, sets certain conditions in the body
that last for a period of time.
Anytime we eat, there's a period of time
that's required for so-called digestion,
but also gastric emptying and other processes
related to breaking down that food and utilizing it.
That process of breaking down food
involves certain cellular functions
that if they're on
ongoing throughout the 24 hour cycle
or even extended too far across the 24 hour cycle,
meaning you're eating across a 14 or a 16 hour
or an 18 hour window, that causes serious problems.
So by eating around the clock,
you're making yourself sicker.
By eating at restricted periods of time each 24 hour day,
you're actually making yourself healthier
and you are activating certain processes
that can positively impact both weight,
either maintenance or loss of weight,
and blood glucose regulation.
As we move forward and we talk about intermittent fasting,
I wanna start to establish a foundational protocol
that all of us, any of us can use
in order to maximize your particular goals.
There are some absolutes within this realm
of time restricted feeding.
Here are a couple of absolutes
that you would want to consider.
First of all, it pays off in the metabolic sense,
and in the health sense,
and in the weight maintenance or loss sense,
to not ingest any food in the first hour after waking
and potentially for longer.
The second major pillar that's well supported by research
is that for the two and ideally three hours prior to bedtime,
you also don't ingest any food or liquid calories for that matter.
So let's deal with this first question
of when is the ideal feeding window.
And here again, we're thinking about a schedule of eating
that involves eating at least once every 24 hours,
not two day or three day or every other day fast.
So it turns out that the answer to the question,
when is it best to eat,
is actually best answered by thinking about
the other side of the coin,
which is when is it best to fast?
So because we are fasting during sleep,
it's very clear that it's best to extend the sleep-related fast,
either into the morning or to start it in the evening.
Now this might seem kind of obvious,
but it's actually not so obvious.
You could place that feeding window early in the day,
middle of the day, or late in the day.
Let's think about what happens when we sleep.
When we sleep, our body undergoes a number of different processes
in the brain and body in order to recover the cells and tissues.
Many of you have probably heard of autophagy,
which is essentially a cleaning up,
gobbling up of dead cells and cells that are injured or sick.
And this is a natural process that occurs
and it occurs mainly during sleep,
although not only during sleep.
Fasting of any kind does tend to enhance autophagy.
So when we're asleep, the bad cells are getting gobbled up and eaten.
And the good cells also are undergoing certain repair mechanisms
mainly related to or at least governed by those circadian genes
that we talked about earlier, those clock genes.
So one thing is certain that you want your eating window
to be tacked or attached to your sleep-based fasting
in a way that makes it easier for you
to get into the fasted state for a period of time.
Now, most people find it very hard
to only eat in the middle of the day.
So while that's best, it's ideal for sake
of the fasting-related improvements in health,
it is not ideal and it's not very applicable
to most work and family and social situations.
Most people eat breakfast with others
and or eat dinner with others.
But in general, it's hard to restrict your feeding window
to just the absolute middle of the day.
But from a purely health perspective,
in a very objective way, that would be the ideal situation.
It does appear beneficial to grab a hold of
that sleep related fast, meaning you don't want
your feeding window to be too close to bed,
time and that's why we came up with this foundational pillar, which is at least no eating
for the first hour after waking, but also no eating within two to three hours prior to bed.
So from both a practical and a health perspective and a purely objective view of how intermittent
fasting works and can benefit us, starting to eat each day somewhere around 10 a.m. or around
noon and then allowing a feeding window that goes until six
or maybe eight p.m.
That seems to me like the kind of schedule
that will allow you to get the most out of intermittent fasting,
time restricted feeding,
but does not set you up to be really out of sync
with the social rhythms in most cultures.
If you think about it from the perspective of say a noon to eight feeding window,
what you'll find is that you're able to eat lunch,
with others if you like or by yourself,
you will be able to eat dinner at a reasonable hour,
at least in most countries and most cultures,
eating dinner somewhere between 6.30 and 7 p.m.
is typical.
When you say a feeding window that goes until eight,
that doesn't mean sitting down to dinner at eight.
That means your last bite of food
or ingestion of any liquid calories was at 8 p.m.
Assuming that you go to bed somewhere between 10 p.m. and 1 a.m.,
that allows this tape
bring off or this transition from feeding to a fasted state
and still allows you to capitalize on the special period
of fasting that is sleep-related fasting.
And again, I want to emphasize that the fasting
that occurs during sleep is vital,
and eating too close to sleep will disrupt
that fasting-related sleep.
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The important thing here is to establish a feeding window that you can comfortably manage,
okay, meaning that on average you can obey an eight hour feeding window or a 10 hour feeding
window. And then to place that feeding window in a social and life context that you can manage
on a regular basis. Now, there are two key points that have been gleaned from the scientific data
about this feeding window and when to place it. First of all, we can say is that the seven to nine
hour feeding window produces all of the major health benefits of time restricted feeding as
well as being pretty straightforward for most people to adhere to on a regular basis.
And on a regular basis turns out to be very important.
I'll get back to that point in a moment.
Whereas the four to six hour eating window doesn't seem to serve people as well as say a seven
or eight hour eating window simply because people are overeating during that eating window.
So let's talk about some conditions where having the feeding window early in the day would
actually be very beneficial. If your main interest is maintaining and or building muscle,
then it can be beneficial to ingest protein early in the day. You would still want to obey
this, what we're calling a kind of foundational rule of not eating any food for the first hour
post waking. And the cutoff for when you would want to eat protein would be sometime before 10
a.m. And there I'm averaging across a number of different situations. Now it's
It's not as if at 10.01 AM, a gate slam shut
and you can't generate hypertrophy.
Of course, that's not the case.
However, it's very interesting that it doesn't matter
when the resistance training, the load bearing exercise,
occurs in the 24 hour cycle.
So whether or not, in other words,
people are training early in the day
or they're training late in the day,
it still appears that ingesting protein early in the day
favors hypertrophy.
So obviously we don't want to be overly neurotic
about this stuff, but because this is an episode
about the science of intermittent fasting
and time restricted feeding, as important as how long
your feeding window is, is where that feeding window
resides in each 24 hour cycle.
And perhaps even more important than that
is that it be fairly regular where that feeding window resides.
Because even if you have a very short feeding window,
if it's drifting around from day to day,
that actually offsets a number of the positive health
effects of intermittent fasting.
Along those lines, however, there are things that we can all do that will allow us to offset
some of the drift, if you will, that we experience or that we induce in terms of when our feeding
window occurs or that the feeding window might push out a little later and then therefore
start a little later the next day.
There are things that we can do and there are things that we can take.
And so I'd like to discuss those briefly.
So throughout this episode, I've more or less been alluding to the fact that
when you eat, there's some period of time afterwards
in which you're actually still eating,
at least from the perspective of metabolism,
because glucose is up, insulin is up,
and you're undergoing different metabolic
and digestive processes that don't really speak to you
being in a fasted state, right?
It's not just about when you take your last bite
or your last sip.
However, there are things that we can do
to accelerate the transition from a fed state
to a fasted state.
And so I'd like to discuss what those are.
So there's a fun and exciting concept,
which is glucose clearing.
You may have heard the old adage
that if you take a 20 or 30 minute walk after dinner,
that it accelerates the rate at which you digest that food.
And indeed it does.
So for instance, if you were to eat a meal
that ended at 8 p.m. and then plop to the couch,
it would be five or six hours until
you have transitioned from a fed state to a fasted state.
However, you can accelerate that considerably
by taking a 20 or 30 minute just light walk.
And this gets back to this key feature of our biology,
which is that what we eat, when we eat,
when we exercise, when we view light,
it's about setting a context or a set of conditions
in your brain and body.
So it's not so much about the activities that you undergo.
It's about the activities you undergo
and their relationship to one
another over time. And so in this way, it really beautifully highlights the way that your biology
is interacting all the time. Now, there are other ways to clear out blood glucose that involve
supplements or prescription drugs. These are so-called glucose disposal agents.
Glucose disposal agents, such as metformin, which is a prescription drug, or berberine,
which is an over-the-counter substance, will lead to very traumatic reductions in blood glucose.
Now, I've tried berberine before, and what I can tell you is that if you take berberine,
which by the way is very much like metformin, its effects are almost identical to metformin,
in fact, but it's much less expensive and it's over the counter, if you take berberine
and you have not ingested carbohydrates, many people, including myself, experience a splitting headache.
You become hypoglycemic because it is a glucose clearing agent.
Nowadays, there are a number of commercially available continuous glucose monitors.
I've tried one of these.
It involves putting what's essentially a patch
with a little needle that goes into your skin,
which is continually, excuse me, monitoring your blood glucose
and you can look at it at an app on your phone.
And you can learn a lot that way
about how different foods impact the increases
and decrease in blood glucose.
If you're doing experiments with berberine or metformin,
you can see how those impact your blood glucose.
You can see how exercise, hit training,
or otherwise impacts blood glucose, excuse me again.
I have to say that glucose clearing
agents that involve a walk or exercise, moderate or intense,
are going to be a lot easier to titrate
and adjust the levels of than things
that you're going to take where you have to ingest the dosage.
And then once you ingest a certain dosage,
you're along for the ride,
at least until the effects of that particular compound wear off.
In the fasted state, a number of different proteins
that are expressed in cells undergo changes
in their expression.
When we are fasted, we tend to reduce the activity
of a particular protein called mtore,
mammalian target of rapamycin.
MTOR is very active in cells while they are growing.
So one way I'd like you to think about the fed state
is that when you eat or when you don't eat,
when you're fed when you're fasted,
you are either promoting cellular growth of all kinds
or you're promoting cellular repair and clearance of all kinds.
And so again, this is about setting conditions
in the brain and body.
It's not so much about when you eat food A or B,
or B, it leads to increases in mTOR.
Anytime you eat any food,
doesn't matter if it's plant-based, animal-based,
fat, protein, carbohydrate, it doesn't matter.
You are biasing your system towards a biochemical state
of cell growth.
And anytime you haven't eaten for a while
or blood glucose is low,
you are biasing your system toward a state of cellular repair.
And this is why people who do not suffer
from any blood glucose regulation issues
take things like berberine.
as glucose disposal agents or take metformin.
I'm not necessarily suggesting that you do that,
but it's because those things mimic fasting.
They create situations in the body
that promote things like AMPK and the Sertuans and others
to push your body and your system down a route of repair,
even though you might have just eaten a meal an hour ago.
Along the lines of the health benefits
of intermittent fasting, there are nice data
showing improvements in the gut microbiome
and in particular in the treatment
of irritable bowel syndrome
and other forms of colitis,
it appears that intermittent fasting
can reduce the amount
of so-called lactobacillus
that's present in the gut,
and lactobacillus is,
when in high levels,
is correlated with a number
of different metabolic disorders.
At the same time,
time-restricted feeding
seems to enhance the proliferation
of some of the gut microbiota
like ocelobacter,
and some of the other ones
that promote healthy mucosolobacter,
and that promote better overall intestinal function.
There are some data that pointed differences
in the effects of intermittent fasting
for males versus females.
Those data right now only come from mice.
That study was published by Sachin Panda recently.
We still await the studies in humans.
Some people do not do well on intermittent fasting
either in terms of mood or hormone health.
And so everyone needs to determine for themselves
whether or not having a time restricted feeding window
is good for them,
how long that time restricted feeding window should be.
I think eight hours is kind of a nice minimum
to adhere to based on everything that we've covered today.
And for some people, time restricted feeding
is not going to be compatible with hormone health for them.
For them, eating more meals spread throughout the day,
presumably smaller meals,
same caloric intake is going to be more beneficial
for their hormones.
This is something that is going to be individual
and is going to have to be determined
on an individual basis.
However, if you're going to try,
time restricted feeding.
I do want to remind you that taking a period of three to seven
or ideally 10 days to transition into it,
not just going flipping from eating to three meals a day
that span from 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.
and suddenly going to an eight hour feeding window,
but rather winnowing down that feeding window
about an hour or so per day is going to allow
the hormone systems of your body, including leptin,
the hypocretin erexin system,
which are systems within the body that signal to the brain
that food is about to come.
Allowing those systems to adjust so that
you're not overwhelmingly hungry, irritable,
and you're not throwing your whole hormone system out of whack.
I keep coming back to this eight hour feeding window
and I wanna provide a little more basis for it
and just to encourage that it's not completely arbitrary.
There's a particular study that I'd like to highlight,
mainly because I don't expect people to delve
into the full reference list of the other review.
And this is a study that was carried out
between Sachian Panda's lab and Christofarity's lab.
So this is a collaboration.
The study was carried out in humans,
and is entitled, effects of eight hour time restricted feeding
on body weight and metabolic disease risk factors
in obese adults, excuse me.
And this study essentially showed,
I'll just read the conclusions,
that an eight hour time restricted feeding
produces a mild caloric restriction and weight loss
without calorie counting.
So that's key, right?
These people aren't calorie counting.
Somehow just by adhering to an eight hour window,
they are,
taking in fewer calories than they're burning off
and clinically it reduced blood pressure.
So I mentioned the study not because there aren't many others
involving the eight hour feeding window, also in humans,
but because the eight hour feeding window has been tested
in obese adults and non-obes adults,
and there are even a few studies in children.
So this eight hour window seems to be a really good rule of thumb
and a kind of anchor around which we can each think about
incorporating time restricted feeding.
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Any discussion about fasting
would be incomplete without a discussion
about what does and does not break a fast.
Insofar as the scientific literature says,
drinking water will not break your fast.
Drinking tea will not break your fast.
Drinking coffee provided it is black coffee will not break your fast.
Ingesting caffeine in pill form will not break your fast.
There are other things that won't break your fast.
For instance, eating one peanut when deep in a fasted state will not break your fast.
However, if you just finished a meal that included carbohydrates or it was a very large meal of any kind, an hour ago, yes, indeed, eating one peanut.
could break your fast.
So it's all contextual.
That's what's really important to understand.
And unless you're going to wear a continuous glucose monitor
and set an absolute numerical threshold
for what it is to break your fast,
I think there are some simple rules that we can follow.
First of all, anything that involves sugar,
in particular simple sugars, can potentially break your fast.
For instance, if you drink a can of soda pop,
unless you just ran an ultramarer,
ultramarathon, you're breaking your fast, okay?
Eat a piece of pizza, you're breaking your fast.
So you can start to see where there's a lot of wiggle room
and it's very contextual.
Today we've really bypassed the discussion
about foods of a particular origin or type,
animal based or plant based.
But all the same rules apply within this thing
that we're called intermittent fasting
or time restricted feeding.
So what breaks of fast will depend.
And what you want to eat or what you are willing to eat,
That's a totally separate manner from when you eat.
But as we've established, when you eat is vitally important.
There is one particular thing that one can ingest
that can help manage psychologically and performance wise
through the fasting portion of the intermittent fasting
and get you to your feeding window.
And that's salt.
Many people find that the kind of lightheadedness,
the shakiness that's accustomed with having
slightly low blood sugar can be offset
by taking a half teaspoon or so of sea salt
or even just a tiny pinch of salt
and putting into some water and drinking it.
What is it doing?
How is it offsetting all this?
Well, salt water actually has a mild effect
as a glucose disposal agent,
but it has a stabilizing effect on blood volume.
And so because sodium brings with it water
and the so-called osmolarity of your blood
in your body depends on the salt levels
in your blood and brain and body.
Many people find that if they're feeling shaky,
they're feeling lightheaded, they can't concentrate,
they think they need sugar or food,
but what will actually remedy that is some salt.
And all it requires really is a small pinch of salt,
ideally Himalayan or C salt if you wanna get fancy about it,
but table salt would be fine.
In a moment, I'd like to review the parameters
of a ideal feeding schedule for you
and give you the variables that you can plug into your lifestyle
your preferences. So first of all, you do not want to ingest food for at least, I want to emphasize
at least 60 minutes post waking up. Second, you want to avoid ingesting any food for the two
to three hours prior to bedtime. Remember that the sleep related fasting is especially important
because of all the cellular repair processes
that occur in the liver, in the gut,
in the microbiome, in the brain, all over the body,
and because of the way that that coordinates
the expression of the clock genes
that are then going to wick out
and have many other positive effects on health,
including weight and fat loss,
but in addition to that, liver health, et cetera.
An eight-hour feeding window as a target seems to be
the best target feeding window.
Shorter feeding windows of four to six hours
tend to lead to overeating
and potentially increases in weight.
Regular placement of the eating window
or feeding window every 24 hours is important.
You don't have to be absolutely rigid and neurotic about this,
but you don't want it sliding around on the weekend
so that it's starting two hours later
and ending two hours later a couple days a week
because then you start to offset many
of the positive health effects
that have been demonstrated for time restricted feeding.
When should that eight hour window be placed
within each 24 hour cycle?
Well, let's talk about ideal.
Ideal, if you really want to maximize
all the health benefits of time restricted feeding,
you need to extend the fast around sleep on both sides.
You would place it smack dab in the middle of the day.
It would be a schedule in which you start
started eating, for instance, at 10 a.m.
and you stopped eating at 6 p.m.
An absolutely dreadful schedule for anyone
that wants to have some semblance of a normal life.
In my opinion, it's not really compatible with most schedules,
although some people might be able to do it.
Of course, you have to take into consideration
when you exercise, if you exercise.
For instance, I like to exercise early in the day
if I run or if I do some moderate or light intensity exercise,
regardless of what type of exercise it is,
I have no trouble waiting until my feeding window
kicks in around noon or even 2 p.m.
But if I do high intensity weight training,
for instance, early in the day,
or if I run sprints, and I do that at 7 a.m. or 8 a.m.,
by 11 a.m., I am very, very hungry,
and it's hard for me to do other things, concentrate, et cetera.
If you're one of these people or you're somebody
who really is trying to emphasize hypertrophy
or maintenance of muscle, then it does
seem that ingesting protein early in the day is beneficial,
that it can be more readily converted into muscle tissue.
Another thing that we can add to this summary
or key points related to time restricted feeding
is the use of glucose disposal agents and or behaviors.
If you find that you've eaten too close
to a period of time in which you would prefer to be fasting,
that's when a 30 minute brisk walk
or even modest walk after eating can be
beneficial.
And then there are the things like metformin and berberine.
And I mentioned earlier why you would want to approach
those with the appropriate level of caution
and figure out the dosages for you.
And for some people, the dosages will be zero milligrams
is going to be ideal.
I know we covered a lot of information today.
I hope you learned a lot about time restricted feeding.
I hope you learned a lot about metabolism and energy and health
and how when you eat is as important as what you eat.
And last, but,
certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.