Huberman Lab - GUEST SERIES | Dr. Andy Galpin: Optimal Nutrition & Supplementation for Fitness
Episode Date: February 22, 2023In this episode 6 of a 6-part series on fitness, exercise and performance with Andy Galpin, PhD, professor of kinesiology at California State University, Fullerton, he explains optimal nutrition, hydr...ation and supplementation to achieve your fitness goals. We cover macronutrient guidelines, when to eat relative to training and training fasted versus fed. Dr. Galpin describes proper hydration for before and during exercise, how dehydration and/or low electrolyte concentrations impede physical and mental performance. He discusses what supplements work best for fitness and performance, how to decide which to take, if any, and when to take them. He also shares high-impact, lower-cost supplements and nutrition recommendations to benefit performance, recovery, and sleep. This episode also includes an audience Q&A. Overall, it is an in-depth but clear discussion of nutrition strategies and supplements that can help anyone improve their level of fitness physical and mental performance. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman Levels: https://levels.link/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman InsideTracker: https://www.insidetracker.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Nutrition & Supplementation (00:05:16) Creatine Supplementation, Muscle & Cognitive Function, Loading Phase (00:16:51) Sponsors: Levels, LMNT (00:20:31) Dehydration, Overhydration, Night Urination (00:35:37) Tool: Hydration, Caffeine & Electrolytes (00:41:22) Tool: Sweating, Salt & Performance (00:48:57) Sponsor: AG1 (00:49:49) Galpin Equation for Hydration & Exercise, Focus (00:55:28) Tool: 5 Steps to Optimize Hydration, Sipping Water, W.U.T. Status, Salt (01:10:58) Electrolytes, Carbohydrates & Exercise (01:15:44) Sponsor: InsideTracker (01:16:47) Training Fasted versus Fed, Caffeine, Carbohydrate Timing (01:25:13) Caffeine & Endurance (01:31:20) Citrulline, Beet Root Juice & Performance; Alpha-GPC & Focus, Nootropics (01:35:43) Rhodiola, Cortisol & Fatigue (01:39:55) Tool: Supplement Formulations (01:47:31) Supplements, Dependency & Root Cause; Foundational Behaviors (01:57:44) Acute vs. Chronic Effects, Supplements & Gut Microbiome (02:02:33) Tool: Sleep Environment, Absolute Rest (02:11:03) Tools: Sleep & Disturbances, Inositol (02:20:03) Tool: “Fitness Fatigue” Model, Taper, Anti-Inflammatory Supplements (02:26:33) Exercise Recovery: Curcumin, Omega 3s, Glutamine, Nutrition, Vitamins (02:39:27) Intermittent Fasting, Training & Keto Diets; GABA (02:43:39) Carbohydrate Loading; Amino Acid Supplements; “Anabolic Window” (02:47:23) Garlic; Tart Cherry Extract; Examine.com (02:51:50) Fitness Testing, Training Programs; Exercise Recovery (03:04:13) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab guest series,
where I and an expert guest discuss science
and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman,
and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology
at Stanford School of Medicine.
Today's episode marks the sixth and final
of the six episode series
on fitness, exercise, and performance.
And today's discussion is all about nutrition
and supplementation to maximize your fitness,
exercise, and performance
goals. Dr. Andy Galpin, I'm super excited to discuss today's topic, which is nutrition and
supplementation for performance and recovery. And I'm particularly excited about this conversation
because I've been interested in supplementation and nutrition for performance really since my
teens, but also because in recent years, we've witnessed a
massive transformation in the general public in terms of their view of supplementation and
nutrition. First of all, more people are thinking about nutrition. What is good nutrition? What is
not? A very barbed wire topic, as you know, but there are some truths in there that we'll discuss,
but also supplementation. Whereas 10, 15 years ago, I think most people
would either be really into supplements, that was a small percentage of people,
but the majority of people were either told or were thinking, oh, you know, vitamins,
you mostly excrete them, they're just expensive urine. Nowadays, it seems that many people,
including many of my colleagues and physicians, all the way down to sports performance experts, are taking and making recommendations about certain supplements.
And so the way that I like to think about supplements is that they aren't necessarily just supplements, which makes it sound like they are augmenting what should already be there, but you're not quite getting enough of. But indeed, a lot of these things we call supplements are very potent compounds that can transform our ability to
perform in the short term, to recover from exercise, and that can really shape brain chemistry,
hormone patterns acutely and when taken long-term. So I'm very excited about today's topic and to
be able to try and sort through this, let's call it a cloud, hopefully not a storm, but this cloud of supplements that are out there.
Because indeed, many of them are excellent and can provide us a lot.
Some of them are terrible and then some just don't do anything and therefore are terrible because either they have side effects or because they're very expensive and they don't do anything.
And then, of course, within the realm of nutrition, there's an equal amount of confusion. because either they have side effects or because they're very expensive and they don't do anything.
And then of course, within the realm of nutrition, there's an equal amount of confusion,
but that's why I'm talking to you
because you're gonna put clarity and structure
and definition on these incredibly important topics.
You absolutely nailed it there.
One of the major reasons supplements can work
is because you can consume nutrients
in extremely high concentrations
such that you would not get in nature through food. Having said that, you really do want to
focus on the basics, sleep, nutrition, hydration, and I'm going to get into very specific detail
later with some of those things. That said, there are plenty of situations and circumstances
when supplementation can do exactly what you said. Also though, because you are taking
them in such high concentrations, they can also be unproductive, they can be destructive, or they
can be counterproductive. So in case if you're taking a couple of supplements over here, it may
actually be counteracting the benefits of some of the other supplements over there. So in the ideal
situation, we would be able to work like snipers here. So we
would be able to run full biological testing. So extensive blood work and saliva and urine and stool
and have an in-depth analysis of your gut microbiome and your stress patterns and your time
of day and your cortisol curve and like all the things that we do in our high performance folks.
With that, then we can get extremely high precision supplementation. And
quite honestly, our philosophy is we only give individuals exactly what they need. So even some
of the standard, generally safe and effective supplements, we don't really necessarily use them
if there's no specific need. We've talked about the consequences of this with things like
antioxidants, but even simple stuff like stimulants and other tools that are effective for recovery,
we don't use them unless we have a reason.
That said, that's not the reality for a lot of people.
They're not gonna be able to do something like that
or work with somebody who can help them in that.
So there are a handful of supplements
that I would consider to be in my 80-20 rule,
which is sort of like the 20% of supplements
that are gonna give you 80% of the benefit for the lowest cost. And so what I can actually do is is sort of like the 20% of supplements that are going to give you 80% of
the benefit for the lowest cost. And so what I can actually do is just sort of start there,
even though this burns my skin and my soul a little bit. I absolutely hate this. I am the
context guy. It depends. It's high precision guy. But let's be real. There are a number of
supplements that are fairly effective and fairly cheap for a wide range of outcomes. So this is for general public.
This is for people who want to do the three buckets, right?
You want to look a certain way.
So supplements that can enhance muscle growth and fat loss,
non-hormonal-based supplements, of course.
Supplements that can improve energy or physical performance.
Again, from everything from squatting more
to feeling better in your yoga
class to having more energy throughout the day to our third major bucket that we've been talking
about throughout this entire series, which are longevity. So we can cover those first if you'd
like to start there. Yes, absolutely. Let's start there. Oftentimes when we think of supplements,
we immediately jump to high sport performance type of things or vigorous workouts or muscle
building, though that doesn't necessarily
have to be the case. Take, for example, creatine. And I've spoken about this at length with Darren
Kandow, who's done a tremendous amount of research. I was just up at his lab recently in Canada.
And he has covered extensively. In fact, I think I put up a post, perhaps I could
draw this up, where he laid out all the myriad of benefits of creatine. This is taken in the, you know,
typically three to five grams per day of dose
of creatine monohydrate,
which has the most research behind it.
Seems to be extremely low side effects in almost anyone.
And the benefits include, of course,
things like muscle performance and strength
and things like that.
And if you go back to our discussion
in our episode on metabolism and endurance,
we talked about the phosphocreatine system.
So you can figure out kind of what this is going to do in terms of effect.
That said, there's excellent information and data coming out
on the benefits of bone mineral density in creatine.
There's a ton of work looking at a host of cognitive factors from memory, executive function,
to effects potentially on even things like depression,
mood, to Alzheimer's, Parkinson's,
all forms of neurodegenerative disease.
In fact, it's pretty obvious.
The brain loves creatine as a fuel.
And so not only, we sort of discussed in the episode
as being the fuel for skeletal muscle contraction,
but the brain needs to do that as well.
The astrocytes around the brain need to be able to provide energy, etc.
So it's very clear that metabolism in the brain
is reduced with things like TBI and potentially concussions.
So now, to be extremely clear,
creatine does not prevent any of those diseases.
It does not treat any of them.
And the data are mixed.
But more and more are coming.
Some show a little bit of benefit.
Some show maybe none.
But I'm not aware of any research in those areas that show it has any downside.
For the most part, side effects are extremely minimal, if not null.
And then potentially some benefit, depending on the specific study.
So we could put up, if you'd like, a couple of links directly to those meta-analyses,
and folks can go through those things one by one.
So I only say that to, again, maybe expand our understanding
or thinking about what these types of supplements can do.
It's not just about growing muscle or high performance.
It's everything to, again, there's an association
with recovery. So creatine is fantastic for recovery from muscle, for muscle damage,
helps and can potentially aid in fat loss and a whole host of things. So you can actually also
even look at websites like examine.com. I have no affiliation with them whatsoever, but if you
want to just type in something like creatine monohydrate,
you can see a whole list,
and you're going to see thousands of studies
of the potential benefits of creatine.
So that is always number one on my list.
I'm relieved to hear that creatine sits at the top of your supplementation list
because, well, first of all, I started taking it when I was in college.
At that time, I was taking it in this kind of loading mode where you take it in anywhere from 15 to 25 grams per day, often causing some gastric distress five grams or so. Although later, I know you're
going to tell me why I should probably be taking more than five grams per day, given my body weight.
So I know we'll get into some of those specifics a little bit later. But in addition to experiencing
direct effects on muscle size and strength, which I did, I don't know how it contributed to my
cognitive function or if it does now because there's really
no way to tease that out with with standard at-home tests like a scale but it is very clear
to me based on the literature that you described and some of which we've covered on other episodes
of the podcast that the phosphocreatine system is vitally important for forebrain function
right the forebrain of course being being the portion of brain, broadly speaking, the portion of brain just behind your forehead that is
responsible for planning, action, setting rules and context. So even as simple as if you're going
downfield in a game of soccer or basketball and you're on offense, and then you make an attempt
on goal or basket, and then it switches and you go back. Now you're on defense.
Being on defense is very different than being on offense.
And that goal, excuse me,
that rule switching is a prefrontal cortical function,
as is every context-dependent way of thinking or acting.
And so anything that can favor function of the forebrain,
I think is good for humans in general.
It suppresses anxiety,
allows us to interpret what's going on for us. And so I'm very relieved and gratified to hear that creatine sits at the
top of the list. Also, as I'm sure you'll point out again later, creatine is for the most part,
a relatively affordable supplement for most people. So here we're not talking about something
that's really esoteric or that you have to, you know, fly to some remote location to get an
infusion of. Right. Although I apologize to all you know, fly to some remote location to get an infusion of.
Right. Although I apologize to all you because I know the price has skyrocketed recently.
Really? Yeah. Why is that? I think it's, well, nobody knows, but it's quote unquote a supply and demand issue, if you will. So those prices have gone up. There's also, of course, been
shipping problems in the world and things. So every time I talk about creatine right now,
people just flame me for like, oh my God, so expensive now i'm like i know i'm sorry but
honestly it's only so expensive because you're used to being so cheap so when you when you
counter the fact that you're like right yeah like relative to the other stuff you're probably taking
relative to any other number of purchases um for the it still lands very high in my ROI list, my, you know,
my 80-20 because of that. It's, it can be taken any time of the day. It doesn't have to be in
magical combination. You talked about co-ingesting with carbohydrates. That can enhance how quickly
you can get in the system. In fact, it's going to work on the exact same mechanisms. We'll probably
potentially talk about hydration, but these things are shuttled. So anytime you bring in
carbohydrate, that's going to be shipped into tissue as quickly as it can. Creatine then goes along for the ride
and then it brings water for the ride. That's how you enhance hydration. That's why it's important
to have carbohydrates when you're trying to hydrate. So you're just going to take it in
there. And that's also why you get quote unquote cell swelling, which is a good thing. It's just
enhancing hydration. We actually use it a ton in our post weigh-in protocols.
So in individuals that have to cut water weight,
creatine is a great thing to throw back in there.
It's going to help you rehydrate.
It's also why when you take 30 grams of it,
it can pull a bunch of fluid in the intestines
and there you go with your little bit of GI distress.
So yeah, there's a lot of fun things
you can talk about there.
I just had to flag that
because every time I've been talking about it recently
and I say it's cheap, people are killing me for it. So I apologize. I don't
know how to make it any cheaper, but it's still fairly, fairly affordable. Yeah. I would say
relatively inexpensive compared to a lot of supplements out there. And when thinking about
the return on investment is it's quite good. Yeah. So like actually, sorry, sorry to cut you
off, but I was just also thinking there's been a number of studies on sleep deprivation as well with creatine.
That can help.
So obviously sleep deprivation will generally reduce cognitive function and creatine can ameliorate some of that drop.
So if you think about it in that context, I had a crummy night of sleep.
Well, and if that enables you to perform a little bit better in your job, then you would make up the dollar or so, whatever you paid for that day's supply of creatine.
So it is something I kind of on that note, it's not going to work as an acute response. So it's
not something you're like, I feel terrible. Let me throw some creatine down the hatch. I'll feel
better that that's not going to work. It's going to take several weeks to have a noticeable effect.
It needs to be stored in tissue. It needs to be built up before you can actually do much of
anything. So it is unlike some of the other things like stimulants or caffeine that have an acute response right now. And so if you're going
to take it, you probably need to consume it consistently. If you can't do that, then really
there's no point in doing it. And the loading phase you mentioned, distance we're here,
is something you can do, again, if you need to enhance the storage of it really quickly.
So say, for example, we've done this in some military cases where it's like you get back
to base and you've only got a week and then you got to go back out.
We may actually have to do a little bit of a loading phase then.
But if that's not the case, the loading phase is unnecessary.
It's not really harmful other than maybe GI stress and maybe waste.
But you're going to have three or four weeks.
It's going to reach full saturation.
Plenty of time to be there if you're in that three to seven grams per day range.
Well, I'm glad you mentioned the slow accumulating positive effects of creatine
as compared to so-called acute effects, because the way that I think of health promoting and
performance enhancing protocols like viewing morning sunlight or endurance exercise for that matter, or creatine or sleep, for instance,
is that while they can have effects in the immediate term, you might feel a little bit,
or in the case of a good night's sleep, a lot better. It's really the cumulative effect of
raising your baseline level of functioning. You know, there's another way to think about it is
these supplements or behaviors and quality nutrition when done consistently over time.
And that doesn't mean 100% of the time, but, you know, probably 80% of the time.
Sure.
Lead to a sort of buoyancy in your system that allows you to be more resilient under conditions where conditions aren't perfect.
Right.
where conditions aren't perfect, right?
And if conditions are made perfect or close to perfect and you already have that buoyancy,
that's when you really start to see
the ultra high performance effects that are so much fun,
but they have to be established
through consistent supplementation,
consistent nutritional intake.
So today I know we're going to distinguish between,
normally they're called chronic and acute effects,
but that makes it sound like chronic illness. The moment people hear chronic, well, they might think of other things,
but in the context of health, they typically think of, you know, chronic illness. And we're
not talking about that. What we're talking about is slow modulatory effects in the body. A lot of
things in the body take time to build up, but once they've built up, they clearly can benefit us.
And then other things, as you mentioned, you know, a stimulant, for instance,
has a very acute effect that is going to occur with,
you know, peak within 30 minutes
and wear off within, you know, four hours or so.
It can also have some chronic effects,
but typically it's a short-lived effect.
So we just want to frame up the language
that we'll be using.
And I'm really excited to dive into this topic.
And I think creatine is a beautiful example
of a supplement that has positive, chronic,
mental, and physical benefits.
Down the road, I can come back and talk a little bit more about creatine and we can
cover some other information regarding best practices for getting the most out of it,
as well as we'll certainly dive into some of the common side effects or at least a thought
of side effects.
While we're here though,
I also could throw in a few other of these high impact, low cost, generally safe things that are
my 80-20 rule, if you will. So the way I actually kind of think about it is you want one from each
of three categories. And these categories are fuel, stimulant, and fatigue blockers.
So creatine is actually in the fuel.
It's not a stimulant.
We talked about the chronic effect there.
So we've already knocked that one off.
Another one from the fatigue blocker
is going to be anything like beta alanine
or sodium bicarbonate.
And then from the stimulant use,
of course, we have anything like a beetroot juice
to a caffeine or something of the equivalent.
So we can come back again and talk about all those in more detail a little bit later.
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.
It is also separate from Dr. Andy Galpin's teaching and research roles at Cal State Fullerton.
It is, however, part of our desire and effort to bring zero-cost-to-consumer information about science and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme, we'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
Our first sponsor is Momentus.
Momentus makes supplements of the absolute highest quality.
The Huberman Lab podcast is proud to be partnering with Momentus for several important reasons.
First of all, as I mentioned, their supplements are of extremely high quality.
Second of all, their supplements are generally
in single-ingredient formulations.
If you're going to develop a supplementation protocol,
you're going to want to focus mainly
on using single-ingredient formulations.
With single-ingredient formulations,
you can devise the most logical and effective
and cost-effective supplementation regimen for your goals.
In addition, Momentous supplements ship internationally,
and this is, of course, important because we realize that many of the Huberman Lab podcast listeners reside outside the United States. If you'd like to try the various supplements
mentioned on the Huberman Lab podcast, in particular supplements for hormone health,
for sleep optimization, for focus, as well as a number of other things, including exercise recovery,
you can go to LiveMomentous, spelled O-U-S, so that's livemomentous.com slash Huberman. Today's episode is also brought to us by Levels.
Levels is a program that lets you see how different foods and activities affect your health
by giving you real-time feedback on your blood glucose using a continuous glucose monitor.
Many people are aware that their blood sugar, that is their blood glucose level,
is critical for everything from fat loss to muscle gain
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and trying a continuous glucose monitor yourself, go to levels.link slash Huberman. That's levels.link
slash Huberman. Today's episode is also brought to us by Element. Element is an electrolyte drink
that contains the exact ratios of the electrolyte sodium, magnesium, and potassium to optimize cellular functioning for mental and physical
performance. Most people realize that hydration is key. We need to ingest enough fluids in order
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Now, of course, people with prehypertension and hypertension
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sample pack with your purchase. Again, that's drink element LMNT.com slash Huberman to claim
a free sample pack. To start off, I want to ask you about something that as soon as I say it,
some people might roll their eyes or wonder, why are we even talking about that now?
But that I have to believe is among the more fundamental,
if not foundational aspects of nutrition and supplementation for performance.
And that's hydration, right?
I mean, I think we hear hydration.
It's like, okay, we have to drink six to eight glasses of water every day.
Our urine should be relatively clear.
If it's too dark yellow, we're not doing a good job of hydrating enough.
How much of that is true?
Is alkaline water worthwhile for changing the alkalinity of my body?
I learned when I was in college and graduate school that the alkalinity of the different
tissues in your body is very well controlled in order to keep you alive and that you don't
want it to shift too much or you
can enter pretty horrible states of seizure, vomiting, and even death. So tell me about
hydration and woven into that, if you would, educate me on electrolytes and hydration,
because I think most often when people ingest electrolytes, sure, they could be ingesting
salt tablets, probably getting some electrolytes, by the way,
electrolytes, sodium, magnesium, potassium through their food. I think most people think about
drinking electrolytes. So water and electrolytes, I think is a vitally important topic to kick this
off with. Sure. We can jump right into your alkaline water. While there's perhaps much to
say about this, we can maybe revisit this in another seven part series all on its own
uh i would just say it this way there's probably a few things you should do before worrying about
the alkalinity of your water and i'll just leave it at that meaning the alkalinity of the water
is sort of irrelevant not that you won't go that far it's just it's probably remember we
sort of started off talking about 80 20.
well this would be in my like 99 one in terms of like if we're really at the level of worrying
about the ph of their your drinking fluid uh we have optimized so many other things
uh that then we can talk about it but until we have nailed months and years of work on other
things this is just not going to make much of an impact.
Great. Then perhaps you could tell us about what volume of water we should be drinking,
when we should be drinking that water relative to training and just generally.
And anything else related to water and electrolytes that can improve mental performance,
physical performance and offset any ill effects. I like the fact that you mentioned physical and mental performance because it's clear in both
cases, we hear that we need to drink more water. And I can give you some numbers and I will in a
second. What we also need to recognize is there's, this is hormesis. We talked about hormesis a few
episodes ago. And this is the case, right? Whether we talked about food or hydration, or I think I
gave you the example of cyanide naturally occurring in your food,
hot water is the same way.
So if you are under hydrated or dehydrated,
then there is a clear negative effect on your body.
And as I increase the level
or improve the level of hydration, things get better,
whether this is physical performance
or whether this is mental performance.
In fact, we know that a body weight reduction
of as low as 2% via dehydration. So
imagine you're doing a bout of exercise and you're sweating and you lose 2% of your body weight.
That alone is enough to reduce accuracy and performance. So the classic study we talk about
here was in basketball players. So shooting accuracy. So free throw shooting, I think is
specifically what they looked at. Significant reduction in performance with as little as 2%
dehydration.
At that level, you also see a significant increase in perception of difficulty of exercise.
And so only right at 2%. And again, when I say 2%, I mean percent body weight lost, right? That's
what that means. You start getting to 3, 4, 5% dehydration, you start having a significant
reduction in blood volume. And that's incredibly important for endurance.
Your blood becomes viscous.
It gets hard to pump through.
And you're going to start having all kinds of issues.
So being dehydrated is, again, not only going to reduce performance,
but because of the mental aspect, which we just walked through,
and neuromuscular issue, you're going to lose accuracy.
You're going to lose total endurance performance.
And you're going to lose speed and power. So we have the triad there, no matter what you're
interested in, it's going to be harmed by being dehydrated. That also is happening then if you're
starting your program dehydrated. So if you're already 1% or so dehydrated, maybe you're like
a little under hydrated and you lose a little bit of sweat, you've already hit that 2%. And so we're
starting to see reductions in performance there. The same happens on the other side of that hormetic curve.
So if you are optimally hydrated in some large window, but you start going past that,
we can start running into equal problems. Remember, there is a need for an optimal
concentration of sodium and potassium and chloride between your cell, inside your cell and outside
your cell. These are electrolytes. This is what we call osmolality and osmolarity. This is really
good. Think of it like concentration and osmosis, if you remember those terms. So if we are trying
to create a muscle contraction, that requires an electrical gradient. And so sodium and potassium,
specifically in magnesium, calcium, are positively charged and chloride is negatively charged.
And we need to have a certain amount inside the cell and outside the cell so that the positives and the negatives
are balanced appropriately. So that when we move one, we change the voltage and we have, in the
case of a muscle contraction. Okay, I just skimmed through a whole lot of physiology there to say,
if you then go mess with fluid only, and you say, if I were to give you a bolus of, you know, three liters of pure water
right now, you're going to dilute your blood. And so there's not going to be as many chemical,
there won't be as many electrical signals in there because you've taken the same amount of
sodium, potassium, et cetera, and put it in a larger volume of pure water. So that gradient
has now changed. That becomes a significant problem for contraction. I mean, quite literally,
it can kill you. This is what we call hyponatremia. So natremia spelled N-A, hypo being low.
Hyponatremia, if you actually go to the periodic chart, N-A is what we use for sodium. So hyponatremia,
it's because the word is natremia actually. So what that literally means is low sodium. And you
didn't get that from sweating out all your sodium.
You actually get hyponatremia from drinking in too much water.
So it's not that the total amount of sodium gets low.
It's the fact that the concentration gets low from excessive fluid intake.
So in the extremes, in fact, if you look at the literature,
you'll see anywhere between like 2% to 15% of people who finish endurance races
are into hyponatremia.
And that varies wildly if you're
doing Ironman and Kona versus like, you know, the marathon in Denver in October, right? It's going
to be totally different depending on other conditions, but these are all important. So
while like death happens, that is sort of extreme. If you back up just a little bit, you start seeing
the same types of performance improvements. In fact, the symptoms can be identical. Brain fog, confusion, performance, irritation, a GI
distress. And you think, man, these are symptoms of
dehydration. So then you drink more water, and you're just
exacerbating the problem. And I can actually give you one
little example of this. We had an executive, actually a
female CEO, I'll say she's probably when her was in her early 40s.
And so she came to us and she thought, man, for sure she has some sort of gut problem going on
because we hear a lot about kind of like gut health and how it affects everything. And so
she's just like, I have brain fog and I've done all these things and I got blood work done and
everything's fine. Like nothing's going on. I think I must have some sort of gut thing or going
on or whatever. And it's okay. And we just started going through her stuff and she was, I think I must have some sort of gut thing going on or whatever. And it's okay. And we just started going through her stuff.
And she was, I think, about 170 pounds, plus or minus.
And she was consuming like 250 to 60 ounces of water a day.
That's a ton of water.
And we were like, holy shit, what are you doing this for?
And she's just like, that's sort of like my thing.
But she didn't realize it was more of like a nervous tick than it was anything else, right?
She just like sip, sip, sip, sip, sip water sip sip water i'm like man how often do you go pee she's like yeah
like every you know 30 minutes or something i'm like fantastic sleep problems focus and so she's
smashing caffeine she was at like eight cups of coffee a day which is also going to add to
excretion of sodium totally right so it's like okay we don't really need to come in and run a sleep study on you.
We're just going to lower your water.
And she was like, what?
We dropped her down to like 180.
So basically an ounce per pound of body weight, which is still high because she did train.
180 ounces.
Correct.
She does work out.
So she needed to replenish some stuff.
And we'll cover these numbers in a second.
Instantaneously, I mean, like two days in, she's like's like oh my god i haven't slept six straight hours in years and then after that it
was like basically tears coming back to us right my focus my brain fog is gone because she's in a
very high pressure job um it's like everything's coming back like now she was down to three or so
cups of coffee a day blah blah blah like the whole thing digestion improved all of it she was sick
like to her only problem after all the analyses was she was just drinking way, way too much water
and adding more salt to her would not have solved the problem because she would have just had simply
way too much fluid in her system. She was having all kinds of ADH problems and aldosterone, like
the whole thing that that rolls into cortisol, the whole like system gets, goes into chaos.
So it is important that you pay attention to hydration,
even though, as you sort of mentioned,
people tend to just kind of like roll their eyes around it,
because if you're in the middle, it's fine.
But if you're anywhere past, not even the extreme extremes,
but just that first standard deviation away,
you're going to have problems and you might be thinking adrenal fatigue.
You might be thinking your chest out, like you're going to think all these things and you simply just haven't
actually dialed in your hydration. Yeah. I think people sometimes roll their eyes at the discussion
of hydration because it just doesn't sound very sexy. It's not like, it doesn't sound like a
neurotransmitter or a hormone. It doesn't sound like testosterone or estrogen or DHEA or dopamine,
like testosterone or estrogen or DHEA or dopamine,
but it actually is all of those things.
It sits at a level beneath all of those,
but not beneath on a hierarchy,
beneath in terms of a foundation.
It's actually without proper electrolyte balance and hydration, none of the cells of the body can function.
And then I think people also hear that,
oh, you know, we are 70% water.
And somehow like that statistic alone,
um, or that fact alone doesn't seem to, uh, stimulate any kind of actionable takeaway.
Right. It's like, great. You know, uh, like gravity also, you know, keeps us, you know,
from jumping as high as we like, you know, what do I do? And so I think, um, it's, it's important
that people understand that every cellular process in
the body critically relies on having enough sodium, magnesium, potassium around. And the
way that it's concentrated in fluid water is really the way that you allow every cell in
their body to function as well as it possibly could and respond to all of the sorts of kind
of quote unquote high performance tools
that we're talking about.
The other thing I've observed many times over is that
if people are ingesting too much water
and also drinking a lot of caffeine
and their electrolytes are low, they get shaky
and they actually can have anxiety like symptoms.
So when people come into my lab to do studies on anxiety
and fear, we ask a few questions and those questions include
how much water they've had that day. Also a sort of bizarre fact, but one that I think is worth mentioning is that when the
bladder is full, it stimulates a sort of anxiety. If you ever had to urinate very badly and you're
in the car or you can't urinate and then you get to the door, like that's talk about anxiety.
And that's because there's a direct neural pathway from the bladder that registers the
mechanosensors how much stretch there is on the bladder that sends a signal to the brainstem
alertness areas broadly speaking locus coeruleus and others that wake us up these are the when
we're awake it makes us more awake and when we're asleep this is what wakes us up to urinate in the
middle of the night yeah that's actually why you you can use night urination as a pretty good diagnostic of sleep disorders.
So if, because of vasopressin, right?
That's exactly what you're talking about.
If you're having sleep disorder issues and you're staying awake and vasopressin gets taken off, right?
And APN goes straight to the kidneys.
Your kidneys are supposed to be dormant basically at night.
You're not supposed to be filtering a lot and producing a lot of urine at night.
If that's happening and say you have any number
of apneas kicking on or anything going on,
vasopressin keeps going, keeps sending a signal,
kidneys start filtering.
So if you're waking up and peeing multiple times a night,
that's called nocturia.
That is a very, very good sign
that either one of two things happen.
One, you have some sort of sleep disorder
or two, you're drinking outrageous amounts of water.
And so that's actually a bit of a backward cycle now, right?
Because you're drinking way too much water,
you're waking up and peeing all night,
that's actually ruining your sleep.
And so we have seen this a number of times
with our sleep company as we go in,
and it's just like, you don't need any of this crap.
You just need to be properly hydrated.
Alternatively, if your hydration is sound
and you're still waking up more than one time a night
to pee on average, then you almost, well, I shouldn't say it like that, but there's a potential that you actually
have some sort of sleep disorder or sleep condition going in. So the rule of thumb on that,
just so we're here, once a night or so of urination is fine. If it is routinely or consistently more
than two, you need to make some adjustments. Start with hydration. It's the simplest way,
getting a full sleep study done. Just figure out hydration. We've had this happen a number of times
where people want to get more health conscious and they just get, they hear things like this
and they're like, I got to get on my water. And then they just start train wrecking their sleep
and then waking it up. So if you're waking up multiple times and you're urinating and it is a
large amount of urine for you and it is clear, That's probably not sleep apnea induced nocturia.
That's probably excessive hydration.
If you're waking up a bunch of times
and it's fairly small amounts of urine,
then it's probably not the fluid issue.
It's probably the fact that the vasopressin
is kicking your kidneys into gear.
So that's not a perfect criteria,
but it's just like a quick little tool you can sort of use.
That's actually one of the reasons
why we measure almost always your body weight at night, as well as in the morning. So that's like the combat sport
in the UFC fighters, boxers, we call that your float. So how much you floated overnight. I like
to know that number because I want to know as well, your first morning void. So when you wake
up and you went to bed at 200 pounds, you woke up the next morning at 195. It's like, oh, you floated five pounds.
Did you pee last night?
Yeah, yeah, three times.
Interesting.
Another case, you woke up, you went to bed at 200 pounds.
You wake up at 199.5.
Okay, you're dehydrated.
Because you should have a certain amount of fluid
that you're just respiring out
as you're breathing throughout your nose
throughout night, ideally.
Guaranteed, you're gonna wake up. What was your urine like? Oh yeah, a little bit pretty
dark, like shocker, you're dehydrated. So you can kind of look at numbers like that. A general float
is something like a pound to two pounds for the 170 plus pound person. As you scale up that number
can go up a little bit, but you can kind of use these to triage a little bit about what's going on
with this kind of combination. Everything is everything, right? So it's like, it's not just about one system. So you're going
to pay attention. You can also look, I don't know if you want to jump into it. We can, but there's
a whole bunch of ways I can teach you to diagnose hydration and then maybe we can start there and
then we can talk about hydration numbers. Yes. I'd love to talk about diagnostics for
hydration, overhydration, dehydration. To start off, would you be willing to give us some numbers?
How much water should we be drinking?
The classic rule here, and you're making me do what I hate, right?
I want to give all the caveats first, but I'll go straight to your number.
Half an ounce per pound of body weight is a rough rule.
So if you weigh, again, 200 pounds,
that would mean you drink 100 ounces of water a day.
Most water bottles are like 12 to 20 ounces, something like that. So, you know, you end up drinking six of those
or so a day, kind of like plus or minus, which is not that unreasonable. This does depend on a
number of factors that which I could go over, but that is a rough starting place. The only other
thing to add to that is that does not account for exercise-induced water loss
or sauna or anything like that.
So that's assuming just like basal daily needs.
If you are exercising or sweating at all for any reasons
or work-related, so folks that work outside
or in the heat or a humid environment,
these numbers all change and you can slide the scale up.
But you generally wanna drink about 125% of the fluids you've lost during that physical activity back.
And how much do you lose per hour of exercise?
That number ranges between one to five pounds, depending on the person. It can even be higher
with some of our athletes. Like I can think of a number of NFL players right now. It's not uncommon
for those guys to do eight or nine pounds, even not even like crazy circumstances. If it's August and
we're in Jacksonville, it's not wild for us, those guys to go nine, 10 pounds.
But what about the typical person who goes to a air conditioned gym or goes out for a run on a
day that is somewhere between, let's say 55 degrees Fahrenheit and 85 degrees Fahrenheit?
You're probably looking at like a pound.
It's not extremely high.
If you are totally soaked,
might be like a pound and a half to two pounds.
If you're like, come back
and like your pits are a little sweaty
and there's a little bit of water
kind of on your neckline,
it's probably like a more like a pound or so.
So in that case,
you might drink back a pound and a half of water.
Okay, so just to review these numbers
to make sure that I'm on the correct page here,
a half an ounce of fluid per pound of body weight is a sort of a foundation for hydration.
And then you want to replace 125% of the fluid loss during exercise and exercise varies where exercise is done varies,
whether or not people are wearing uniforms or helmets is going to impact how much fluid they
lose, et cetera. In a very hot environment that the amount of fluid lost can be anywhere from,
you know, one to five, maybe even 10 pounds per hour of of hard hard exertion for most exercise done in conditions
of 55 degrees fahrenheit to 72 excuse me 85 degrees fahrenheit done with some degree of effort
one might lose a pound or or two pounds of water super easy way to find out all you have to do is
weigh yourself naked go do your workout come back in dry off weigh yourself naked that'll tell you exactly what you lost so if you went in you were 160 pounds you come back in, dry off, wear yourself naked.
That'll tell you exactly what you lost.
So if you went in, you were 160 pounds,
you come back out, you weigh, you're 158,
you lost two pounds, drink back two and a half pounds of water.
You're good.
So that is, honestly, it's like fairly gold standard for identifying.
You can actually buy a whole bunch of technology for this
and they are using the exact same equation,
which is your body weight when you were there.
Now, if you do that though,
you do need to account for any fluid you drank
during the workout.
Sure.
Because that then offsets it.
Simple, but I think important question.
We're talking about a half an ounce
of fluid per pound of body weight.
Does that include things like coffee, tea, soda,
pre-workout drinks, mid-workout drinks,
mate, matcha, whatever the, you know, there's a
yerba mate, there's a, there are a million things out there, or just water.
Any fluid for the most part is going to count.
And is it true that fluids that contain caffeine generally cause us to secrete sodium?
Yeah.
Okay. So do you recommend including electrolyte powder or a small pinch of sodium
or any number of other supplement type electrolytes that can replace that sodium,
magnesium and potassium? A couple of things we have to pay attention to, to accurately
answer that question. What you also sort of asked about, you may have not realized is,
does caffeine actually enhance dehydration? Which is not really what you asked, but it's probably a lot of people thought that
as well. So caffeine can, but coffee doesn't necessarily do that. Because remember, you're
co-ingesting that with fluid. And so we used to say that all the time, how coffee dehydrates you.
It doesn't. It might make your urine yellow. It certainly gives off an odor in your urine. But in general, coffee will not do that because you're ingested. If you were to now
be taking caffeine pills alone, now there is a bit of a diuretic effect there. And so you're
going to urinate. How much? Maybe not enough for you to be really concerned with, especially when
you balance that against the ergogenic effects and benefits of caffeine. It's not something we
are concerned about. Second part of your question, do you need to then offset the loss of sodium? I'm not super
concerned about the amount of sodium lost to caffeine. I am more concerned about simply the
amount of sodium being correct because of the bigger circumstances, like how much is actually
in your system and how much you lost in the training session. So it's not the caffeine that
I care about that much relative to, you know, if you lost three grams of sodium because of the
training and you added another few milligrams because the caffeine, I don't really care or
didn't. I'm glad you brought up the difference between a substance like caffeine and the vehicle
it's contained in like coffee. This is all really important. And it also raises a question about individual differences in sweating ability. And I call it sweating ability because I have a good
friend I've known for ages, really actually work with him in my laboratory as well. And he's one
of these people that the moment he starts any physical activity, it's like a flood warning,
right? He just soaks through clothing. It's just the sweating
adaptation is, is exceedingly robust in him, other people less so. So is it true that sweating and
our ability to dump heat through it by loss of water is something that we tend to vary on? And
that also that we can build up that capacity. I know a number of people are probably thinking,
ew, gross, why would I want to sweat more? But there's actually a huge advantage to be able to dump body heat during exertion because body heat in some ways sets the cap for performance.
In many, many ways.
Including mental performance. Our ability to stay alert often is enhanced by being cold. And
of course we all want to warm up properly. But in terms of loss of fluid through sweating,
is there a way to easily bend ourselves into kind of a low sweater, medium sweater, heavy sweater?
That sounds like an article of clothing.
But in any case, you know what I'm...
Man, another, a lot to say here.
I wish we had a whole series on this.
Listen, if we have to go 17 hours, we can do it.
Just everybody hydrate well.
I think we've shown the listeners,
that is a real threat.
That's a very real threat. Podcasting to failure. You don't have to do every set in the gym to
failure, but here we are attempting to podcast failure in it, in all seriousness. What, what is
the role of sweating ability? And is this something that any of us should care about or train for,
or pay attention to, or is this just kind of getting into the arcane? Number one, you can train your ability to sweat. This is
important for heat acclimation. And why that matters when you sweat, that actually is not
what regulates your temperature. What you want to have happen is the fluid to hit your skin and
that to be evaporated. That's the actual mechanism. So in fact, if you stop sweating,
like you can guarantee
within a short amount of time, you're going to be done moving. Oh, very interesting. I hope people
heard that and really are highlighting that in their mind, that sweating is a process of bringing
fluid from your body onto the surface of your skin. And then the heat dumping aspect of sweating
is the evaporation of that off your body,
which brings to mind all sorts of ideas about how to dress during exercise, et cetera.
But what you said is that if you are not sweating enough, you are limiting your output capacity.
So it's not just about having enough fluid to sweat.
It's also about being able to sweat and being dressed appropriately to allow that sweat to move, to evaporate
off your body.
Yep.
And heat acclimation training is as simple as it sounds.
So just practice it more.
So if you're going into a process where you either need to be in a hot environment or
you need to improve your sweat rate, you just need to practice sweating and your body will
get better.
So that practice of sauna, practice of jacuzzi, just get in those things and you will improve
your ability to do that.
Now, there is a huge genetic component. I have one individual, actually a UFC fighter I've
been working with, and I don't mind mentioning his name. He'll give me full permission. Scott
Holtzman, many, many years. He's actually fighting right now. Actually today he'll be going. He is
like, he is like you described, like buckets and buckets and buckets
of fluids come off this guy when he's tying his shoes. Like he just goes, right? Like,
and we've, we've improved that. He actually sweat too much. We worked on that a lot early in his
career and we, we got some improvements down to get him to hold onto the fluids better.
That being said, I've worked with other individuals in his weight category and it's the opposite,
right? So we can have them literally do the exact same training session together.
And Scott will dump six pounds
and other folks at his size will dump two, two and a half.
So there's a genetic component that is just there
and you don't need to worry about it there.
So can you identify if you are a heavy salt sweater or not?
Well, you have a whole bunch of routes for this.
Number one is you can use the old free,
cost-free test of just looking at your clothing.
And if you're seeing that white residue all over it,
so you all have the friend
who probably wears that same baseball hat
that they've had for eight years.
If it is covered in the white junk all over the place,
that's a sign of a higher salt sweater.
If the opposite happens,
and it's like you can pull their clothing back
and there's just nothing there.
They are maybe a little bit of a lower salt sweater.
You can also use any number of hydration tests.
I know that there is some coming out in the market
very, very soon that can give you
theoretically real-time measurements,
just like a CGM would be,
although I haven't seen any data
on if those are accurate or not.
I haven't used one yet. But there are a number that are out, super cheap, you know, 10,
15, 20 blocks, all the way up to a couple of hundred dollars, where you can buy these patches,
put them on you and get a reasonably close estimate. And again, if those things are 5 or 10
or 20% off, I don't know, I have to see independent data come out first. But even if they are, you're
not worried about the specific milligrams, right?
Whether you sweat out, you know,
1,250 milligrams at a workout,
or if it's 1,340, it doesn't really matter.
You're trying to look for big, big numbers, right?
Are you losing 500 milligrams?
Are you using three and a half grams where you're at?
So those things will get you in a ballpark
to do exactly what you just said.
Am I high, medium, or low?
And there's a lot of them that I've used in the past.
So that's another way to go
about it. Then what you want to do is probably match your electrolyte intake to something close
to what you sweat. That's the ideal scenario. You can get a lot of information about hydration from
blood. You can look at like acute markers of dehydration, like hemoglobin, hematocrit.
If you're like, if your hemoglobin is like 15 plus,
it's funny, we've talked about this
in a few episodes before,
but I see that and I'm like, man, that dude's super fit.
That's like a 15 for hemoglobin would be pretty high,
14 or so would be pretty good for a female.
That's also the exact same thing
as the sign of acute dehydration.
So hematocrit, same thing.
If you're north of 50%, you're probably dehydrated.
So you can get a lot.
There are also though a lot of biomarkers
that can tell you more about chronic dehydration.
So you can run through those things as well.
So a good blood chemistry test can tell you a lot
and you can actually get some insights
in your sodium and potassium.
Albumin is another fantastic way
to measure longer term hydration status.
Another one of these amazing globulins
that we've sort of talked a lot about.
So you can do all those things. You can also simply measure the body weight pre and post and use a sweat patch or not
and use the freer version of your clothing test and get a rough idea of where you're getting it
from. So those are good places to start. I want to go back though and make sure I wasn't over
terrifying the audience too much on a silver piece. If you're performing a type of training or exercise or sport in which you're
not losing more than 2% of your body weight, you don't need to be overly concerned about hydrating
in the sport. And so we can actually get into some equations for how much water to drink during
training right now. But if you're, again, losing less than that, it's not critical.
You can have some fluids, it makes you feel better, but you're not going to be experiencing
tremendous amounts of performance decrements. If you're, again, out playing a baseball game
and it's 50 degrees out, you're fine. You can drink some water, but that's not going to be
compromising performance or recovery. So we can actually then, if you'd like, I can go through
the three-step system for optimizing hydration, but those are, I want to make sure I planted that flag so people aren't just terrified that they got to be guzzling down water if they're, probiotic, and adaptogen drink designed to help
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I would love for you to tell us
what I refer to as the Galpin equation.
Understanding, of course,
that you did not name it the Galpin equation.
Listen, folks, scientists can have things named after them,
but in general, it's not reflective of healthy psychology
if they name things after themselves. Sometimes, yes, neuro's not reflective of healthy psychology if they name
things after themselves. Correct. Sometimes, yes, neuroanatomists used to do that. But in any case,
Dr. Andy Galpin did not name the Galpin equation after himself. I named it after him.
And the Galpin equation for how much fluid to ingest during exercise is?
You want to take your body weight in pounds and divide that by 30. And you want to take your body weight in pounds and divide that by 30.
And you want to consume that number, which would be in ounces,
about every 15 to 20 minutes.
So in the example of you being 200 pounds,
you would take 200 divided by 30,
which is, let's just call that number seven to be close,
which means you would consume about seven ounces of water
every 15 or 20 minutes or so.
Now, as a little bit of a point,
while I also did not name it,
I also didn't do the research.
It's important to point out
that other scientists figured these things out.
I just read their papers
and made that derivation of their equation
to make it a little bit easier for us folks
who do not work on the metric system.
Okay, a couple of things.
First of all, I'm not 200 pounds,
but it doesn't matter how much I weigh
because the point is that the listener
should take their body weight in pounds
divided by 30 and just that number of ounces
in fluid every 15 minutes.
And then for those out there outside the US
that are accustomed to thinking in milliliters
and liters, not ounces and kilograms, not pounds,
what is the Galpin equation in the metric system?
This would be two milliliters per kilogram,
which again, if you were, let's say 200 pounds,
that's going to be something roughly like,
we'll call it 90 kilos.
And so if you did two milliliters per kilo,
you'd be something like 180 milliliters of fluid,
again, every 15 or 20 minutes.
Great.
And how should people ingest that fluid? And of course,
I would imagine it's through their mouth, I would hope. I hope. There are other orifices that
might suffice, but let's not go there. They're drinking that water consistently or is it every
15 minutes they slug it back? Does it matter? Okay. Yeah, that's very good. A handful of things.
In general, when you talk hydration,
the slower and steady, you can go the better.
In fact, the reason this two milliliters per kilogram
number came out is because a number of trials were run
when they looked at that every 15 minutes,
just one bolus of it in different derivations.
And it is pretty clear that the slower pace
one could do it the better.
So whether you're doing it every 10 minutes
or 15 or 20 minutes,
the reason we actually give that gap
is because you have to be also offset
a little bit of GI distress.
In fact, like kind of the four golden rules
of recovery, if you will,
we use sort of three R's.
You need to rebuild, rehydrate, and replenish.
What that really means is you need to have
a continuous glucose stream. You need to have a continuous amino acid
stream. You need to hydrate and you need to do all one, two, and three without disturbing your
gut too much. And so in this particular case, it was sort of found that we can hit that level in
general and be just fine for most people. So, I mean, a little bit of context,
the example we gave there in both cases, it's something like six to seven ounces
for 15 or 20 minutes. If you think about that, there's 16 ounces in a pound and most water
bottles, like if you go buy a water bottle at a store here, it's, they generally come in like
16 ounce bottles ish. So six or seven ounces is really like a third of a water bottle, maybe every 15 or 20 or so
minutes. So it's not some egregious amount of water that you have to slam down. Now, that is
influenced heavily by how hydrated you started the session with. So how hydrated you came in,
external factors like heat, humidity, temperature, things like that. But that gives you a rough idea
that, again, and these are numbers that
you would need to consume to optimize performance at the end of that then is when you would look
to see how much i lost like we talked about earlier and then add back that 125 percent
taking into account how much fluid you ingested so if you're 200 pounds and you drank a total of, say, a pound of water during the training,
and you started off at 200 and you finished at 198,
you actually lost three pounds, not two pounds, because you lost three.
You drank one during it, so your final net number is two.
So now you really need to drink back 125%
of that remaining two pounds, two and a half pounds,
something like that.
These numbers, especially that 125,
they're just rough guidelines.
Some actually papers suggest it's all the way up to 150%.
So it's just like an idea.
Don't measure out whether you need 5.5 ounces
or 6.2 ounces.
It just sort of gives you an idea of where
to start. All right. A few sips every 15 or 20 minutes is close enough. I've actually started
using the Galpin equation to determine how much fluid I need for mental work, given the now robust
data that are out there on the relationship between hydration and mental work. It's been
very effective for me.
And again, there are peer reviewed studies that support the idea that hydration is important for
proper mental clarity and energy and focus. And that even being slightly dehydrated can disrupt
that. But if one is drinking so much water that they're frequently going to the restroom and
can't comfortably focus on the work they're doing,
that's also an issue.
So that's very helpful.
What are the three most critical features of hydration?
And then I'd like to move on to some of the more particulars
about supplementation and nutrition.
Three parts.
Start hydrated.
Maintain hydration throughout.
Part three is hydrate post to fix it. Okay. We gave you the half ounce per
pound of body weight equation. So you start the training hydrated. We gave you the, you know,
two milliliters per kilogram slash body weight divided by 30 to stay hydrated. Then we gave you
the one 25%. Um, but I can actually just give you sort of, I'm giving you another list here, I'm sorry. But it is my five-step cheater guide for optimizing hydration for performance.
Step number one, drink a lot of water first thing in the morning.
This gets everything kickstarted, gets you going.
It also saves you from having to drink a bunch of water at night,
which is then going to compromise your sleep.
What's a lot?
Depending on how big you are, the general thing I'll tell people is,
like one of the very first things you should do throughout your day. You wake up,
go to the bathroom as you're consuming your sunlight, consume water. This is maybe chugging
a full glass. It's honestly what I do. It's not the best route, but I'll just get that going.
16 ounces or so is great. It's fine. If you're larger, um, you know, I'm, I'm 165 to 70 pounds,
depending on what's going on, maybe a little higher.
Sometimes if you're 225 pounds, maybe that number is 30 ounces, right? So you just sort of scale up
and down. And the only reason I say a lot is it just depends on, on what you're doing. And I also
should clarify, I don't really literally mean chug just like sips because the faster you drink water,
the faster it's going to expand blood volume, The faster it extends blood volume, the faster you get rid of it.
I don't think a lot of people know that.
Yeah.
Maybe this is clarifying.
This is also, we sort of talked about earlier, if you drink too much water, you'll dilute
the system.
Well, if you have a diluted system, your body's first reaction is to rid of water, to bring
total blood volume down, right?
Remember, if you were to go to a doctor and they looked at your total blood volume, they're like, man, you're five and a half liters.
You're going to be like, holy crap, you're going to be put on a diuretic because you don't want to
have a heart attack and a blood pressure. I wonder if people are drinking a 16 ounce glass of water
or other fluid all at once before going to sleep. And that's why they're waking up in the middle of
the night. Totally. Given what you just said, probably a better protocol would be to sip on a glass of water
in the final hour or two hours before sleep.
Generally, the number we say is three hours.
In the three hours preceding sleep,
you want to basically limit fluid intake to sipping as needed.
I think that's, I'm going to start that tonight
because I wake up generally once per night to use the bathroom.
And I do drink some fluids before I go to sleep mostly because I'm pretty thirsty at that time.
Yeah. Um, but I'm going to start sipping that water in the, uh, three hours heading into sleep.
Yeah. So you can actually pay attention to is, um, to go back. This is actually,
I love doing this stuff, but if you're waking up at night and you have a very dry mouth.
Not for me.
All right.
Because it can be one of two things. You might actually be dehydrated.
And so then the mistake people make is like, man, my mouth is so dry.
I keep getting up to drink water at night.
That makes you then pee too much.
What that also indicates is probably your mouth breathing.
So a lot of ways to fix people waking up and urinating too much at night is to
tape your mouth and or use a dilator over your nose. And then what happens is you don't feel
like you have a dry mouth. So you don't get up to consume any extra water throughout the night. So
that actually reduces your fluid intake. So you don't have the problem of actually now having too
much fluid to do it. And so there's another reasons why mouth taping can really, really help.
do it. And so there's another reasons why mouth taping can really, really help. If you are having those issues and or snoring, those are not benign. That's a really, like you really should get some
work on those. Something, you're not sleeping very well is the way I'll say it. It doesn't
necessarily mean something life-threatening, but it's not a good thing. So you're going to run kind
of your triaging things back and forth. So if you're like, I'm waking up to pee a lot, but my mouth isn't thirsty.
Okay, great.
Then you may actually have just a water consumption issue.
If it is, my mouth is dry, but I'm actually waking up and I'm having these large urinations,
then you're not actually dehydrated.
You're just breathing through your mouth.
If you're waking up and your mouth is dry and there's not a lot of pee there, then you
actually might actually legitimately be under hydrated.
So a little bit of a game you can play there.
Well, that's super informative.
I think that the point alone that gulping a bunch of water all at once is going to cause you to need to excrete that water soon after is a really important point. Also for people that are going to,
I don't know, give a talk or you don't want to have to get up to use the restroom. You have to
sit through a long meeting. Clearly I'm violating all these rules up until right now. I've been,
you know, not, I sort of follow the seagull approach to, to consuming fluids, just
in enormous volumes.
I'm going to start sipping fluids instead.
What are some of the other rules of hydration?
So you're going to wake up, you're going to start your day and start hydrated.
So you're consuming a larger percentage of your water earlier in the day.
Then you get all the performance enhancing effects of water and you don't have to worry about it compromising your sleep.
So that's step number one. Also, now you're going to start your session closer to hydration. All right,
great. Number two, eat mostly real whole foods. Why? Interesting. What you may or not have thought
about is a huge determinant of your hydration status is your food choices. If you look at
different foods, for example,
most fruit, watermelon, watermelon is like 95 plus percent water, right? Fantastic source.
Also, by the way, since we're here, it is not extremely high in carbohydrate. It's not
extremely high in sugar. It is by percentage, but since it is almost exclusively water you're eating,
it is not something that is extremely dangerous in terms of sugar. I, there alone, probably of all the things we've talked about in the six episodes,
that comment right there will probably blow the internet to pieces
and I'll probably get hate mail for life for it.
But from people throwing water, throwing watermelons.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh my gosh.
Well, I don't think the point is that sugar is necessarily bad.
I think the point is that for most people, they're ingesting too much sugar.
Most people. Yeah. And it's interesting. Oftentimes the people who are justifying the ingestion of sugar
are exactly the kind of people that should not ingest so much sugar. So there's a little bit of
a user bias. The point here is if you're eating whole real food, this is like now we're kind of
splitting hairs about those things. So morning hydration, consume food.
Now, important point here.
If you compare it to other foods,
like actually meat is a very high percentage of fluid,
depending on how well or long you've cooked it.
Remember you said earlier, we're 70% water, right?
So if you're eating meat,
you're getting actually a big chunk of water.
As you cook it, of course, you lose some of that.
But meat can be like, I wouldn't call it a hydrating food item,
but it is not as low as something like a biscuit, which can be actually like 10% water.
That's why it's like dry and dense, which doesn't mean it's bad for you. But there,
if you're eating highly processed foods, almost by association, that means they've been dehydrated
or partially, right? So you're just getting less total fluid intake. In addition, they have also been highly salted in general, right? So now we're in this position
where we're under hydrated and highly salted. Bad spot. If you now switch over to mostly,
again, just mostly whole real food-ish, whatever that means to you, then your hydration is going
to skyrocket. You're going to have a lot. So you're eating a ton of food. In fact, it should be
a large percentage of the fluid intake you have actually should be coming from
your food and you shouldn't have to be smashing water bottles after water bottle all day. In that
case though, you do need to add salt back. So we do see this a lot with people who try to make a
transition for maybe a suboptimal nutritional lifestyle and they give up a little bit of the
processed food and they come over and they start having problems because they're not actually consuming enough salt. So add that back. Easy
way to do that. You can use electrolytes and we could talk about those numbers if you want. If you
just salt your food that you're making, you know, to taste, that's going to get most people in a
pretty good spot. So start hydrated, consume hydrating foods. Step number two. Step number three, you want to pre-hydrate.
If you know you're going to do a workout session
and it's going to be hot and long or one of those things,
you want to look for that half a pound per body weight of ounces.
So that's the number we're looking for to start our hydration session.
We do that, we're pretty much taken care of.
And then, like I said, adjust depending on lifestyle,
humidity, and other factors like that.
You can use what is called the WUT system, W-U-T.
I think Bob Kennefick has done a ton of research
in this area.
If you want to read more, look up his research.
It is simply weight, urine, and thirst.
So in other words, check your body weight,
look at your urine color, and gauge your thirst. And actually, words, check your body weight, look at your urine color and gauge your
thirst. And actually you can use those three things and those can significantly predict actual
hydration status independent of actually measuring osmolology or anything like that. So those three
metrics alone are a pretty good indicator of where you're at. So you're going to have that normal
amount of water, plus or minus. If you miss that number for whatever reason, you get at. So you're going to have that normal amount of water plus or minus. If you miss that
number for whatever reason, you get distracted. The number we typically tell people is like
something like 400 to 500 milliliters of water in the hour preceding the training. All right.
So that's like 13 to 20 ounces. So like, you know, you're going to go work out at three o'clock.
It's two o'clock and you realize, oh man, I have not drank much water today. You don't need to go smash tons and tons and tons. Just look for something like that,
you know, call it a bottle of water, if you will. If that's not enough, if you're in a really tough
spot, you can do more like five to eight ounces, 15 or 20 minutes before exercise. You want to be
really careful about drinking a bunch of water
like in the seconds before exercise
because you're just going to feel a whole bunch of water
bouncing up and down in your stomach and nobody likes that.
So 1 to 300 milliliters, 15 or so 20 minutes before.
That assumes you're in this like 185 pound range-ish.
Again, if you're talking people of much larger size,
you may need to
increase those values accordingly. If you do all that, then you use the Galpin equation for your
intra-workout hydration, and you're in a pretty good spot. What you want to consume in that
is what I call sweat. What I mean by that is you don't actually want to necessarily consume water only during a workout.
You want to consume something that is isoosmotic to your blood. So something that is the same
concentration that you've lost in your sweat. So if you've done a sweat test, you would then drink
a fluid that is of the same osmolality. The short version of that,
something in the neighborhood of 200 to 400 milligrams of sodium.
Most electrolytes products are going to be something like that.
Now I know Element is 1,000 milligrams,
and it's a lot higher.
But most products that you're going to find are 250 to 400 milligrams.
And they're typically in the two to maybe up to three to one sodium to potassium range, right? Coconut water is actually cool. It's like basically the opposite.
Like a cup of coconut water, I think has something like 200 milligrams of sodium,
but like 600 milligrams of potassium. So like total spoiler alert, but we'll use coconut water,
a lot of hydration, just add a little pinch of salt because that'll bring the sodium way back up.
Yeah, one note about sodium.
Obviously, people who have prehypertension or hypertension
want to be careful with their sodium intake.
Anytime I've suggested that people might consider ingesting more sodium,
you know, it's like putting a target on your back.
And yet, the data are pretty good showing that if people are not getting enough sodium,
their mental clarity, their focus, their mental stamina, their physical stamina really suffers.
And then people argue, well, most of us are getting too much salt.
That often is true for people that are eating a lot of processed foods.
And not training.
And not training.
But for many people who are already sort of health conscious,
who are training, they're largely consuming,
or I should say they're consuming largely non-processed
or minimally processed foods.
And especially for folks who are not ingesting many carbohydrates
and are consuming caffeine.
Totally.
A lot of people don't know that carbohydrates hold water
and that makes it sound bad.
It's not necessarily that, you know,
you're going to get subcutaneous swelling of your body.
Now it's recovering.
It's bringing water into your system and it holds water.
So when you drop carbohydrates, starches in particular,
you urinate a lot more.
And when you drink caffeine,
you also urinate a lot more as you pointed out earlier.
So you start combining a few things like slightly lower carbohydrate or low carbohydrate eating really quote unquote
clean. You're not getting a lot of salt in your food and drinking caffeine and then exercising.
And then pretty soon those numbers that come along with, um, you know, a gram of sodium in
your electrolyte drink are not all that outrageous. And what you find is people feel
much, much better when they're getting enough sodium. And of course I should say that there's
no reason why someone has to ingest a supplement like Element or something. There are plenty of
other ways to bring sodium into your system. You use a pinch of pink salt or Himalayan salt or sea
salt, or even just table salt in water, or just making sure that you're salting your food enough. And I think that there too, salt appetite and salt taste is a pretty good guide.
If you taste something and it feels, it tastes really salty to you, that's an indication that
either it's really salty or your salt stores are kind of tapped off. You're okay. Whereas if you're
craving salt and you, and you're thinking, gosh, I really want to put salt on this already salty thing,
not necessarily, but oftentimes that means that you are salt deficient.
So salt appetite is a pretty hardwired set of neural circuits and hormones.
And I think we would all be wise to learn to tap into our kind of intuition about salt intake,
but of course also to measure your blood pressure, et cetera.
Yeah, of course.
If you think you have some sort of contraindication there
that work with a medical specialist without question,
those situations you laid out though were very real.
A lot of people are living like that.
And so it's important for those folks to understand
if you are going through symptoms, fatigue,
lack of focus, cognitive function,
performance isn't there,
then hey, like you may be undersalted.
And again, actually a good amount of blood chemistry work
can unravel that a lot.
And it can sort of tell you if you're running out of whack.
There are a number of folks who are extremely sensitive to sodium
in terms of health risk.
And that is a real thing.
Again, work with your individual folks on that.
I don't work with anyone for disease treatment or management at all.
I've said that probably four times. I'll say it six more times. I only take people who are healthy
and trying to make them perform at their best possible level. So it's actually funny you
mentioned that because I was going to give people my recommendation for sodium intake in general
throughout the day. And then I decided I'm not going to say that because all it's going to do
is make all the rest of the people who aren't coming to come after me for the watermelon comment
come after me for that. So I'll say that. Well, by the end of today's episode, the goal is that everyone's coming after you,
but also that everyone has learned something of value.
You've already given us tremendous insights and actionable information on creatine and hydration.
And along those lines, I'd love for you to tell us about some of the things that we can do with supplementation in order to enhance training by taking certain things before we train.
And I also have the question of how long before training should we start thinking about
supplying nutrients and supplements for the training session?
I'm not sure I've actually finished my fiber.
Maybe I wasn't clear enough about the last one.
So I just want to tie that bow and then we'll go to the next one.
Yeah, no, it was probably my fault.
So that, in addition to the Galpin equation in terms of amount,
I recommended roughly three to one sodium to potassium recommendation.
And I gave you some rough numbers for things like that.
I actually, in all honesty, use probably six to 10 different electrolyte companies,
depending on the situation. Some of them are really good. In the case, again, like Element,
what's nice about that is there's no carbohydrate. However, the downside is there's no carbohydrate.
So sometimes I want carbohydrates in the training because, as you mentioned,
there's significant evidence going back actually several decades on the benefit of carbohydrate during exercise.
So if you're in a situation where you're trying to, again, maximize actual exercise performance,
especially if it is either a long duration, so more than two hours, or extremely high intensity,
and this has to be well north of 100% of your VO2 max. In that situation, as we talked about in the
endurance episode, you can actually start having a decrement in performance
because of a drop of muscle glycogen.
Liver glycogen can start coming down.
If that's the case,
augmenting with the carbohydrates during the training
is going to enhance performance.
It's going to do what we call spare the liver.
And it's going to keep my second rule of my four,
which is maintain a glucose ingestion.
It's going to keep that going.
In general, what you're going to find is the number is like a five to nine percent glucose concentration in your fluid, which turns out to be like exactly the number that most sports drinks
have, as well as I think that's pretty much exactly what coconut water is. The downside of sports
drinks, since we're here, is they actually tend to be undersalted, and so they don't provide enough of them. If you look at the numbers, they're going to say
something like 60 to 100 grams of carbohydrate per hour is the target. And now if you're using
the sort of Galpin equation and you're splitting that up into 15 minute intervals, it's something
again like 20 or so grams of carbs per 15 to 20 minutes.
If you're doing, again, an hour long plus training about.
So admittedly, 100 grams is a bit much for some folks,
depending on your size.
So I would recommend starting in that 60 gram or so range,
again, per hour total is what you want to get to.
And only in the situation in which muscle glycogen depletion is becoming a limiting factor to
performance. So the other benefit of that is, as you mentioned, that actually drives water into the
cell. And so you're going to be in that nice sweet spot of you're actually keeping glucose going,
which is going to enhance performance, and you're helping hydration at the same time. So the other
little part that's important to pay attention to here is the type of carbohydrate matters. So you can use actually a whole combination of things called
resistant starches, which I will use for a long bouts of exercise. But in the middle of the workout,
you're going to want to focus on glucose and fructose, mostly glucose, typically at least a
two or three to one ratio of glucose to fructose. And the reason is those actually get into tissue
through separate transporters. And so what happens is once the glucose transporters get
full, you can't bring anything else in. However, since fructose comes in a separate route,
you can maximize total carbohydrate intake by using two different unique forms. There's a lot
of ways you can do this, but this is where the Momentous Fuel product specifically has that exactly in it.
So it's fantastic.
You can use food, no problem.
You can use a combination of things like honey and different easily absorbable and usable and things that you can actually maybe put in a drink to get away with.
So there's lots of routes for it, but you want to look in that sort
of combination of five to 9% roughly glucose for there. So you do need to train your gut.
So do not do anything. And there's a generally a good rule. Do not do anything in your competition
that you've never done in practice. So try these food items, try these amounts,
the carbohydrate numbers, try the sodium numbers, try the total amount of water. Start low, you can always increase. What you don't want to do is have to run out during the middle of your spin class and sprint to the bathroom and hope nobody's in your way, which in the lab we've seen, we'll just say accidents like that occur more than once. So just be careful of your stomach.
We'll just say accidents like that occur more than once.
So just be careful of your stomach.
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I realized I jumped the gun a little bit
asking about supplementation
for before, during, and after a workout
because what I neglected to ask about
was training in the fasted state.
This is something that we talked about
in an earlier episode,
but I think it's worth highlighting now.
Sometimes the best way to supplement,
if you will, a workout or pre-workout is ingesting nothing.
I'm one of these people.
I actually prefer to do my weight training somewhere between 7 and 8 a.m. each morning,
sometimes a little earlier, sometimes a little bit later.
I drink fluids, water, and I do ingest caffeine prior to those training days.
On days when I don't train, I do, as I often recommend people do,
delay my caffeine intake 90 to 120 minutes after waking.
But in any event, it's water and caffeine,
yerba mate or coffee or some sort of stimulant
for weight training workouts.
And generally not for cardiovascular training workouts,
although sometimes yes.
So I'm training fasted.
That said, I'm ingesting carbohydrate the night before
to make sure that I have glycogen stores
that are topped off.
And so it's fasted, but with that caveat.
What are your thoughts on training fasted?
And what I just described is fasted overnight,
but some people are training in the afternoon
and they may opt to not eat anything in
the, you know, two to four hours prior to training, or maybe even longer. I personally find that
caffeine hits my system a lot better when I'm fasted better, meaning it just seems to have more
of a potent effect. There are some reasons for that. And of course we dissuade people from
ingesting caffeine too late in the day because
they'll disrupt sleep. So I'm not saying fast for three hours, then drink caffeine, but who knows,
maybe that's in your protocol. The simple version of this question is what are your thoughts on
training fasted? And if people are going to train fasted, how should they modulate their fluid
intake? If at all, what happens with exercise? In the endurance and metabolism episode,
we walk through and the fact that
no matter what you're using for fuel,
carbohydrates or fat, or even other potential sources,
the end product of all of those is ATP, CO2 and water, right?
So you're trying to make ATP, that is the fuel for exercise.
Now, ATP is adenosine
triphosphate. So one, two, three phosphates on top of an adenosine. Well, what you may have
not put together is if you hydrolyze ATP and you break off one of those phosphates, you now have
ADP. If you do it again, you have AMP, adenosine monophosphate. If you do it one more time,
now you just have adenosine.
And if you have then, therefore, run through a lot of exercise,
burned a lot of energy,
you have increased the amount of adenosine that's floating around.
Now, if you have a high concentration of adenosine,
what's that going to make you want to do?
That's going to bind to certain receptors,
and we know when those receptors get bound to, you fall asleep.
Bingo.
Caffeine will competitively bind to those receptors.
Therefore, that's why caffeine stops you
from feeling like you want to go to sleep, right?
So we have a very clear relationship
between exercise fuel.
In fact, if you look at the literature,
there's a pretty clear relationship
between the more caloric expenditure in different sports and the higher amount of hours needed for sleep.
So there's a nice tie between how hard you're exercising, how much energy you're burning, how much you need to sleep, stimulants, which brings us all the way back to your question of fueling.
So do I need to fuel prior to my exercise bout?
If you're going to be limited in your exercise bout by fuel,
then fueling is necessary one way or the other.
If it is a type of training that is not,
then it's not going to matter.
And so the examples we gave,
if you're going to go do a 30-second bout of maximal exertion
and you're going to do it one time,
you don't need to worry about fueling at all.
We're eating within your workout because it's only 30 seconds. Yeah, you get 30 seconds. You don't need to worry about hydration post-exercise. You don't need to worry about recovery. Total
energy expenditure was nothing. If you're going to go, you know, you're going to go practice,
you're going to go to the driving range and practice your golf swing. You don't need to
worry about it. The total amount of energy expenditure is just not high.
In fact, in that case,
you might want to keep it somewhat low
because you want to keep blood glucose fairly even
and you don't want to bring it into the system.
You certainly wouldn't want to use stimulants, right?
Because you may get over exerted inside.
In all of these things,
we probably should have started off
our conversation with this.
In terms of macronutrients,
the total amount throughout the day
is more important generally
than the timing of them, which is why you can do things like have a bunch of carbohydrate at night,
not eat the next morning, and lift and be just fine. It doesn't matter that you didn't have
them in a few hours before. Your muscle glycogen is topped off. Your liver's glycogen is topped
off. You're absolutely fine. You have plenty of fuel.
Even if you were to wait a few more hours.
In fact, even if you were to do conditioning,
you're probably fine.
I have plenty of athletes that prefer to do many of their training sessions faster in the morning
for personal reasons, not because it enhances performance,
but if it doesn't enhance or harm it,
and it's a personal preference thing, fine.
If you're going to go do a session
though, where you're going to be really concerned with muscle glycogen depletion. And again, you can
go back that episode to learn of different types, uh, when those thresholds hits and what you worry
about, then a feeling would be important. You would either need to have something before the
session or consume it during the session. So one of the other things we'd like to say here is
recovery starts during the previous workout, right?
So if you're working out right now
and you optimize nutrition right now,
even if you don't necessarily need it
for the current workout,
if you can get ahead on recovery,
then you're gonna be fine the next day.
And the differentiation here
between carbohydrate and protein is important.
So the total amount of protein you ingest
throughout the day is probably a bigger determinant
for things like muscle growth than the timing.
So the post-exercise anabolic window,
it doesn't necessarily matter.
Carbohydrate is different.
The timing of that does matter.
It needs to be around and available
so you can maximize both hydration
and muscle glycogen resynthesis,
which is restoring the muscle glycogen you burn during
exercise. I also work with athletes that train multiple times a day. So in those particular cases,
recovery window is half what you normally have. So if you're in a situation where you have two
or three days before you work out again, you don't need to worry about getting carbohydrate
in before, during, or after. Because by the time you go to train again, you will have restored your
muscle glycogen levels easily. However, if you're training every day or twice
in a day, then the timing of carbohydrate really starts to matter. In that case, I see no reason
to not ingest those nutrients either before, during, or after. You don't need to necessarily
do it, but you can. The general rule of thumb I give is something like this. If you're doing something
where you're trying to really work hard, whether this is hypertrophy training or a lot of endurance,
energy expenditure is going to be high, potential muscle damage is high, and or energy utilization
is high. What you want to look for is a number, something in the area of like half a gram of carbohydrate per pound of body
weight. So you weigh 200 pounds. You want to make sure that either pre, mid or post or total,
you bring in a hundred grams of carbohydrate. It's just a very rough number to start.
Protein is about half of that. So it's about a quarter of your body weight, right? So those numbers would be,
if you're 200 pounds, make sure you have a hundred grams of carbs and 50 grams of protein.
And again, it doesn't necessarily have to be before or during or after,
and you'll be in a good spot. All you need to do then is alter, what I do, I should say,
is alter the amount of carbohydrate based on energy expenditure.
So a lower energy and easier workout, instead of having 100 grams of carbs, I might tack that down
to 75 or even 50 and be at a one-to-one carb protein ratio. If it was even harder, more sun,
hotter outside, more fluid loss, I might go from 100 grams of carbs up to 150 or 200,
get closer to like a three to one or four to one carbohydrate to protein ratio. So those are the
numbers that I generally go by. Well, as I take a sip of my double espresso Americano here, I'd
love for you to tell us about stimulants. Sure. There's no shortage of these in most of our lives.
And of course,
you can cover the health benefits of it later. Maybe you have an episode.
Yes, we have an episode on caffeine and it does have certain health benefits, although one has to use caffeine correctly in order to drive those.
So there's caffeine is the easy one to start with. And we won't belabor the point here.
The evidence is strong. It has an ergogenic effect. You can take it at
whatever dosage is reasonable for you. And of course, there is a bit of a learning curve there
such that obviously the more you take it, the more you need to take, even though there's actually
some recent evidence showing even folks who are acclimated to it will still see an ergogenic
benefit, even though if they don't feel a big boost of it. So typically that takes 30 to 45 minutes or so, but it's highly dependent upon the person. So some people can
smell coffee and immediately feel better. And that's probably working actually through a
different mechanism of anticipation, but you can take it there. The half-life of it is,
you know, four to six hours or something like that. It can totally depends on the person. So
don't let it ruin your sleep.
But if you take it prior to performance, it has a noticeable effect on particularly endurance.
Maximum strength, maybe less, well, quite clearly less so.
In fact, the data are mixed there
on whether it actually does anything for peak strength.
Although I think most people would suggest that,
you know, you're going to take it prior to trying to truly lift
as high as trying to, you know,
lift a one repetition max or similar.
But most of the documented effects
are on the endurance-based activities.
Yes.
So my read of the literature
in terms of performance-enhancing effects of caffeine
are that one to three milligrams,
I want to make sure that people hear the units correctly before people blitz themselves out with that caffeine,
one to three milligrams per kilogram of body weight
about 30 minutes prior to exercise
has a definite performance enhancing effect.
It also has a definite mental performance enhancing effect,
especially when people who are regular caffeine users
have abstained from caffeine for anywhere from two to 15 days.
And that's an extremely rare circumstance.
But even if they have not,
it appears that one to three milligrams per kilogram
of body weight of caffeine taken about,
again, it's not super precise as far as I can see,
about 30 minutes before the event starts can really enhance reaction time and power output as well as, as you mentioned, endurance.
When I was researching the caffeine episode, one interesting caveat that I discovered was that if people are not caffeine adapted, they are not regular users of caffeine.
People are not caffeine adapted.
They are not regular users of caffeine.
The sudden introduction of caffeine can really degrade performance,
mostly because people don't know how to operate
at that high level of autonomic arousal.
Have you ever observed that?
Yeah, 100%.
In fact, there's actually data going up
as high as 10 milligrams per kilogram of body weight.
Wow.
Which is, in fact, once you cross
the five milligram per kilogram threshold,
you will start seeing performance decrements. So there's absolutely such a thing of ruining
your performance with too much caffeine. So most people listening to this, if you're thinking,
wow, they said caffeine, I'm all in. And then you just stop listening. And now you go for your
quad espresso shot before your, every time you go to work out,
you probably are passing that threshold.
If you think about those numbers, one to three milligrams per kilogram body weight.
If you weigh 100 kilograms, that's 220 pounds.
That'd be something like two to 500 milligrams of caffeine,
which is like a pretty high amount.
But, you know, a coffee is going to get you close.
An espresso is going to get you somewhat in that ballpark,
depending on sources.
So you don't really need to go and blister your brain with caffeine.
In fact, if you do, it's quite common,
and in fact likely, that you'll actually make performance worse.
Right. Yeah, the amount of caffeine in different coffees and sodas, etc.,
of course, varies.
One thing that people ought to know is that the smallest of commercially available coffees and sodas, et cetera, of course varies. One thing that people ought to know is that
the smallest of commercially available coffees at the most popular commercial vendors
generally contain anywhere from 250 to 350 milligrams of caffeine. What that means is
that the so-called medium and the large contain as much as 500 milligrams or one gram of caffeine.
So for you morning large coffee at a commercial vendor drinkers, if you're wondering why you get a headache if you're 30 minutes late on that caffeine or if you can't access that caffeine at all or or even if you're drinking coffee, excuse me,
from another source,
you're finding like, oh, it's really not doing it for me.
It's because the amount of caffeine
in the now commercially sold coffees is exceedingly high.
It's about two or three times higher
than the standard lookup tables
that you'll see on the internet.
So I'm not saying that to demonize caffeine.
We can pretty quickly adapt to
and form a tolerance to caffeine.
Some people never really can get over the jitters.
Other people are just fine with even a thousand milligrams of caffeine,
but only because they've been drinking a lot of caffeine consistently.
Anyway, it's also wildly inconsistent from location to location,
the brew type, the functionality.
So yeah, that stuff can be very hard to figure out what's happening.
There's only one way really to objectively measure caffeine and that's use caffeine tablets and they work pretty well. Actually someone I know who's prominent in the
podcast space uses 100 to 200 milligrams of caffeine in tablet form combined with tea.
So they've now conditioned themselves to think that herbal tea
actually has this caffeinating effect, but tablet form caffeine, while I'm not recommending it to
outright, it is going to give you the best sense of how much caffeine you can tolerate and how much
is performance enhancing or is performance degrading. There's actually another line of
supplementation that we can go down here, which is not technically a stimulant,
but it's something I use to help performance
when you don't want caffeine.
And so this thing specifically,
if you're one of those folks who have to exercise at night
and you want a little bit of boost for your training,
but you don't want to have caffeine
because it messes up your sleep.
And this is when you can turn to the whole
like citrulline, arginine, nitric oxide sort of route.
And we'll skip the explanation there.
But effectively what happens is nitric oxide is this wonderful compound that causes vasodilation.
And of course, that's going to aid then in transporting nutrients in and out of the cell.
So it has an ergogenic effect.
You have a number of ways you can go about this.
Some of them have more pros and cons than others,
and there are more and more data coming out
specifically on citrulline more recently.
If you look though, in my opinion,
the most consistent evidence for the most consistent effect
is in the supplement of beetroot or beetroot juice
or extract or something like that.
So you can find those supplements and they tend to, again, they're pretty effective at
enhancing performance, specifically anything moderate to longer duration, endurance performance,
and they are not a stimulant, so they won't ruin your sleep that much.
One note of caution for those of you that are interested in citrulline or beetroot,
because they are in the arginine pathway, if you're somebody who has a predisposition to cold sores, oral cold sores,
that is, or other forms of cold sores that because activation of the arginine pathway can exacerbate
some of the neural related aspects of cold sores. And that's because the viruses that cause those
cold sores actually live on neurons. Then you want to be very cautious with citrulline, especially high dose citrulline.
I can really amplify that, the cold sore response. What about non-stimulant yet
focus enhancing supplements? Things like alpha GPC, for example. I routinely use 300 to 600 milligrams of alpha GPC
prior to hard physical training, typically weight training.
But occasionally I'll take 300 milligrams of alpha GPC
prior to a mental workout.
Less often these days,
because I kind of reserve it for physical training
and I don't tend to use it every day, maybe once every,
you know, third or fourth workout combined with caffeine. So that combination is pretty,
pretty potent, I find. And so technically, because it's a cholinergic agonist, it's not
a stimulant in the traditional sense, but it has a focusing and an alertness promoting
aspect to it. What are your thoughts on those sorts of compounds?
There's not much human exercise performance data on those.
There are certainly cognitive functioning tests on those.
So you're not going to find a lot of information,
though there isn't none.
We actually will use many of these substances.
You could globally call them nootropics,
which is any you know, any
substance that specifically will enhance brain function is a rough way to think about it.
We'll use them prior to more challenging bouts of training. This is something that we'll pull
out, say on the sparring day only, or the most important training session or a session when
you're trying to work on pitch command, or when you're trying to enhance, work work on your shot and as a basketball player or you're really trying to improve a certain swing
as a golfer or something like that but we do not use them every day we do not use them with every
person so yeah we will use those they are not stimulants but they can be performance enhancing
and another kind of way to think about this is if you're in the case of caloric restriction so
whether you're trying to lose weight
or we're actually trying to control weight
for weight purposes in terms of sports
where you have to be in a certain weight class
or something like that,
well, we may not be able to give you food.
In fact, we may not be able to give you stimulants
because of the sleep thing
or because we're already like maxed on a stimulants.
Now we can go this route.
And so you at least like mentally,
you're a little bit there and you're more likely to be alert and focused and you can train harder despite the fact
that we didn't actually change fuel. Now that's a little bit of a short game in terms of that's
not your permanent solution. You eventually need to bring calories up or, you know, whatever other
trains you're training or whatever you're going to do, but it can work in a nice short pinch.
I'm very interested to learn from you about fatigue reducers, and I'm hoping that Rhodiola rosea will come up in the conversation.
Yeah, great. Let's just start right there then. There's actually a lot of research on this,
despite most people not having heard of it. I think I mentioned in a previous episode,
I've used it a lot over many, many years. You have to be a little
bit careful of it. There's, well, first of all, no, we should have said this at the onset, no
supplement is a panacea, right? Nothing's going to work for everything. Rhodiola is no different.
It can have a number of effects. If you look across the literature, you're going to find
generally somewhere between a small benefit to little benefit, but not often is it detrimental with a few exceptions. I know
of a handful of papers that would be two specifically where it may actually reduce
muscular endurance. Okay, fine. If you think about what's happening is one of the benefits
that has been seen so far with rhodiola is it is helpful at managing cortisol. But cortisol suppression is not necessarily a good
thing. We talked about how if you do an acute bout of stress, cortisol will go way up. And that is a
sign of acute stress. However, a sign of long-term excessive stress is cortisol suppression. And so
this is a thing to be really careful of is if you're feeling down or lethargic or tired
and you think your adrenals are messed up and then you start taking cortisol modulators,
you could be making the problem worse because now your cortisol is actually suppressed.
And now you're taking these things to blunt it or keep it low. And you continue to feel lethargic
and lack of desire and libido and focus and sort of all these things. So cortisol is not a bad
thing. We want this to be going up and down
in the amounts that we want.
So if we're thinking about like, for example, waking up,
you would want generally something like a 50% reduction
in the first hour in terms of cortisol concentrations.
However, if you're extremely suppressed already,
going down is only gonna be a problem.
So rhodiola has a good evidence base to support
it for that. You'll see actually a number of studies that have looked at it in a whole host
of areas for benefits. So something good to do. The difficult part with rhodiola, to be quite
honest, is getting it from a high quality brand and source. It's difficult to get as a single
source, which is a very, very important thing
to do with supplements is try to get them sourced alone. Rhodiola typically comes in combination
with any other herbals or other stuff, you know, adrenal support and et cetera, et cetera.
Also then getting them then third-party certified, which for most folks is not necessary,
but for any athletes that need to go through drug testing systems, you should not take any
supplement at all
that does not have some sort of third-party certification.
So those are the challenges.
That being said, if you've ever ran into somebody who's taken rhodiola
and they're like, it didn't do anything for me, it's possible.
Nothing works for everyone.
It also could be just very poor quality sourcing.
So if you look at, there have been a number of papers on
its perception of fatigue and you've sort of mentioned that you felt pretty immediate effects
of taking it a few times. Yeah, I'm fairly sensitive to supplements, but I've started taking
rhodiola before workouts and found that I could push much harder, much longer through the workout. Normally I would,
or typically before taking it, that is in sessions where I did not take it, I would be able to work
out very hard for 20 minutes or so. The next 10 minutes I could get some workout put in,
the remaining period of time, it was kind of a tapering off. Now, granted, these are very intense training sessions.
These are not the endurance training sessions.
These are the weight training sessions
that one time per week per body part type sessions.
What I've noticed is I can complete the entire 60 minutes
with minimal fatigue now.
I mean, obviously I hit fatigues within sets
and of course, you remain human despite taking it,
but I found to be very useful and I've been using it whenever I use alpha GPC prior, prior to
workouts. And I've been impressed by, by it overall. I do want to highlight something that
you said, because I think it's so, so vitally important, which is that using single ingredient
formulations for most things is critical to figuring out what works for you,
what doesn't, what dosages you need,
being able to take things two on, one off,
two days on, one day off, for instance,
being able to increase dosage in the morning
and then maybe reduce the dosage
and combine with something else in the afternoon.
Single ingredient formulations
are pretty much the only way to do that.
There's perhaps only one supplement that I take at all,
and that's Athletic Greens,
as they've been a regular podcast sponsor for a long time,
that is a cocktail of many, many things.
And those are all adaptogens,
as well as some probiotics and vitamins and things like that.
So I'm not opposed to blends,
where the blends include a lot of nutrients that are synergistic.
But for all pill capsule-based supplements where I'm
looking for a very targeted effect and it's not just about foundational nutrition, I really believe
strongly that single ingredient formulations are the way that you can build a rational approach
to supplementation and also make adjustments if something isn't making you feel better and also
make adjustments if something's really working for you. So for instance, some people might take alpha GPC, 300 milligrams
and not feel anything, go up to 600 milligrams, not feel anything, maybe just feel kind of,
eh, they don't like it. Other people like myself took 300 milligrams of alpha GPC. The first time
I was like, wow, this really puts me in the zone, but I want to be really careful how often I use
it. I did mention, I go up to 600 milligrams occasionally,
but that really puts me on the outer threshold of kind of overall levels of focus and amped up
such that if I drink too much caffeine,
it can tilt me over the edge.
So I encourage people to become scientists of themselves.
And the only way to do that
is to try and limit the number of variables.
And the final point is that
I think that single ingredient formulations
are by far the best in terms of
changing things over time. You know, this could be women during their menstrual cycle might find
that during certain phases of the cycle, they're more sensitive to certain things than not others.
And for men and women, it may be that, you know, certain times of year even, and certain supplements
might go better closer to sleep, some earlier in the
day, and on and on and on. There's just no real way, in my opinion, to have a supplementation
protocol that involves lots and lots of blends. One or two blends, okay, but lots of blends,
I think that's, I actually think that's potentially dangerous territory.
Yeah, I mean, just take rhodiola as a good example. I know a new meta analysis came out just in the last few months looking at it and they found in general, you see
again, a slight to moderate improvement in everything from power output to fatigue resistant
antioxidant effects to endurance performance. So it's like, okay, great. Maybe there's a little
bit here. Now let's say you went to do it and the only way you could access rhodiola
is in combination with that and some lion's mane
and some other of these adaptogens.
And it's like, well, wait a minute.
I just wanted to take this to get a better workout.
But now it also came with this stimulant
or this cortisol suppressor or cortisol activator.
Well, now all of a sudden you can't take it at night
or you can't take it in the morning
because you already had coffee.
Your options are just way limited.
So I think the biggest part of all that is if something doesn't feel good, you have absolutely
no idea.
You don't know if it was a raviola.
You don't know if it was the boswellia that's in there.
You don't know if it was any of the other things that were smashed in there, or it could
be something as simple as the citric acid they use, like some other combination of thing.
And now here you are thinking that some supplement that actually works for you
doesn't, and you throw that out of your repertoire for the rest of your life,
which is not the biggest crime, but it's not needed,
and you're not really going to know.
So yeah, I fully stamped.
You can look back at my course lectures for the last decade,
and you will see like stamped number one
on the supplementless sections is make sure you're taking single ingredient supplements at all costs.
The last part about that too is you're more likely to ensure the amount that is on the label
is correct. So if you're taking rhodiola and it says, you know, it's a hundred milligrams in
there. And if that's the only thing that's in there, you're more likely than not to actually
get something close. Now they're never perfect, but it will be close. If it's in a combination
of 20 other things, you actually don't have any idea if that's in there. In fact, there have been
many papers on melatonin and vitamin D and a number of other supplements
in which when you actually just pull them off the shelf,
these are standard studies
where they would go in and buy,
I said like 20 to 25 different supplements
in the case of melatonin.
And then we'll actually measure
the amount of melatonin actually in them.
And despite the fact that the label says five milligrams,
they can be up to a 500 to a thousand fold
actual concentration in that supplement.
And then you wonder why some people react great to melatonin
and some people it absolutely destroys you.
And this is also why we'll see this constantly.
People will have like 500 times the upper limit of melatonin the morning after.
When the half-life is supposed to be more like 90 minutes,
it should be totally gone.
But we're seeing extremely high, I'm not even talking like double,
I'm talking 10, 20, 30x,
the upper limit range for melatonin the next morning.
And then it's like, well, what are you taking?
It's like, oh, I got this melatonin at X store
or X website.
And you're like, holy cow.
So I'm not opposed to melatonin theoretically,
but you have to be careful with that one in particular.
So any supplement has that to be true.
So you want to buy them from as many places as you can
that are high quality.
And if they are third-party tested,
even if you're not a performance athlete,
I want to stress this,
even if you're not a performance athlete,
third-party certified and tested supplements,
you're less likely to just get wildly high concentrations
or low concentrations of active ingredients.
And so relative to other ones who you might get for cheaper,
but you could be totally wrecking yourself
by getting 50 milligrams of melatonin every night
and not realizing it.
And so then of course the next morning
you drown yourself in caffeine
and then you can see what death cycle you're in now.
Yeah, and people can look for third-party certification
on the packaging.
And some websites will allow you to zoom in on the bottle beforehand. It's largely listed on,
on certain vendor websites, a brief point about supplement cost and blends. And I promise this will be a brief point, different ingredients, meaning different types of supplements have
widely varying costs in order to you know create to get
them to manufacture them so oftentimes what you'll find is that blends will include the least amount
of the most expensive ingredient right not always the case there are some there are certain
exceptions to this and i mentioned some blends that i like a few minutes ago that are for
foundational nutrition,
adaptogens and probiotics.
Athletic greens, of course,
just being one of several examples out there.
But when it comes to say a sleep blend
or a pre-workout blend,
there are some decent products out there,
but a lot of them tend to put in
more of the least expensive ingredients
and less of the ones that you're actively seeking.
And so those tend to be,
caffeine tends to be a kind of a buffer
against the other things.
Meaning if you pre-workout,
putting caffeine in there isn't necessarily a bad thing,
but if it has five other things in there,
oftentimes what manufacturers will cheat on
is the actual amount of the things that are costly.
So again, single ingredient formulations
for 80% of your supplements,
I think is really the way to go.
And the other thing that I know is gonna come up
as we're talking about all these supplements
is this issue of dependency.
I often get this question.
And when I solicited for questions on social media
in anticipation of this episode,
a number of people said,
okay, so if you take a sleep formulation,
do I need to take it every night?
If I don't take it,
will I have an incredibly hard time sleeping?
If I take a pre-workout every time I train,
will I need it?
It's a great question.
Some people will take supplement holidays,
as they may be called,
for a couple of days each week, back to back.
Some people take them straight through.
I myself take a sleep cocktail.
We've described this, it's magnesium, theanine and things.
This is not one ingredient.
These are multiple ingredients.
In fact, precisely because some people who have sleep,
walking and vivid dream issues
can't take theanine before bed.
In any case, I've had times
when I either forgot my supplements, that's rare,
or I just didn't have what I needed,
or just simply took a break for a night
and it was not a problem.
But in terms of pre-workout,
I do think that people become dependent
on being in that really ramped up state.
But I don't think we view all this as true dependency,
kind of like addiction.
Totally.
Right?
I mean, I define addiction as a progressive narrowing
of the things that bring you pleasure.
So, you know, I suppose people could get addicted
to pre-workout, but it seems a little unlikely.
More likely there would be a dependency
such that if you didn't have your pre-workout,
you might feel like, oh, you're not motivated to train.
So what are your thoughts on taking little holidays
from supplements and varying frequency of supplement intake
in particular as it relates to stimulants
and fatigue reducers?
The end goal, anytime I coach somebody, is to get them into a physiological state in which they
require no or close to no supplementation. That's the target. We should really be in a position to
where our lifestyle, our sunlight exposure, our stress management, our physical activity,
our sleep and our hydration,
and our whole food nutrition
provide us almost everything we need.
Now, look, again, there are some foundational items
that we can give people.
We've put together a little bundle actually for this,
basic things that you can go look at.
But that's the goal, right?
So the target is to let your physiology run the game.
Your physiology is way smarter than we are.
Even if I take a bunch of biomarkers from you,
your physiology still knows better
than those few markers can tell me.
So that's always where we're ending up.
I actually personally don't like people being in a position
that they have to take a supplement for anything.
So I don't like it if you have to take a supplement
to have a good night of sleep. I don't like it if you have to have a supplement to train. We will use any of
these stimulants very, very carefully with any of the athletes we work with, and certainly for the
non-athletes, because at least the athletes, we have an end date. We have a fight scheduled. We
have a season. We have a game you're going to pitch, whatever. When you don't have that, it's
sort of like you're in this endless cycle of, oh, you're just going to do that all day, every day. We don't really need
to be in that spot. So what I, the way that I describe my philosophy is I will use those short
term tactics to symptom manage if I have to. So if somebody comes to me and they're like, you're
feeling awful and we've got to get through the hump. Okay, great. Maybe we'll give you something
for sleep immediately to get you sleeping. That allows us to then come back and work on the causal
problem, right? So this is what is, why are you having a hard time sleeping anyways?
If you have to take a nine cocktail supplement to sleep, then all we're doing is blinding the
reason. Why are you in that position to begin with, right? So we see this all the time, whether
it is sleep problems, whether it is cortisol or testosterone, the question is,
well, why is that low? Now we may give you something again to manage it immediately, but
the task, the mystery I'm going to try to unveil is why, why is it there to begin with?
This could be something like this is natural for you and your lack of energy is something else,
or it could be actually it is not a natural level
for you, but something is suppressing it. Any number of, you've got some infection going on,
there's some allergic reaction to something in your environment, there's a, you know, mold,
mercury, like that one comes up a lot. You'll see mercury in folks and that's causing a lot
of problems. Or any number of heavy metals or toxins, any host of things, psychological distress,
bad daily habit. You don't ever see the sun,
like you don't ever sweat, you don't ever drink.
We was talking about so many things.
So I'm always going to hunt for that.
And I hate using this phrase.
It's highly maligned for a good reason, but root cause.
All right, so we're trying to find that.
It's like, are we making sure
that we're not causing this problem?
And I'm not going to want to give you a supplement to cover up something if we're not even trying to
solve the problem of what's being there. That being said, am I that concerned about people
taking a multivitamin just all throughout? No, not really. Am I concerned about people taking
creatine? No, like go ahead. Those ones are generally pretty fine to just take.
But anything else, I want a reason.
I really don't like giving people anything in a super physiological concentration
or a super food concentration, right?
So again, an amount you wouldn't find in a normal food dosage.
Unless we have really a specific reason.
Some of these things are more problematic.
Others are less problematic.
So to answer the question of dependency, reasons. Some of these things are more problematic. Others are less problematic. So when I
to answer the question of dependency, you have a combination of actual physiological dependency,
caffeine, like that actually creates a physiological dependency versus a emotional
or psychological dependency or just a I like drinking this. Like that's my habit. That's my
routine. There's a fancy scientific phrase for that, but it doesn't matter. So yeah, we want to get off that. And like, again, my personal philosophy is I don't want you
dependent upon anything. I want to create extremely resilient people and I want to create physiological
resilience. We actually have a fancy little algorithm we use to measure that in people.
And so we can actually calculate that number. And the goal of us is to push that number higher
so that we don't have to have anything. So many situations pop up in your real life that you're not going to have your supplement or you're not
going to have your routine or you're not going to have your journal or whatever. But also for the
long term, I don't want to create a situation in which this is a short term success that you have
to now do that the rest of your life. Now, let's just get out of the way. Let's fix the problem.
If we if there is something symptom management, that's real while we're actually searching for better foundational habits. The last thing I
want to say about this is if you're only covering symptom, you're really missing signal, right?
Which is if you're constantly tired throughout the day and all you're doing is giving yourself
a number of alpha GPCs and caffeines, et cetera, even though there's good literature.
Are you really just using that to allow your poor sleep hygiene to happen?
If they took those away, I bet you, you would actually start addressing your sleep
if that's the cause, right?
Or your stress or your poor hydration.
Like you would go hunting for the problem.
And so like you want to walk a fine line here of going like,
hey, look, is an athletic greens
supplement that big a deal no probably not but wait a minute am i actually now covering up the
pain point that is maybe needed it's a signal to actually get my ass in gear to go make one of
these changes um whatever it needs to be so i know i got like a little bit meta on you a little
bit philosophical but that's honestly how i approach it. Yeah. I think it's really important. A friend
of mine who's a physician has a great saying, um, which is better living through chemistry
still requires better living. Um, that's cool then. That's so good. You know, and it pertains
also to things like antidepressants and ADHD drugs and things of that sort. Most, all of those
things were developed as tools to allow people to move from a maladaptive state.
Okay, maladaptive is hard to define,
but think about in any domain of life,
you can either be back on your heels,
flat-footed or forward center of mass.
And there are times when people are so compromised
neurochemically that they need to use pharmacology
in order to get into a
flat-footed position.
They're really back on their heels, flat-footed or forward center or mass.
But the idea was always that those things were developed as things to allow people to
engage in the sorts of behaviors that can produce the same sorts of neurochemical shifts.
And if people are thinking, well, what sorts of behaviors can induce these neurochemical
shifts?
I'll just zoom out myself for a moment here and say, I am a big proponent. I believe you are as well, if I may, in doing behavioral tools first,
whenever possible, really establishing good habits, the do's and don'ts, which we've talked
a lot about in this series and in this episode, then excellent nutrition, which involves do's
and don'ts, volume, food choice, timing, all the factors.
And then also supplementation.
And also there's sometimes a case
for prescription drugs, certainly.
And often brain machine interface
or body machine interface, measuring stuff using devices.
But the foundation of behaviors and good nutrition
are really truly foundational.
And it's hard in anything to skip steps,
but supplements and prescription drugs are one place
where people often skip steps,
and then they don't actually learn how to cultivate
the best behavioral practices,
including the don'ts, as you mentioned.
And then just one more point along these lines,
you know, you talked about taking anything for energy is
really disruptive to the system. And it is because especially caffeine, while it has its uses and
even health benefits, it's really borrowing it's against the adenosine system with interest.
And so because caffeine acts as an adenosine antagonist effectively, while caffeine is present
in those receptors,
you don't feel as sleepy.
You have more energy.
Your reaction time goes down.
Memories, enhanced focus, performance of all kinds.
Yes, but then when that caffeine
is dislodged from the receptor,
then the adenosine can act even more potently
at those receptors.
So it's sort of like being able to borrow
against the normal variations in
wakefulness and sleep. And this is why we encourage people if they're not training first thing in the
morning to push their caffeine intake out about 90 to 120 minutes after waking. So they can clear
some of that adenosine in the morning, which tends to happen even after we wake up. People can listen
to episodes on master your sleep or perfect sleep or the caffeine episode to understand more about
that. But the final thing I just want to say here,
and then it prompts a question,
is in thinking about supplement protocols,
I think a lot of people assume
that once they start taking something,
they're going to have to take it all the time.
And one idea, perhaps,
is that people have some alpha-GPC around
that they could take.
And granted, it'd be great if people could try things
without having to buy a whole product.
I think companies hopefully are listening to this
and will give people a sample
to see if something works for them
and then give them an opportunity to try it,
to have things around,
but not necessarily assume
you're going to take it every time, right?
Some things you take every day,
foundational nutrition supplements, for instance. But then also to take it every time right some things you take every day foundational nutrition um supplements for instance but then also to take a look at how well you're eating or not eating
right at times when i'm eating much better i consuming you know low sugar fermented foods
which are great for the gut microbiome i consume less probiotics if ever i've been really compromised
for whatever reason then i will take pill form probiotics but i don't take those all the time
um because i get them from food and from certain green, you know, green strengths like athletic
greens and so forth. So I think that nutrition and supplementation are tethered in this way in
my mind. And I don't think that most people think of supplementation as something that where you can
induce a lot of variability in when and how you take them. But as far as I'm concerned, as long
as they're single ingredient formulations, you can use supplements once a week if you want.
You can use them seven days a week.
You could use them twice a day, four times a day, every day.
Or you could use them not at all.
Agreed?
Yeah.
Some of them will have an effect randomly like that.
Others will not.
And we talked about creatine being one of them. It's,
if you're going to take it once or so a week, then there's, I mean, basically.
No benefit. That's a very good point. Yeah, creatine.
Beta alanine is another fantastic example of something you need to take consistently
if you want some sort of benefit. It needs to be built up in muscle. We need to use that to create
carnosine, which is what's actually going to help us
with our fatigue management.
That's why we call it like an acid buffer.
So in our previous metabolism episode,
we talked about that being a major cause of fatigue.
The wonderful part,
one of the reasons why beta alanine works so effectively
is it blocks that buildup.
So that is an example of another one
that you would want to take.
Other things like fish oil,
you could certainly skip a day here and there.
It wouldn't be that big a deal. I also do support your comment of you can take absolutely none of these things and be just fine. In terms of, and we'll come back maybe to beta
alanine in a second. In terms of some other fun stuff, my colleague Greg Osicki ran a really
cool number of studies looking at how exercise actually alters the gut microbiome.
This is actually an area that I probably have 300 stool samples sitting in my freezer in my lab. Well, goodness, another reason to pause before entering your lab.
Yeah, another reason to not apply to come be one of my graduate students,
unless you want to deal with that. We actually have a number, we've applied for a couple of
grants to look more into this, specifically with females. So hopefully we can get that funded. But nonetheless, you can actually see some like
pretty traumatic, and I say that word on purpose, changes in the gut microbiome. This one in
particular study I was thinking of that Greg did is he looked at the changes pre, post and ultra
marathon. And even within a single bout of exercise, I can't remember the sum of the markers,
but I know one of the markers was specifically increased
by like 14,000% after a single bout of exercise.
Now, this is an ultramarathon.
This is like totally absurd amount of exercise
relative to what normal people would be,
but that number, I remember, it was like 14,229%
or like some random number like that.
Of something meaningful?
Yeah, something meaningful.
I can't remember which marker that was.
That had changed.
I know streptococcus was in there.
Streptococcus went up maybe something more like 30% or 40% or 50%.
The point is we haven't even had the proper time, and we don't,
to even launch into the gut microbiome.
Supplementation there needs to be ultra-specific.
You wouldn't be best served to just jump in and take random things there.
It's a whole area of emerging science.
We know very, very, very little about it,
but there is a number of actionable things one could do there.
So probably something to not mess with.
Would certainly work with a qualified physician
if you think you have something going on clinical or, you know, some actual problem there. Don't
work with someone who's not a specialist, a medical doctor there, but just randomly assigning
a bunch of probiotics or prebiotics without intention is maybe the next forefront of human
performance research, but we'll have to
maybe come back in a few years and dive into that in detail. Or perhaps you can bring somebody on
as an expert in that to discuss that. Yeah. Gut microbiome is fascinating. I think of sleep
as the most powerful performance enhancing activity. Of course you still have to do the
activity. I consider it foundational.
It basically raises the tide on mental health, physical health, performance of all kinds.
There's recent data that during sleep, your body goes through all its various forms of metabolism possible, which is amazing.
So it's measured from breath in human subjects, breath metabolites in human subjects. So obviously, if one is thinking about supplementation and wondering, okay, what's the best supplement to enhance performance?
You gave some great rationale for why creatine would be an excellent choice provided you're eating well and hydrating well.
And then to my mind, the next thing on the list would be anything that allows you to improve the
quality and maybe even the duration of your sleep. Although if you wake up and you feel
rested throughout the day and only need a short nap in the afternoon, not everyone needs one,
but then generally that means you're feeling okay. People sometimes get flipped onto this
idea that they have insomnia. Insomnia is excessive daytime sleepiness where you're
falling asleep during the day. That's insomnia. It could also be narcolepsy, but that's insomnia. Insomnia is excessive daytime sleepiness where you're falling asleep during the day. That's insomnia.
It could also be narcolepsy, but that's insomnia.
But supplementation to improve the quality
or duration of sleep or both
seems to me like the most direct route,
even though actually technically it's an indirect route
to performance enhancement.
And then thinking about things that increase alertness and stimulants and
fatigue reducers. Do you think that's a good logic? Yeah. We go to absurd lengths to dial
sleep in as much as we can. I mean, the honest answer is like truly absurd. This is a conflict
of interest that my company, I'm a part of this, Absolute Rest is the name of that company. We
actually go out to your house and run a full clinical grade sleep study in your bedroom on you and run that over multiple nights.
So instead of having to go to a sleep clinic and have it done in this weird hospital room or sort of setting with these people looking at you through a mirror, it's like totally creepy.
That is important because that's the only way to truly determine how you are sleeping.
Now, that said, the technology of wearable trackers is getting better. In fact, I would actually predict
those things will reach a level of accuracy equivalent to the PSG in the next couple of
years and probably will get FDA approval to be able to diagnose officially sleep disorders.
That's my total, my prediction from some inside information. I don't know that to be true,
but it is getting a lot better. Right now, those wearables are not accurate enough to meet that threshold. So what we do is
we bring out basically all the equipment to do that. So we'll come in and do that. Now, once we
understand exactly how you're sleeping, the next question is to answer, why are you sleeping that
way? And so this is a full fourfold system. Number one is we're going to look at biology,
which means we're going to take saliva and blood. And we're looking at everything from neurotransmitters, concentrations to vitamins,
B6, B12, et cetera, that are important for sleep performance. So we're going to see,
is that a physiological problem? Is there something happening? Is cortisol, DHEA ratio
that we've previously talked about, or is something like that off. If it's not physiology,
then we're going on the next one, which is environmental. We run a full environmental
scan of your bedroom during those nights of sleep that were there. And that's really important
because we can look at everything from dander and pollen and allergens that are in the air.
A quick tip here is wash your sheets at least once a week. One of the most common places that people get allergens in the air
is actually from accumulation on your sheets.
So if you clean those more often, you'll be in a better spot.
The next one there also is keep your...
I'm sorry, this hurts my heart.
I don't even...
In truthfulness, I violate this,
but keep your pets out of your bedroom
and certainly keep them off your bed.
Our ghost face killer is my dog, and Nelke's my other one.
They don't go on my bed, but they're right next to my bed, so we violate that one.
But full environmental scan includes all those things.
Of course, we measure light and temperature and humidity and everything else that's going on in the room.
Volatile organics that are coming out of the mattress, formaldehyde, lead out of the wall, like all of these things that could potentially
disrupt your sleep. And we want to make sure that none of those things are kicking on.
We see this constantly. People will have things like trying to be cool and they want to be cold
at night because that's important. And so they'll turn an air conditioner on or a fan, but the air
conditioner kicking on and off at night actually can shoot you out of various sleep stages.
So you want to be really careful about how it's going.
The last metric on that is actually CO2.
And so what you remember from our metabolism discussion
is when you exhale, you're breathing out CO2.
Well, if your room is closed and the ventilation isn't great,
the amount of CO2 in your room starts to build up.
And we actually very specifically know the threshold based on information collected from the International Space Station, actually.
We know the threshold at which CO2 crosses and starts disrupting sleep. So we want to make sure
that you're not sitting in this CO2 bath in front of your face and then breathing it back in and
disrupting your sleep. So environment is the second one. The third one is actually now psychology. So
one of the members on our team is a Harvard MD in psychiatry
and put together an entire sleep scan survey.
So we run through all that to see if there's anxiety, depression,
anything like that psychologically going on.
And then the fourth one there is if you have some sort of actual sleep pathology.
And so this, again, will include some eye-tracking stuff that we can use.
So we take all those data. they go back to our team.
We work in combination with Steve Lockie from Harvard,
who's done a ton of stuff. He actually set up a lot of the circadian rhythm stuff
in the International Space Station as well.
Himself, Jeffrey Drummer, an MD, PhD, etc.
And all these folks in the room go over your data,
identify what's going on, and then build action plans off of that.
Occasionally those action plans will include supplementation, but only if necessary. We're really going to try to come back
and work through a system to improve the sleep however is needed. So I realize that is not
totally accessible for a lot of people, but like if you really need to go to the end of the earth
to figure out sleep, that service is available. Absolute Rest sounds like an amazing tool, given that most people won't be able to use it
or access it, although we will provide a link in case people are interested in it and do want to
try it. You mentioned a few things that I think everyone should assay their sleeping environment
for and determine whether or not they are hindering their sleep
without realizing it. For instance, the air conditioning going on and off, or this could
be heater going on and off or central heating or cooling unit. This could be keeping the room dark.
This could be cleaning your sheets. Certainly that doesn't require that one sign up for absolute
rest. So cleaning one's sheets routinely, keeping pets out of the bedroom, as you admitted, you don't entirely.
Different opinions about that. But if you're having sleep issues, the dander from animals
may be part of those issues. And then one that I'll just add, which I think is pretty interesting,
is there's some beautiful data out of Michael Turman's lab at Columbia Medical School in New
York on negative ionization. And this sounds pretty wacky, kind of new agey. I'm sure some
of you are like negative ionization. But listen, the Turman lab is a serious laboratory focused on
circadian biology for many decades now. Negative ion concentrations are higher near coastal
locations. So if you've ever gone to the sea or gone on vacation and you sleep better near a body of water, that's actually a real thing.
And there are negative ionization machines, but there are also some things that one can do in order to increase the negative ion concentration in their sleeping environment that are nearly zero cost, if not zero cost.
You can look those up online, and we probably will do an entire episode about this in the future. But I think what you described for Absolute Rest really highlights
a more general set of themes that I think are really important, which is your sleep environment
is an environment. It's got a lot going on in it and it's worth running through the checklist
that you described and asking, you know, where are things, you know, maybe not optimized, but where
am I really getting in my own way
in terms of sleep?
All of this, again, being related to the fact
that getting excellent sleep consistently
will completely transform everything that you do
and not getting excellent sleep consistently,
which is a challenge for so, so many people,
will also transform everything that you do
and think and feel, but in the negative direction.
Yeah, I can also offer a few tips on sleep based on things we find most consistently
for those that can't go through the whole protocol.
One quick little actually app called Time Shifter is really cool for anyone that's
dealing with consistent travel and jet lag.
So you can go and enter your location, your time, where you're going, the location, and
then it'll actually back calculate and it'll give you full light, stimul time, where you're going, the location, and then it'll actually
back calculate, you know, give you full light, stimulant, food, hydration and stuff protocol,
and you just follow along with that. And we've used that for many years, actually,
especially when traveling to like Abu Dhabi for advice and Mongolia and, and Brazil for the
Olympics and sort of all over the place. So that's I think that app is still available. I hope so.
It's great.
A nice tool.
A couple of things we found major.
If you're dealing with acid reflux,
so if you're someone who has problems like that,
you can just elevate the head of your bed by like six inches.
So if you put a little piece of wood
or something underneath it,
you can also buy very inexpensive pillows
that can elevate that.
Now that's not solving the problem, but at least it can help you sleep,
whether it's just that night or if it's a consistent problem, you can do there.
If you're snoring, like I said, that's not really benign.
You should probably take a look at that.
Your first step there is mouth tape.
If that doesn't work, you can go through what's called myofunctional therapy,
which I don't know if you've covered that before,
but it's basically tongue exercises. And that can be quite effective specifically for people who have problems with
REM sleep. So myofunctional therapy, it's just a, it's kind of like you do, like, depending on the
protocol, some tongue exercises kind of in the morning, afternoon, or night. And that takes a
while, to be honest, you're probably going to need at least six weeks before you start seeing
anything. But that actually is pretty well demonstrated to help with sleep. So you can
probably Google, we could find a link for exact protocols. I don't want to describe all them, but
yeah, you're going to strengthen your tongue so that it stops falling in the back of your neck
and waking you up at night. So that's a really free, easy, free protocol to use. If you're
struggling with, it could be insomnia, but it could be just things
like when you get into bed, you're super tired and you can't fall asleep or things like that.
Kind of a basic rule of thumb we use is only two things happen in your bed. And if you can make
sure those are the only two things you do in your bed, the problems of falling asleep or insomnia
tend to go down. Those two things are you have sex and you sleep and nothing else goes down in your bed.
And so you can make that environment very special
and that can help quite effectively improve your ability to fall asleep
and then not wake up early.
So keeping that environment specific to what it's for can be effective.
The only other thing I would think of is,
and I hate to say this cause it's not super
practical, but it's just quite clear at this point, sleeping with a partner in your bed,
it's just not very good for sleep. So good luck with that one. I know, um, you can do a couple
of things if it helps. Uh, you can get two smaller beds and put them right next to each other. Um,
if you can actually have separate sheets, that alone can be helpful.
So if you get, even if you're on a king size bed or something, and again, I know some people, they're just like, there's no chance. But if you want to know the cost for your, like the
effective, end your relationship, lose your, use your loved one. Ideally, please don't,
please don't. Oh my goodness. So the only last thing I want to mention here
is something that's popped up just a few times recently,
but you're going to see more of,
which is called orthosomnia.
So that is a term that is,
people are growing concerned over,
which is wearables and sleep trackers causing sleep issues.
So people basically become too obsessed
with optimizing, maximizing
scores. And that alone, well, actually it's actually you, so you learn when to wake up.
And so you have actually a, an anticipatory response when many hours prior to waking up.
So if you actually learn to have a little bit of a, what's that little molecule of like excitement
and reward? Oh, dopamine. That's the one. If you start getting that, cause you wake up and you get
super excited to check your score or your phone, it's the same thing. If you check your phone or
Twitter or whatever, and immediately morning, that'll actually start carving back your wake
up time because you start launching it. So it can ruin sleep becoming too obsessed. So what I'll say
is if you're going to use a sleep tracker and you just like, don't care, you want to check it and
you have fun with it. Great. But if like you are really, really, really interested in it and you pay a lot of
attention to it, don't check your sleep score for at least the first 60 minutes after waking up.
And then, you know, that should help you. That's a great tool. I think that, um, and piece of
advice, I think generally, because I think a lot of people are waking up in the middle of the night,
checking their phone two or three times per night. I'm kind of wondering why they're doing that. And I'm guessing
it's this anticipatory wake up circuit. Yeah. You absolutely should use either your night mode or
do not disturb or airplane mode or something overnight or leave it out of the room. Yeah.
I mean, if you have to wake up and like some people have, um, like a family member who's
maybe not in great health and so they have to get their phone around in case they call or
things like that.
So I get it.
You're like,
I can't leave it out.
Leave it in there,
leave it in,
do not disturb and enter in their phone number or whoever's phone number.
So only they can get through it,
but keep it black and white.
So if you do have to look at your phone at night,
you see black and white and you do not have notifications.
So make sure that there's no notification for no email and a new DM,
like get all that stuff off your screen.
And so you look at the, did anybody call, did anybody text of importance? What time
is it? No emergency going on black and white. Okay. Right back to sleep. So that can help a
little bit. One of the supplements that I've found is extremely useful for being able to fall back
asleep. If I've woken up in the middle of the night and for some reason can't, and is also very effective for enhancing sleep
when one is ingesting fewer carbohydrates,
an issue that a lot of people run into.
Or for people that are fasting for many hours before sleep,
people are trying to not eat anything within two to four hours,
but is inositol, 900 milligrams of myo-inositol.
I find, again, this is anecdata to be clear,
that if I wake up in the middle of the night and I've taken 900 milligrams of inositol before
initially falling asleep, that I fall back asleep much more easily. So that's why I've added 900
milligrams of inositol to my so-called sleep stack. I've also tried just taking it alone and
it works well alone, but it works better, of course,
with the Mag3 and 8 Apigen and Thinian sleep stack.
Also in terms of tools for sleep,
the app Reverie that was developed by my colleague,
Dr. David Spiegel,
who is a medical doctor at Stanford Psychiatry,
Stanford School of Medicine Psychiatry.
There is a free trial.
There's a nominal cost if you use it month to month,
but the data are really strong that people that use that,
I think it's eight to 11 minutes sleep hypnosis once a week.
And it doesn't have to be in the middle of the night
when you wake up,
really helps improve people's ability to fall asleep quickly,
stay asleep, fall back asleep
if they wake up in the middle of the night. In some cases, curing insomnia. In other cases, really just helping
people with their general sleep issues. And I mentioned this because obviously it's a technology,
it's not a supplement, but I know that some people are supplement averse. Also, if you look at the
cost comparison between taking the sleep stack and the Reverie app app it's pennies on the dollar really um so again
i'm a proponent of both for myself but i realize that people have varying budgets and again i
should say as always behavioral tools first and i think of the reverie app as as more or less a
behavioral tool yeah it's uh it's really just a tool. Any of these breathwork protocols,
hypnosis protocols,
they're just a tool for you to
touch back in with your own physiology
rather than a substance that's coming in.
So I fully support those.
We have used a number of those in protocols.
There's some other tricks that we can pull in those areas.
I probably shouldn't say this,
but the reality of it is depending on what's keeping you up,
sometimes we recommend just getting up and getting it done.
Like if it's a really, like if it's a project or a thing or whatever,
like sometimes rather than laying there all night not sleeping,
you can get up, get it done, and then if you stay awake, fine.
At least the anxiety is gone.
Or sometimes you can actually go back to sleep
because you're like, especially if the task
only literally would take like 10 or 15 minutes.
It may ruin your sleep,
but you're going to have ruined sleep anyways.
So you can try that tool.
You don't want to pull that card very often
and you have to be very careful
with what you consider to be something worthy of doing that.
But that is like between me and you and nobody else here.
That's a tool I have used personally more than a few times
where it's just like I get an idea and I don't lose it
or like the solution for something you've been noodling on
for a long time pops in your head
and you're not wanting to forget it.
Just get up, get it done and get on with your day.
In several previous episodes,
you emphasized how exercise induces various adaptations
depending on the type, specificity, volume, intensity,
et cetera, of the exercise.
And that during exercise,
the degree of adaptation that one triggers
is often associated with things
that normally we don't associate
with exercise related health.
Things like huge increases in blood pressure during exercise, huge increases in inflammatory markers,
muscle damage, and these things all sound terrible. But as you beautifully explained,
all of that triggers adaptations that then bring those markers below the baseline
with which they were previous to the exercise.
So that's the adaptation and the recovery.
Within the realm of supplementation and nutrition,
I'm aware of a number of things,
some herbal, some lipid-based, other compounds
that are used for various things,
but that are known to have a potent anti-inflammatory effect.
Things like omega-3 fatty acids,
ashwagandha for its effect on cortisol,
although that's a bit indirect to the inflammatory pathway,
curcumin, and things of that sort.
Given that we want inflammation
in order to trigger the adaptation response to exercise,
and given that we want to reduce inflammation
in the recovery period,
can we put together a logical framework
as to when is best to take anything anti-inflammatory,
whether it's supplement-based or prescription
or over-the-counter drug,
and when to strictly avoid
taking any anti-inflammatory supplement
or a behavioral tool? You mentioned ice can reduce inflammation. That's
why you don't want to do it too close to exercise. Anyway, I think you get the gist of the question.
What about specific supplements related to inflammation and anti-inflammatory responses?
What are the best ones? When should we take them? When should we avoid taking them?
The way that I think about it is understanding what we call the fitness fatigue model so what i mean by that is whenever you do some sort of insult the whole idea
is for you to come back and get an adaptation now recovery is not adaptation right recover is
recovery adaptation is what happens after you're recovered right so it's a very important distinction
there fitness fatigue model says basically you've done something and you've got an adaptation and
you've enhanced fitness and by fitness in this case i mean it as a non-specific says basically you've done something and you've got an adaptation and you've enhanced fitness.
And by fitness, in this case, I mean it as a nonspecific term.
So you got stronger, you've improved your endurance,
like whatever thing you're trying to train for.
At the same time though, your fatigue elevated.
So what happens is if fitness increases at the same or similar rate as fatigue,
your performance actually isn't any better.
And so you may think, oh, my program isn't working.
I need to then train harder
or I need to take more anti-inflammatory
or whatever the things are.
When in reality, all you really need to do is reduce fatigue.
And if you do that, your performance will increase
and all the training adaptations will be actualized.
So the way that we do that is a couple of things. First and foremost is actually a taper. So the first step I think of if someone
is training very, very hard and you're not seeing any results and we want to think about
supplementation. Before I get there, I want to think about taper and deload. If you're actually
training hard and sleep and everything else is taken care of. So just without going too far into taper,
some general parameters there. You want to think about about a 50% reduction in training volume
over the course of about a week for every eight weeks of training. Super, super rough, right?
So if you've been training hard for three months for something, you might want to taper for two
weeks. Something like that, right? It's sort of a rough estimate. That taper, you might want to taper for two weeks, something like that, right?
It's sort of a rough estimate. That taper, you actually don't need to reduce intensity
because intensity is not the driver of fatigue. It tends to be volume. So as long as your volume
is reduced by 50%, you can maintain intensity. You can maintain, in fact, I generally would
recommend maintaining frequency. So if you're used to working out four days a week, keep it
four days a week. You can go down a little bit in frequency, but if you go down too much in frequency, you
actually tend to feel super lethargic. So I wouldn't do that. If you do those things correctly,
you can typically see somewhere between like a three to 8% improvement in performance
within a matter of days. So it's important to do that. We actually ran a study on cross-country runners years ago,
testing on a metabolic heart, muscle biopsies,
blood, a whole bunch of things.
And we did it pre and post three weeks of taper.
And we actually, this is cool
because we did this in competitive season.
So these were collegiate cross-country runners
and we got them to come to our lab
three weeks before their conference championship,
ran them all through a bunch of testing, biopsied them.
They went through their three week taper and then we biopsied them again. And then they went and ran their conference championship, ran them all through a bunch of testing, biopsied them. They went through their three-week taper,
and then we biopsied them again,
and then they went and ran their conference championships and stuff.
Well, what happened was they ended up hitting about a 50% reduction
because what they did is they took out what we call the junk volume.
So they kept their race tempos, high-intensity stuff in there.
They kept their recovery stuff,
and then that medium pace they just basically reduced.
Now, they were terrified, as any endurance runner or endurance athlete or participant would
understand. When you take volume away, they tend to get very nervous. And so they didn't like that.
But as a result of that, what we saw is their VO2 max, despite the fact that they covered half the
mileage, their VO2 max did not go down in three weeks of reduced taper. Your fitness is extremely
stable. And in fact, once we actually looked at their data, the enzymes in their muscle were
responsible for oxidative metabolism were maintained. And so you don't have to worry
about losing, again, fitness, or we're talking about overall performance, or even oxygen capacity,
mitochondrial function, etc. That was all preserved.
Obviously, we saw performance go up. What was actually really interesting is we saw,
I think it was around a 10% increase in type 2, which are fast twitch muscle fiber size.
So we saw a 10% increase in fast twitch fiber size at the end of three weeks of tapering.
switch fiber size at the end of three weeks of tapering. Now, what you may think is like, wow,
I guess tapering is anabolic, but that's probably not what happened. What realistically probably happened was their volume of training was actually causing their fibers to be reduced in size.
And then once we remove that fatigue, they just recovered back to normal. So that's a good example
of what I'm talking about. Once you remove
the fatigue, you can actually see enhancements in performance, not because you're necessarily
getting better, but because you're removing the stimuli that's suppressing you. So that being said,
the way that you want to think about recovery like this is, although recovery, especially like
injury recovery, like seems chaotic, biology is very organized. And there's a very specific three-step process
that you're gonna go through for recovery.
And then there are different supplements
that can help you in each of those three areas.
So area one is basically inflammation.
So this is when the cytokine storm comes rolling out.
It starts signaling the injuries there.
In this case, even if it's muscle damage,
it activates the immune system to kick on and that whole
repair process happens there.
What you're trying to do effectively, in fact this is why
you probably ever wonder, like why is inflammation a thing?
What you're trying to do is bring in fluid,
enhance the size and increase blood flow in so that you can get
nutrients for repair and immune cells and everything like that in the system
and get the waste out. So short termterm inflammation, even in the case of muscle
soreness is the example we talked about in the previous episode, but any inflammation,
it is part of the necessary process. That's why you would not want to take an anti-inflammatory
in that state. And so why you also would not want to do things like an ice bath.
So in that immediate inflammatory response time window, this is, you
know, seconds to hours after training, you would want to stay away from things like that. A good
option here are things like omega-3s. Good evidence somewhere in the neighborhood of like
two to five grams total, typically like a one-to-one EPA to DHA ratio is fine. Similarly, this is another example
of when good doesn't mean more is better.
Because for example,
there is actually evidence showing up to 15 grams
will harm the immune response.
And so you don't just want to be like,
man, I'm super sore, I'm training harder,
I'm just going to go to 10 grams a day
or more and more and more.
You're actually causing yourself more of a problem.
So antioxidants, anti-inflammatories are fine.
Again, omega-3s in that dosage are a decent thing.
You can also do something like 500 milligrams of curcumin three times a day.
That's going to be enough to keep you in a decent spot.
There are some other things that you could look up,
maybe some potential benefit for ginger and boswellia
and some things like that
for inflammation. But under, unless we're in like very specific circumstances where we have like an
injury, we're probably not going to those, you know, areas. I just wanted to highlight one thing
that came up in a previous episode. Some, not all people, but some, including myself, are very
sensitive to curcumin. It has a very potent effect in reducing DHT, dehydrotestosterone,
and leads to all sorts of clamping of testosterone-associated positive things.
So I have experienced that myself.
I've had people write to me and say,
I don't understand.
I started taking a supplement.
Curcumin is supposed to be a great anti-inflammatory. It flatlined my libido. It took away my drive and kind of wondering what's going
on there. Those people are very likely to be very DHT sensitive. Curcumin, while it's a potent
anti-inflammatory, can also potently reduce DHT, but some people tolerate it quite well and are
hearing this and probably think that's ridiculous. Well, it's certainly substantiated by the biochemical pathways that curcumin taps
into in the known roles of DHT on libido aggression,
power output,
et cetera,
and mood.
So just be wary that a,
there's no way to predict this.
One simply has to figure it out empirically,
meaning you have to try and see if you like it or don't.
The good news is,
is those negative effects on DHT
seem to reverse pretty quickly
after ceasing to take curcumin.
So just a mention of something
that came up in a previous episode,
but in case people didn't hear that segment,
just wanted to highlight those facts.
Further evidence, I strongly discourage,
strongly discourage taking anything
in the anti-inflammatory, antioxidant realm
unless you actually have a reason to do so. If you're waking up and you're like,
maybe I'm inflamed, that's probably not a good approach. Let's have a reason to do so.
Step two is actually what we call proliferation. And that's kind of like the cleanup crew. That's
when you're going to be going in there and cleaning out dead cells and debris and misfolded proteins and things like that. At this stage, a fantastic evidence-based supplement
is glutamine. Glutamine, 20 grams a day. We typically honestly split it up into two dosage,
10 grams morning, 10 grams night. It's a conditional amino acid, which means you can make
it, your body can make enough of it at times and other times you may want to support it.
you can make it, uh, your body can make enough of it at times and other times you may want to support it. Uh, generally those conditional times are things like burn victims, um, high stress
situations or injury, things like that. So, um, there isn't also like a ton of downside to
glutamine because it can go through, uh, transamination, which means your body can take
it and say like, we don't need anything here for our muscle recovery. Let's make it into something else and use it for whatever else is needed.
So it's kind of another one of these like low risk products.
It's honestly why you see it in a lot of recovery products.
If you're ever wondering like, what the heck is that in there?
I don't need amino acids.
And you're thinking it's like for protein synthesis.
It's really not.
It's because of this, it is beneficial to this proliferation process. I've been taking glutamine for years.
I tend to take it in higher dosages several times throughout the day if I'm ever feeling
particularly run down. I know there are decent data, not great, but decent data on the role of
glutamine for leaky gut. Totally. For off-sane leaky gut. That's getting a little bit into the realm of
not super well substantiated in the peer-reviewed literature, but a lot of anecdata and certainly
some peer-reviewed work, but not a ton. And then there is also growing interest in the idea that
glutamine, because it can trigger activation of the neurons in the gut
that signal to the dopamine pathway in the brain, that it can be used to offset sugar cravings.
This is kind of an interesting new and emerging theme, which makes sense given the biology of
the neurons in the gut that respond to specific amino acids, including glutamine, essential fatty
acids, and sugar. And because they respond to any and all three of those,
any one or combination of those, I should say,
to trigger this dopamine response.
Some people have taken to a teaspoon or so of glutamine
in some water or other drink a couple of times
throughout the day as a way to reduce their sugar cravings
because what it's essentially doing
is it's tricking the pathway into activation of those neurons through an alternate ligand receptor interaction.
Right. Also, another interesting point, there are very, I'm trying to think right now off the top
of my head, I can't think of a time, and I've used glutamine a lot, I can't think of a time
where I've ever heard anybody come back with any side effect reports.
I think if you take enough of it, you can get some gastric distress.
But of course, you take enough of any powdered substance mixed in water,
you're going to get a gastric distress response.
And what I've noticed about gastric distress with things like creatine, glutamine,
and even protein powders for that matter, I use a high quality whey protein powder routinely,
is that if you build up to it over the course of a few days, then you can get away with using much
higher dosages without any issue. Yeah, yeah. Beta alanine is the same thing, by the way. We sort of
talked about that earlier. If you've ever tried that and you're like, oh my gosh, like I feel
like I've just rolled around in grass and my skin is itching everywhere. Oh, it's that ants under the skin sensation?
Yeah, all that stuff.
You can just take a little bit of a lower dosage and be fine for the most part.
And then you will build up a tolerance to that pretty quickly.
So you can up that dosage along the way.
So what we will oftentimes do there is start at a dosage that's pretty minimal, like two grams.
And then every week or so, you can go up another gram until you get to
whatever final point you want to be five, six grams a day, you know, whatever. So that's another way
you can sort of mitigate that problem. So the third step in this recovery process, after inflammation,
proliferation, we're now into remodeling. And this is when you're actually, you know, quote unquote,
growing back bigger and stronger. This is where the majority of the repair is actually taking place.
And at this point, we're basically playing a micronutrient and macronutrient game, right? By that, I mean,
we've talked about basic macronutrients. One thing to pay attention to, oftentimes if people are hurt,
whether they had an injury or they've had just, they're super sore and they are concerned about
eating excess calories, they tend to want to eat less food during this process because they're super sore and they are concerned about eating excess calories.
They tend to want to eat less food during this process because they're like, I'm not working out so much, so I'm going to eat less calories. One of the things that you have to pay attention
to is injury can increase basal metabolic rate by up to 10%. So what you want to do in general
is just take your calories up about 10%. At least that's what I recommend.
If that is an extended period of time, then yes, you may put on a slight amount of body fat or something. But if that also means you come back some percentage faster, then it's worth the
exchange. So we recommend that. In terms of your carbohydrate or fat split, I'm not super worried
about it. My general recommendation is just don't make any major changes relative to what you were doing.
Right, keep yourself pretty much in the same spot.
In terms of protein, this is the big one.
You wanna make sure you are absolutely
at one gram per pound of body weight
because we need those amino acids to come in
and start helping with recovery.
One gram of protein per pound of body weight
or more or one gram? Or more. Yeah.
And there's going to be very little downside to having more. Remember, protein and carbohydrates
both stimulate insulin. And remember, insulin is anabolic. And so we're trying to drive this
process of recovery. That's why you want both. So you wouldn't want to skimp on carbohydrates in this phase, nor would you want to skimp on
protein because you need the activation, the drive into the tissue, as well as the structure.
Going back to one of our earlier conversations, and at this point in the week, I honestly can't
remember at all what episode we covered this in, but I gave an analogy about making a campfire
and using fat and carbohydrates as the wood and the log
and the protein were the metal structure.
So you need that supply.
If you've cleared out in the previous step,
damaged proteins,
and you need to make new ones to recover that process,
you have to have the raw supply and material.
So you wouldn't want to avoid either one of those things.
There's actually some indirect inflammation management
that comes from fatty acids, which you actually sort of
alluded to earlier. I don't think you need to necessarily go crazy. You don't need to
change your fat intake that much. Just don't drop it, you know, depending on where you're at. So
if you're a little bit of a higher carb, lower fat person, great. If you're moderate, great. If
you're the indirect, if you're higher fat, lower carb person, awesome. Just don't
make an extreme change and try to not be on the extremes of either one of those ratios. But
the only specific number to pay attention to, again, is that protein number. And if you go a
little bit high or even a lot high, it's totally fine. Just don't go low. So that's the macronutrient
portion of remodeling. In terms of micronutrients, to be honest,
you just get your bases covered. This is when a basic multivitamin is effective. What you're
really trying to look at here are vitamin A and zinc. They actually have independent mechanisms
that are helpful here, but those are typically covered in most multivitamins. So we generally
just give people a multivitamin. Magnesium actually has some benefits here,
something like six milligrams per kilogram of body weight
is the dosage you're looking for there.
Magnesium citrate probably has the most evidence
in terms of this respect,
but it doesn't mean,
I actually have no reason to think you couldn't use glycinate
or if you're using another form for sleep,
that's probably fine.
I don't know that
for sure, but I can't think of a reason why the other forms of magnesium would all of a sudden
not work. So you could probably choose whichever form you like. Albeit citrate has probably the
most research in this aspect. The only other things you would probably consider here,
three things. Calcium might be on your list,
particularly if you're trying to,
if you're concerned with some sort of bone injury and we've sort of gone past like recovery
and we're actually like into injury.
So you'll see that in recovery products occasionally
and that's why.
And then the last two ones, of course, are vitamin D
and that's pretty well researched.
And then the last one is actually something
that can help you if you're at this stage
and you still are dealing with a lot of soreness or not and that is tart cherry juice and that's
actually effective for both doms muscle injury muscle soreness and actually has another benefit
of potentially aiding with sleep so not a bad one to turn to as well and there's a number of
companies that make these things um yeah and then there's actually more ongoing research that i know
of on those areas but a promising literature we'll say. Not often, but every once in a while
on this podcast, I will solicit social media for questions from the audience,
or I should say the audience to be, and then ask some of those questions on the fly during the
podcast. I did this with Dr. Lex Friedman.
I'm going to do it with you.
Your goal is to answer each of these questions,
certainly not all of them,
thousands of them within the last couple of hours,
to answer each of these questions in three or four sentences.
I certainly won't be counting
the number of sentences that you speak.
So just know that if you want to go over a little bit,
that's fine. But feel free to refer to your Instagram site at a future time where you might go more in depth or to refer to a study. Or if you like, you can also say pass if you don't
think that you can answer the question succinctly enough for this format. And here, the goal is not
to put you on the spot. The goal is simply to allow the
audience to ask some questions directly. And I confess I'm looking at these for the first time.
So I'll try and be quick with my reading. Some of these we may have touched on in previous episodes
or in this episode even, in which case you can just kind of cue us to the reminder.
This is not directly related to supplementation, but it is related to nutrition.
And I don't think we touched on this directly. Can we do intermittent fasting, aka time-restricted
feeding, with keto and still gain muscle mass? TBD. I am quite clear such study does not exist.
So I don't know. I think i've alluded to before that we did run
an intermittent fasting 16-8 hypertrophy study there was no keto arm the results of that study
by the time this comes out we'll probably be ready though i'm not sure so i can't comment on i haven't
looked at the data but regarding whether if you did that with keto or not i can't comment scientifically
but regarding whether or not if you did that with keto or not,
I can't comment scientifically.
Do you ever prescribe the use of GABA supplements?
Well, I can't prescribe anything, just to make sure we're clear.
But you're a professor. You can profess.
I can profess.
We generally don't spend too much time on GABA, rarely.
Is it okay to weight train fasted and then not break the fast and eat for three or four hours
after training? So in other words, train fasted, I do this, but then also not eat immediately
following training and wait another three to four hours after training. Once we have our results from
our intermittent fasting study back, we will, we will have a better answer here. My general
recommendation as it stands now though, is as long as your total
protein intake is sufficient, you should be in a decent spot. Great. A lot of questions about
fasting and training, just to note that. Can you train high performance fasted and how long before
you need to refuel the body? Yeah, you can certainly do that.
I know of actually many athletes,
some athletes that will do that,
though the vast majority will not.
As it gets higher and higher in intensity and or duration,
it gets more challenging,
but it really does come down
to what you did the day before as well.
So if you ate sufficient calories the day before,
didn't train and your glycogen stores are topped off,
you have a fighting chance. Now,
the duration part of that equation is really kind of dependent upon you. So are you really talking
30, 45 minutes, 60 minutes? You're probably fine. And whether you're out past that in several hours,
you may not be. And then the only other comment I would make is there is keep in mind whenever
you think about fasting and any other, let's say against the textbook, you know, quote unquote style, you really, really need to
be careful in thinking the difference between can I do it? And is it optimal? So I have absolutely
no reason to think fasting like that would improve performance. I only work for the most part with
people who are trying to perform at the highest level possible. So I can't think of a scenario in which I would go to fasting to try to enhance performance.
So whether or not you can maintain some level of performance, probably.
Will it provide any benefit?
I struggle to find scenarios in which that would actually make you perform better.
How do different forms of carbohydrates impact performance?
And then right below it, another question about carbohydrates, which is, does carbohydrate cycling work? So these are two
questions from people that I think don't know one another, but a lot of questions about
carbohydrates and performance, which we've touched on. Anything else that you want to add to that
conversation? I don't think I really, maybe you might want to think about carb loading slash carb cycling.
So carbohydrate loading does help. However, a misconception there is it's just, you know,
a big bowl of pasta the night before. That can help top off storages, but really optimal
carbohydrate loading prior to a long duration endurance performance is probably best over the
course of three or four days. So you want to gradually increase carbohydrate intake for multiple days
rather than just have one big bowl of pasta.
Branch chain amino acids and essential amino acid supplementation.
Yay, nay, or as I would say, meh.
Meh, usually.
If your total protein intake is fine,
then you don't really have a need for them.
If you're, for whatever,
any number of valid reasons,
total protein is not,
then going to an essential amino acid would be my first step rather than a BCAA.
Now, admittedly, we actually do use
essential amino acids somewhat regularly
because it's also sort of like
there's no real harm other than
if you're price conscious and you're sort of
like I'm wasting money, that's fine. The people I work
with generally, again, that's not a few dollars
to maximize.
Recovery is not that big.
So we will sometimes use that
pre-mit or post-training in
some circumstances. Total protein
would be a high-quality whey,
something like that.
If you can't use whey for whatever reason,
there are plenty of high-quality vegan proteins you could use.
If you want to top all that off, though,
and add some essential amino acids,
it wouldn't hurt anything and may potentially help slightly.
So you choose based on that algorithm.
Ah, I was hoping somebody would ask this.
I touched on it a little bit.
It's a little bit of a loaded question
the way they phrased it.
So I'm at risk of leading the witness.
Does the mythical anabolic window really exist?
And I'm just laughing
because the way they pose the question,
they're already telling us what their stance is,
making it more effective as to create hypertrophy to eat within a certain time frame
after working out. I'm going to assume that this person genuinely wants to know whether or not the
anabolic window really exists or not, because they refer to it as mythical. I'm going to assume that
they're suspicious, but what's the deal? Is the anabolic window a real thing?
The post-exercise anabolic window is extremely real. So what this is, you can see more detail
in a number of videos on my YouTube page, I believe. It is the idea that you need to, must
consume some sort of nutrients, specifically, usually protein in some time domain, 30 or 60
minutes post-exercise in order to maximize growth.
So is that window real?
Yes.
Are you hypersensitized to nutrients in that timeframe?
Yes.
Is it very important that you rehydrate,
replenish muscle glycogen,
and rebuild tissue quickly after exercise
to maximize recovery?
Absolutely.
It's not real, though,
in the sense that you have to have it within 30 minutes. In the case of protein, as we talked about a second ago, your total protein intake
throughout the day is more important. Timing though for things like carbohydrate, especially
if you're training multiple times a day, it is very real. So it is a very real thing. It's just,
you may or may not actually care about it. It may not be important for your context.
Garlic seems like an appropriate
question. What, if any, functional roles does garlic have in performance? Garlic's actually
really cool. There's a number of things you can dive into that are outside of my three to four
sentences, considering I'm at like two and a half probably already. You're not going to find strong
human data on garlic extract. However, there is a little bit suggesting
it can actually enhance recovery from injury
or potentially tissue damage.
So you got to kind of be careful though,
because in order to understand what's happening,
you have to differentiate between innate
and adaptive recovery processes.
And when we say things like immunity,
realize friends, that's not one thing. That's
just like a very colloquial term for a number of things. Again, it's a verb, like it's a noun,
right? The immune system, but it immunity is a bunch of processes or processes. Um, if you're
about to correct my speech, I'll correct yours right back. Um, not yours, Andy, but the listeners
processes, but tomato, tomato. It's a verb.
Immunity is a verb.
This is my problem with immune boosters.
Same issue, right?
You're like, whoa, what are you boosting specifically?
Because in fact, if you're boosting the wrong part of immunity
during the wrong phase of recovery with garlic,
you may be actually hurting the process
because you are theoretically could be trying
to down-regulate that portion
so that you can up-regulate the next portion.
That's the faster way to say it, if you will.
So we actually, you may see more data come out
that says the garlic extract's overrated.
I don't know.
I actually don't even know yet.
We just don't have enough human data on it.
But yeah, there's some stuff there
if you want to look hard enough. I'm going to ask this question for myself
because I'm curious to know the answer. Selfish.
Tart cherry extract. Pretty effective actually for two things,
potentially aiding in sleep, getting to sleep, as well as muscle soreness. That's the bulk of
the research is in muscle soreness
and seems to be a moderate effect there.
I think for people that might be interested in dosages
of things like tart cherry extract, garlic, et cetera,
obviously Dr. Andy Galpin's Instagram and Twitter
are great places to ask questions like that
and to find answers to questions like that,
as well as examine.com as a terrific website.
They actually recently overhauled their entire website. So they have this human effect matrix
that shows the, the effects and the strength of different effects in human studies of many,
many different compounds relating to everything to, you know, hormone health in men and women,
sports performance, cognitive performance.
It doesn't cover everything,
but it certainly covers a lot with links to studies.
There's a lot that's available at completely zero cost.
By joining examine.com,
you can access some additional features.
And this is, by the way,
not a paid endorsement from examine.com.
I'm simply a longtime user of examine.com myself.
And so I just want to cue people to it. And again, many of the resources there are available
completely free of cost. It's a wonderful site. So for dosages of garlic, tart cherry extract,
and things of that sort, whether or not you're getting it from food or you're getting it from
extract powders, rather, All of that information is pretty nicely
laid out there. So unless you have something to add to that, I was just going to cue people to
that resource. No, I've been using that since the first day that website was launched. I was made
aware that it was coming. I've been fortunate to know those guys for a while. So yeah, I've used
it. I use it in all my classes i use it i don't even know probably
weekly at this point another nice feature that's actually on there is they have a series of like
they'll do some topical reviews basically so they'll write a big paper out on muscle damage
or blood pressure or testosterone testosterone enhancement or um hormone uh your menstrual cycle
and and yeah pcos i think they do one on and all kinds
of stuff so you can search by topic uh like you know energy or recovery or whatever or you can
search by you know black cumin seed extract or like whatever number of things you want to do
and i'll also tell you if there's any interactions to pay attention to so it's really really nice so
be careful if you're taking a and b or whatever. So yeah, it's wonderful, wonderful.
Yeah, they've done a marvelous job.
So thank you, examine.com.
Keep up the amazing work.
Well, we've come close to the end of this episode.
And that means that we're close to the end of this series
where you have so graciously joined us
for six full episodes of the Huberman Lab Podcast
to educate us on all things fitness. Episode one, you reviewed and
educated us on assessing our level of fitness. In fact, I learned so many ways of assessing
fitness that I had not thought about and also assessing my recovery capacity, for instance.
One thing that I'm definitely going to implement from that episode is a routine broad jump test and an in-home high jump, jump and touch test. If people don't know
what I'm referring to, that's all contained in that episode. It's time stamped. These are very
straightforward, zero cost ways to assess one's level of fitness. There are a few others that
require a bare minimum of technology,
like taking your pulse rate in very specific ways
at specific times.
Also some timing of mile runs
and some other things related to strength and hypertrophy
and on and on.
Really, it's a buffet of options that we can select from.
And I already know the four or five
that I've started implementing this week.
I've recognized how I'm pretty good in a couple of areas. I'm doing maybe, maybe better than pretty
well in one area, but that I'm doing abysmally poorly in a few areas that I just wasn't aware
of. And so I've already started taking on ways to adjust that over time and I'll keep people posted. So that first
episode was absolutely incredible and just provides so much actionable knowledge and the rationale
behind it. The second episode, you educated us about strength, speed, and hypertrophy training.
And there too, an immense amount of incredible knowledge. We got way down into the details.
incredible knowledge. We got way down into the details. You explained sets, reps, the rationale for sets, reps, rest, cadence, number of workouts per week. I'm definitely going to take away my
need to do some speed-based training and some power-based training. Normally, I think in terms
of strength or hypertrophy. And I'm relieved to learn that a lot of the speed and power-based
training, it's low intensity enough that it can
be done fairly often and incorporated into my program, which already touches on strength and
hypertrophy and indeed some endurance work as well. So amazing tips that you provided there.
I'm certainly going to implement the three to five program that you described,
three to five exercises done for three to five repetitions, three to five minutes between sets. You're doing
this three to five times per week and so on and so forth. All the details, again, timestamped
in the strength and hypertrophy episode show notes. So just incredible.
We even use that to set up PR with you this week.
That's right. I did PR this week. Thanks to your input and following that program.
And I'm really grateful for that. It does feel good to break through a barrier.
And I intend to break through more barriers, but not just with strength and hypertrophy,
because episode three, you taught us all about endurance, the four different forms of endurance,
how to train for each of those different forms. The value of doing even very brief 20 second
sprints or bouts of jumping jacks throughout the day, which to some people might just sound like a,
you know, like a little hack or a gimmick, but no, these are actually tapping into fuel systems and
modes of neuromuscular interactions that greatly aid other forms of endurance,
like long duration endurance. I would love to return to my high school mile time. I won't
reveal what that is because this is not really about me, but I plan to start doing, if not mile
repeats, then doing some mile runs and testing there once a week. You laid out a beautiful
program for how to do that. And then in the next episode, you wowed us again with a description of the science and the tools and this right down to
the details, but all laid out very cleanly and clearly as to how to design an optimal fitness
program. What are the things that really represent an optimal program? What questions does one have
to answer before designing a program? What are some of the barriers in the way this concept of
defenders as things that prevent you from reaching your goals? And some of the barriers in the way? This concept of defenders
as things that prevent you from reaching your goals.
And one of the key things,
I have it right here in front of me
that I took away from that episode
was this quadrant approach
of really thinking about and figuring out
how much one intends to devote to work, career, calling.
Let's make that one bin.
Relationships, another bin.
Fitness in the other bin and recovery in the other bin. And here we'll tip our hat to our good friend, Kenny Kane,
for mentioning that overall scheme for doing things. It's been immensely useful. And I've
actually charted it out and thought about and drawn out which different things fall into each
of these categories. You might think it's obvious. Okay, relationships, but that includes a lot of different things.
And there's crossover between these bins
in terms of how you can combine enhancing relationships
with fitness, work, recovery, and so on.
So that episode is just, again,
a treasure trove of knowledge.
And then in the next episode,
you educated us on recovery in all its forms
in the very short term within the workout,
immediately after the workout and from workout to workout, ways to really accelerate recovery,
assess recovery. And as you pointed out, for people like me who always assume that we don't
recover very well and that's some sort of character trait or nervous system thing or genetic,
to really think about how my training is impacting my level of recovery. And in doing so, it's revealed to me that I have far more capacity than I thought I had.
And already this week, I've managed to train more often, doing more work, and I feel better than
ever. And that's also despite the fact that we've spent a fair amount of time in these chairs across
from one another. It's a kind way to say it. Well, it's been a pleasure. And then in today's episode, you explained nutrition and supplementation
as it relates to performance. And of course, that touches into recovery, but also optimal
mental states for training, how to approach one's training and how to extract the most from training
through quality nutrition,
right? So what to eat and when, which carbohydrates, protein amounts, windows of opportunity,
windows you absolutely don't want to miss, and then some that are a bit more flexible.
And then we went deep into the weeds of magnesium, garlic, tart cherry extract, alpha GPC. We touched on neural transmitter related systems, hormone related
systems. We went deep into a discussion about sleep because of course, sleep is the foundation
for recovery and performance of all kinds, emotional, mental, and physical recovery and
performance. And in taking us through this enormous arc of a journey through fitness,
I think it's fair to say that you've given us your knowledge contained in your
head. I was telling someone just the other day that one of the things that I always lamented
in science is that I would encounter these incredible professors and scientists
and in other domains of life too. And you just wish there was some way to download their brain
because they had so much knowledge inside them. And I'm looking for a USB or USB-C port on you,
and I don't see one yet.
But what you've effectively done for us across these six episodes is to download the actionable
knowledge. And it's wonderful. The information you've provided is clear. It's super interesting.
It's highly, highly actionable. And in many cases, it's counterintuitive and surprising.
But once one understands the logic
behind it as you've provided for us also then it all makes sense in a way that's extremely
satisfying and extremely motivating so it's certainly motivating me to change the way that
I train in a number of ways and I promise that I'll report back to our audience and to you as to
what my results are but really as we both, this is not about me. This is not
about you. This is really about the people listening. And so for those of you listening,
I hope you can appreciate what an incredible gift it is to have somebody of Dr. Andy Galpin's
experience and drive and scholarly background who also works with athletes and everyday people just to splay out
all this knowledge for us systematically over six episodes. Dr. Andy Galpin, thank you ever so much.
I appreciate that far too kind of words to me there. If you've been following along through
this entire journey, as you called it, you know I like first principles thinking and I like lists. So I'm going to get you with one more list, and I got five
things on this final list. Get your pen and pad out, please. Number one, I want to really emphasize
science itself is a verb, which means it's ongoing and changing. I did my best over the course of these many, many, many hours
to provide my interpretation of the science,
to provide my practical knowledge and things that I use,
but that's fallible.
Science changes.
There are many, many things in my career
that I was very sure that the evidence was clear on,
and then it changed.
So as you move forward,
do not think of any of the recommendations I gave you,
whether they were about supplement dosages and timing,
rep ranges or breathing tactics, anything in between.
Just use them as guidelines.
So number one, science is a verb.
Number two, I really want to thank the audience.
This has been an extremely long haul.
Some of you have somehow, I'm sure,
which I'm not sure how,
but some of you have probably made it
through this entire journey
and listened to all six episodes.
And you should probably get some sort of
free Huberman Lab shirt or something
or a plaque or I don't know.
How about a Galpin plaque?
Ah, Galpin plaque.
How about an internet high five?
And even if you just dropped in for a few of the episodes, uh, you know, I appreciate you
taking the time. There's a lot of things you could be doing with your time and, uh, to make,
to spend those resources on my words is, uh, touching. Number three, uh, I want to actually
thank you, of course, Andrew and the whole team and the crew up here for three things.
Andrew and the whole team and the crew up here for three things.
Number one, I think it's incredibly important that you have gone out of your way
to give other people credit for their work.
You go out of your way on your large platforms and social media
to tag people to give scientists credit for their work.
Most people do not do that.
And that's something you don't have to do.
And I think that as a culture, I know why you do it.
You come from science.
That's just what you do.
You give people credit for their work,
but you go out of your way to do that.
And so I want to thank you for that.
The next one is many people
who have outlets and platforms
will try to fill those with people
who are going to grow their platforms.
It doesn't mean these people are wrong or bad,
but I think what's extremely special about what you've created here is, again, you have gone out of your way to bring on the direct source
of information. I can't even imagine how many of your podcast
guests have never been on a podcast before or have been on a very short number
of them. And you've made an extremely large platform doing nothing but talking about
super deep dork science directly from the scientists themselves and to create a community like that
it's um i'm so happy that science is is made it here and you've shown the world
people aren't stupid people want detail and people want science and you've given it to them
um and the last one, of course,
let's see if I can get through this,
is thank you for what you've done for me in my career.
I understand there could have been any number of people in this chair.
To put me on your platform once was incredibly gracious,
but to do it for 600 hours
for whatever we did in this series is,
I can't thank you enough for that
opportunity. So I hope I lived up to it and I had a tremendous time and then thank you for being
such a gracious host. Well, you more than exceeded, uh, expectations. You are absolutely the person
to be in this chair talking about these topics with me and for the world. And once again, I just want to say thank you as a colleague, as a public educator,
as an exercise scientist, and as a friend. If you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast,
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Thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion
about fitness, exercise, and performance
with Dr. Andy Galpin.
And as always, thank you for your interest in science.