Huberman Lab - LIVE EVENT Q&A: Dr. Andrew Huberman at the ICC Sydney Theatre
Episode Date: May 17, 2024Recently I had the pleasure of hosting a live event in Sydney, Australia. This event was part of a lecture series called The Brain Body Contract. My favorite part of the evening was the question and a...nswer period, where I had the opportunity to answer questions from the attendees of each event. Included here is the Q&A from our event at the ICC Sydney Theatre. Sign up to get notified about future events: https://www.hubermanlab.com/events Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Timestamps 00:00 Introduction 00:15 Live Event Recap: The Brain Body Contract 00:32 Sponsors: AG1 & Eight Sleep 03:30 Q&A Session Begins: Napping and Sleep Quality 06:34 The Power of the Placebo Effect 11:31 Entering Rest and Digest State: Techniques and Tools 15:35 Muscle Growth, Learning & the Brain 20:13 Hallucinogens: Personal Experiences & Clinical Insights 27:28 The Misunderstood Effects of MDMA 27:42 Exploring the Potential of MDMA in Clinical Settings 29:25 The Complex World of Psychedelics & Mental Health 30:07 Ketamine: From Misconception to Medical Use 31:53 The Fascinating Science of DMT 33:11 Supporting Science: Funding & Future Directions 34:48 The Gut-Brain Axis: A Key to Overall Health 40:41 Sleep Patterns and Chronotypes: Personalizing Rest 42:50 Addressing ADHD & Focus in the Modern World 49:27 Closing Remarks & Gratitude Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast,
where we 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.
Recently, the Huberman Lab Podcast hosted a live event
at the ICC Theater in Sydney, Australia.
The event was called the Brain-Body Contract
and featured a lecture
followed by a question and answer session with the audience. We wanted to called the Brain Body Contract and featured a lecture followed by a question
and answer session with the audience.
We wanted to make the question and answer session available
to everyone, regardless if you could attend.
I also would like to thank the sponsors for the event.
They are 8Sleep and AG1.
8Sleep makes smart mattress covers
with cooling, heating and sleep tracking capacity.
I've spoken many times before on this podcast
about the fact that sleep is the critical foundation
for mental health, physical health and performance.
Now, one of the key things
to getting the best possible night sleep
is to control the temperature of your sleeping environment.
And that's because in order to fall and stay deeply asleep,
your body temperature actually needs to drop
by about one to three degrees.
And in order to wake up feeling refreshed and alert,
your body temperature actually has to increase
by about one to three degrees. Eight Sleep mattress covers make it extremely easy to control the temperature of
your sleeping environment and thereby to control your core body temperature so that you fall and
stay deeply asleep and wake up feeling your absolute best. I've been sleeping on an Eight
Sleep mattress cover for about three years now, and it has completely transformed the quality
of my sleep for the better. Eight Sleep recently launched their newest generation
of pod cover, the Pod 4 Ultra.
The Pod 4 cover has improved cooling and heating capacity,
higher fidelity sleep tracking technology,
and the Pod 4 cover has snoring detection
that will automatically lift your head a few degrees
to improve airflow and stop your snoring.
If you'd like to try an Eight Sleep mattress cover,
you can go to eightsleep.com slash Huberman
to save $350 off their Pod 4 Ultra.
Eightsleep currently ships to the USA, Canada, UK,
select countries in the EU and Australia.
Again, that's eightsleep.com slash Huberman.
The other live event sponsor, AG1,
is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink
that also contains adaptogens
and other critical micronutrients.
I've been taking AG1 daily since 2012,
so I'm delighted that they decided to sponsor the live event.
I started taking AG1 and I still take AG1 once
or twice a day because it gives me vitamins and minerals
that I might not be getting enough of
from whole foods that I eat,
as well as adaptogens and micronutrients.
Those adaptogens and micronutrients are really critical
because even though I strive to eat most of my foods
from unprocessed or minimally processed whole foods,
it's often hard to do so,
especially when I'm traveling and especially when I'm busy.
So by drinking a packet of AG1 in the morning
and oftentimes also again in the afternoon or evening,
I'm ensuring that I'm getting everything I need.
I'm covering all of my foundational nutritional needs.
And I, like so many other people that take AG1 regularly,
just report feeling better.
And that shouldn't be surprising
because it supports gut health.
And of course, gut health supports immune system health
and brain health.
And it's supporting a ton of different cellular
and organ processes that all interact with one another.
So while certain supplements are really directed
towards one specific outcome,
like sleeping better or being more alert, AG1 really is foundational nutritional support.
It's really designed to support all of the systems of your brain and body that relate
to mental health and physical health. If you'd like to try AG1, you can go to
drinkag1.com slash Huberman to claim a special offer. They'll give you five free travel packs
with your order, plus a year supply of vitamin D3K2.
Again, that's drinkag1.com slash Huberman.
And now for the live event at the ICC theater
in Sydney, Australia. Does having an afternoon sleep affect your quality of sleep at night? Great question.
I can keep this one pretty brief. We just recorded a six episode series that will be
aired later this year with the one and only Mighty Matt Walker, who wrote the marvelous book Why We Sleep. And we went into this topic in depth. The
business of naps is the following. Keep them shorter than 90 minutes so you don't disrupt
your nighttime sleep. Don't do them at all if it disrupts your nighttime sleep. So if
you're somebody for whom even 10 minutes of napping disrupts your nighttime sleep, don't do that.
If you're somebody who wakes up from naps feeling groggy, that's what's called sleep inertia.
This is what gave rise to the ever-famous napuccino of having some coffee and then taking a nap or an espresso and then taking a nap. Again I
get obsessed with nomenclature why didn't they call it espresso nap I don't
know. Naps are wonderful if they're shorter than 90 minutes don't interfere
with nighttime sleep but I in particular am a big fan of as many of you know
this business of non-sleep deep rest, of putting the body into what?
Body still, mind awake.
And we know, based on several studies
from the University of Copenhagen,
that that actually replenishes levels of dopamine
in certain key areas of the brain
that restore mental and physical vigor
and do not disrupt nighttime sleep,
but rather enhance one's ability to fall and stay asleep
or to fall back asleep.
So not only are these states of body still mind awake,
very beneficial it seems,
or I should say perhaps for creativity,
because that was all anechid data,
but we know from real data,
from laboratory data on many subjects,
peer reviewed, et cetera, that body still, mind alert,
is actually an effective means to improve one's sleep
and perhaps even make up for sleep that one has lost.
So I encourage you, if you're a napper, great.
And if you have challenges with sleep,
in any way that you think might be
related to your napping activity that you consider
short 10 minute or maybe 20 minute non-sleep deep rest protocols.
By the way, they're completely zero cost and very soon
we will be releasing to our YouTube clips channel
a 10-minute, 20-minute and 30-minute non-sleep deep rest
protocol that I've narrated. If you don't like my voice, we can, there are many out
there of more pleasant voices. But what might be a particular interest
to you
is that the visual is of the beautiful sunrise over Sydney.
So it'll bring you home as well.
Sunrises here are absolutely spectacular.
Do you believe in the placebo effect?
Absolutely, and there's probably a joke there,
but I can't come up with it on the fly.
How would I know if it's real?
Like, something like that.
So the placebo effect is real. Our belief about what we've taken or what is happening to us has a powerful effect on our
physiology. It's not purely psychological. The whole business of psychosomatic, even that word,
is starting to fall away as we start to understand that our beliefs have a powerful effect on what happens to us
physiologically. So much so that for instance my colleague Ali Crum, a tenured
professor at Stanford's Department of Psychology who's been a guest on the
podcast who studies mindsets, has done beautiful experiments on stress showing
that if you watch a short video about stress and you learn all the terrible things that stress can do to your cognition, your
sleep, and your well-being, well that indeed that happens. And that if you watch
a short video about how stress can be performance enhancing by sharpening your
mental acuity or access to particular memory stores, etc., that indeed that
happens. So-called belief effects. Why belief effects and not
placebo effects? Well placebo effects tend to be more general. Belief effects
tend to be around specific types of information. But the placebo effect has
recently been shown to extend to a dose dependent placebo effect. One of the more
remarkable papers I think published in the last few years most people are unaware of, I talked about this in a
journal club episode of the Human Lab podcast with the one and only Peter Atiyah,
described a paper where people took either zero, I believe it was 0.25
milligrams, half a milligram or a gram of nicotine, which is known to be a cognitive enhancer. Please don't smoke, dip, huff or snuff nicotine that's cancerous in
those forms, but and taking nicotine can increase blood pressure, vasoconstriction,
etc. But nicotine is a cognitive enhancer. It is a cognitive enhancer and I can't
help but tell you one story about this before I get back to placebo effect.
Don't worry, I always make my way back.
You can see why living with me as a child was so challenging.
Nicotine, I was told by a very, very famous Nobel laureate member of the neuroscience
community because I visited his office.
I won't tell you who it is, at
Columbia University. I met with him and he was telling me about what he studies
but I noticed he chewed no fewer than six pieces of Nicorette during the course
of that conversation and I had to just stop him at one point and say why are
you consuming all this nicotine and he said well it's what's going to allow me
to stave off Parkinson's and Alzheimer's of course and I don't want to smoke and I said
really and he said yeah there's some evidence that keeping levels of
neuromodulators like dopamine acetylcholine elevated despite the
increases in blood pressure that are caused by consuming nicotine may indeed
offset Parkinson's and Alzheimer's I'm not telling you this as a clinical trial, I'm telling you this as anic data. He is a
Nobel Prize winner, he's still very very sharp in his 80s. The point here is that
in a study of nicotine and cognition, where people's cognition is indeed
enhanced by nicotine, everybody knows that and agrees upon that, people who
were told they had a higher dose of nicotine performed better in
this cognitive task when in fact they consumed zero. And people who performed
moderately who were then told that they had consumed a higher dose of nicotine
performed better than those that simply consumed the moderate dose and were told
they had a moderate dose. In other words, everyone gets the same dose,
either zero or moderate, but depending on what you're told,
your performance changes accordingly.
And that's cool, but what's really cool about the study
is they actually recorded from brain centers
of these individuals and the levels of activity
in particular areas of the brain that are relevant
for cognition changed according to what the people believe. So there you go.
Placebo effect is changing neural activity. It's not all just through what
you think is happening. What you think is happening is the reflection of neural
activity and then you go well of course. But I think it's an important study. So I
believe in the placebo effect and it it is dose dependent. And that raises all sorts of scary concerns
about the placebo effect, but it's also pretty darn cool.
Because what it means is that our belief system,
including our understanding of the mechanisms
that are likely driving certain effects of drugs,
or protocols, or what have you,
is going to play a powerful role
in whether or not we get
the effect that we want. And perhaps that's the most important thing,
provided that you're going about it safely. How do I enter the rest and digest
state and exit my constant fight-or-flight state? Well, the fastest way is going to
be physiological size, probably repeated two or three times in a row if you don't
experience that. The first time, the second would be to combine that with
panoramic vision. I must say, and I don't want to sound like a repeating
record here, but there are certain things that if we're not doing on a regular
basis, our nervous system is just going to idle at a higher, let's just call it
autonomic RPM, which is not real science language, but if you've ever
felt wired and tired from lack of sleep,
you know what this is about. The key thing is to get enough sleep each night.
You know, so much so that I think we can safely say that stress is not bad for us
provided you sleep well at night. Now the challenge is for most people, including
myself, if you stress a lot, sleep doesn't come easily or you wake from sleep in the middle of the night. And here again is where zero cost behavioral protocols are truly, in my
opinion, unless there's some dire clinical need, the most effective and
best practice. And this non-sleep deep rest, which by the way is indeed a
renaming or a partial renaming of yoga nidra which
stands for yoga sleep and again I have tremendous reverence for the yogic
traditions it's just that I had to make a decision a few years ago when I'd been
introduced to yoga nidra in 2015 I was down at a trauma treatment center an
addiction treatment center in Florida run by a friend of mine essentially
observing what they were doing with these addicts that couldn't recover no matter what their effort and
they were able to recover to get sober and stay sober and people were getting
over other sorts of traumas through the use of many protocols of course talk
therapy etc but they would start their day with 30 minutes to an hour of
yoga nidra and I thought what's yoga nidra I learned it's's yoga sleep, you lie down, you do a self-directed relaxation,
it also involves intentions, etc. And I thought this is really powerful and I
spent a lot of time in my laboratory working on it and understanding it and
there are other studies as well that now explain how these states of keeping the
mind active while the body is still as a self-directed practice is immensely
powerful for a number of reasons.
And the reason I decided to call it non-sleep deep rest,
NSDR, was not to rob it of the official name of yoga nidra,
but because unfortunately, names like yoga nidra
or proprietary names or things,
when we name protocols after people,
it acts as a separator. It
often deters people from trying things because it sounds esoteric. So I went with a description of the thing
that relates to what the thing is supposed to do, non-sleep, deep rest, or what it's all about. So,
you know, I actively avoided calling it Huberman breathing or something like that because that's not my interest. My interest is in people using these tools
and I have taken some heat for that one. I'm not interested in it was not an
attempt to appropriate something. It was really an attempt to just try and
distribute valuable tools because I see a lot of suffering and it seems like a
useful thing to do. So I would encourage anyone that feels like they enter a
stressed state too much to learn self-directed
relaxation first and foremost.
So do NSDR anywhere from three to five times a week, 10 minutes a day as a zero cost tool
as a way to be able to better access better sleep at night.
And then if the fight or flight state persists, then of course things like physiological size,
etc. should be
incorporated. And then of course, of course, of course, I believe in modern
medicine there are excellent pharmaceutical tools, prescription drugs
that can be used for that, but of course there's the intermediate stuff, things
like theanine and magnesium, that you know for all the world can be useful in
some context, but they're not the be-all end-all. You know, as much as I might
reference supplements on the podcast from time to time, I don, but they're not the be-all end-all. You know, as much as I might reference supplements on the podcast from time to time,
I don't think they're the place to start.
I think one should always use behavioral tools first, and I've said this many times before,
but I think it's worth saying again.
Our muscles need rest days from the gym in order to grow back stronger. Yes, definitely true.
Is the brain designed to be consistently learning and developing, or does it need periods of rest from consuming new information or is the rest
when we sleep? Great questions. Thank you, Timothy. Yes indeed, our muscles get
stronger, grow after a proper stimulus is applied to them in the time after we
provide that stimulus, which typically is resistance, but since not everyone's
interested in that, it's also the case that an endurance adaptation occurs
after we embark on the run, the hike, the swim, etc. There's something kind of
interesting, and I just want to take a moment and just mention that there's
something kind of interesting about resistance training, is that's the one
form of training that because of the
enhanced blood flow to the muscles while we do it gives us a window into what the
adaptation might look like once it occurs if we allow proper rest whereas
with endurance training it's very different right you go further and or
you run up a hill until your legs burn and you want to vomit up a lung and then
the next time you do it you don't feel quite as bad right the adaptation
Occurs of course in a very similar way to resistance training different mechanisms, but there's a delay in adaptation you get better
It's just that with resistance training. You can kind of sense the change before the change occurs
Because of the enhanced blood flow the muscles with training, you sense the limit of your ability
and then you exceed that limit subsequently.
Now in terms of cognitive learning,
the same thing is basically true.
If you wanna get really technical about it,
the computational biology, the modeling of this says that
if you wanna learn something,
probably setting the difficulty of what you're trying
to learn to about 85%
correct trials, 15% error trials is probably ideal. What does that mean? It
means if you're trying to learn a new piano piece, you know, or you're trying to
teach that to a child, if they're not starting from scratch, let them play
something that they know pretty well and then introduce a small percentage, maybe
10 to 15, maybe 20%, you don't have to be exact about this,
of novel material that's hard for them to learn.
But yes, it is the focused, deliberate attempt
to learn something that creates that sense
of underlying agitation that is the trigger,
the stimulus for neuroplasticity.
This makes sense if you could complete
something, if you could do something, a scale of music, a physical task,
speaking a new language. If you could do that, why would your nervous system ever
change and how does your nervous system know if it's supposed to change?
Your nervous system doesn't know successful trial versus failure trial.
I've tried many times to learn other languages and I'm modestly terrible at Spanish, but
if I were to try and get better, my nervous system doesn't know when I'm failing.
It has no idea.
What it knows is the release of certain neuromodulators, namely adrenaline and norepinephrine, and
a few others as well, that are associated with the underlying agitation of like,
oh, I'm failing at this,
I'm not able to remember that Spanish class
because I didn't attend in high school,
and this is really difficult.
And that agitation, the frustration is the stimulus,
but when we say frustration, it's the neurochemicals
that when they bathe the surrounding neurons,
those neurons go, oh, something needs to change for next time.
And lo and behold, the stimulus for neuroplasticity has occurred.
But the actual rewiring of the neurons, either the improvement
or the reduction in the strength of synapses
of connections between neurons, and in rare instances,
the addition of new neurons for neuroplasticity,
occurs, yes, when we sleep in states of deep rest or non-sleep deep rest, although there's
less data to support that, but the actual rewiring occurs away from the stimulus.
So there's really two important principles here. One is that agitation
and stress and the neurochemicals that underlie agitation and stress, that is the stimulus for learning. And goodness, do I wish they had taught me that in
school. I mean they taught me all sorts of things in school but they didn't
teach me that, they didn't teach me the physiological side. Lord knows I would
have done better in life if I had a couple of those tools. Instead they told
me, look you know if you drive drunk you could die that was good information but
they didn't tell us about all the other stuff so I wish they told us about the
stimulus and rest thing and somehow they have permission to talk about the rest
all right what's my take on hallucinogens goodness gracious my take on
hallucinogens is I've taken them, clearly.
Well, here's the real story on hallucinogens.
First of all, I'm very open about most everything I've done,
you know, trying to keep context appropriate, but I had the unfortunate experience
of taking LSD and psilocybin when I was all too young, And those were bad experiences. Some of them were bad in the moment,
some of them were bad after the moment.
It is something I do not recommend,
and I'm not saying that to be politically correct.
I'm not saying that because it's true.
The reality is that being a child,
an adolescent, or a teenager is a psychedelic experience.
And your brain is still wiring up
in all sorts of interesting ways and
everything seems chaotic and even if you're one of those rare kids that seems
to have everything rode up appropriately you don't want to throw massive amounts
of neuromodulators in there haphazardly and start tampering with the wiring.
That's my deep belief, okay? You can, that's my deep belief.
However, it does appear that at least for adults
who are not suffering from particular psychiatric
challenges, namely forms of psychosis, right,
this is real, I mean one in 100 people experiences
schizophrenic symptoms, et cetera,
it's a very high number if you think about it.
Certain forms of bipolar depression.
That the clinical trials on psychedelics,
and here I'm assuming when you say hallucinogens,
you're referring to psychedelics,
are very, very compelling.
The psychiatric community is now being forced
to look at these data because the data are very compelling.
What do we know about these data? And yes I've participated in two such clinical trials,
one on high dose psilocybin, high dose meaning more than two grams, taken twice.
By the way this is with the support of medically trained therapists and the use
of psychedelics such as psilocybin, mostly psilocybin, not so much LSD.
Do you know why most of the trials are on psilocybin
and not LSD?
I do, but I'm curious if, you know, it's not to...
What's that?
LSD's too long, that's right.
That people need to go home.
People need to go home, the technicians need to go home,
and LSD is a long ride.
It's a long ride. So the thing about psilocybin is that the sort of journey, the trip is somewhere on
the order of anywhere from three to seven hours, which can fit into a reasonable work
day for a technician, clinician, and LSD can be many, many hours longer. The kind of Mount Everest of
psychedelics which is under investigation by a colleague of mine at
Stanford School of Medicine, Nolan Williams, is Ibogaine, Ebola, which is 22
hours long. It has cardiac effects. This is not something to to get cavalier with.
This is something only to be done in a clinical context with medical experts there. And Ebola is very interesting from what I'm told I have not
participated in an Ebola trial. Ebola allows for or induces a state in which
you do not hallucinate at all with eyes open but the moment you go eyes closed
you get a high resolution accurate picture of prior
events in your life but you have agency you have volition inside of those
pictures and you're able to change your behavior and re sculpt your relationship
to those experiences like wow and the state of Kentucky in California recently
excuse me the state of Kentucky in California recently, excuse me, the state of Kentucky in the United
States, thank goodness Kentucky isn't inside of California, that would be civil war.
The state of Kentucky recently took the $40 million settlement from the opioid thing,
right?
You've all heard about that, the opioid crisis, and applied that money to Ebola trials. So this stuff is happening. This stuff is really happening now in
the US. In any event, psilocybin, these two sessions, medically supported two
sessions, has been shown to be pretty effective in the treatment of major
depression. Not completely effective, sometimes there's adverse outcomes
but far more effective than the other
pharmaceutical treatments that it's been compared to.
So that's interesting.
And psilocybin is serotonin.
If you look at the structure of psilocybin,
it looks like serotonin.
So what we're talking about is a massive dose of serotonin.
And psilocybin appears to bind
near selectively to a particular serotonin receptor, and the outcome seems to be enhanced
or more broad connectivity between brain areas that normally are not communicating with one
another, probably not the growth of new connections, but the, let's say, the unveiling of the ability for certain
brain areas to communicate with one another, whereas they couldn't prior.
Different ways of thinking about the same problems, which is logically sound
if you think about ways to deal with depression. Depression is characterized
by a number of things, of course, but one of the hallmark features of depression
in addition to sleep challenges is a lack of positive
anticipation of the future and it does seem that these macro dose psilocybin
trials are helpful for that. Turns out that the micro dosing of psilocybin has
not been shown to be terribly effective which is not to say it isn't but the
trials don't support that although there aren't many trials of that yet.
So it appears, you know, if you had to pick
between micro and macro dosing, go macro.
But be careful.
Be careful and set in settings is important.
Safety is important and certainly not for children.
And as long as, and adolescents or teenagers,
I really, again, wanna reemphasize that. The other thing is as long as we're talking about teenagers, I really, again, wanna reemphasize that.
The other thing is as long as we're talking about psychedelics
and hallucinogens, we should probably just touch on MDMA
for a moment.
First of all, MDMA ecstasy has a number of challenges
or potential problems that need to be highlighted.
First of all, contaminants.
You know, we have a fentanyl crisis in the US,
so contaminants, so purity is essential. Second of all it is methylene-dioxy
methamphetamine and the methamphetamine part often gets people thinking like whoa
it seems however that the inclusion of the methylene-dioxy component increases
serotonin dramatically and it is the increase in serotonin perhaps or at least
it's now thought in addition to the increase in dopamine caused by the
methamphetamine component combined that provides some sort of neuroprotective
effect the early reports that MDMA ecstasy is neurotoxic quote-unquote puts
holes in your brain was flawed by and indeed that paper was
retracted. The researchers did that study in earnest but then later discovered
that when they reached for the MDMA on the shelf they actually grabbed the
methamphetamine. But the news agencies didn't report that retraction. Now our
best evidence that MDMA taken in the
appropriate clinically supported context can act as an empathogen, can help people
develop empathy for themselves and help relieve trauma and indeed the clinical
trials show that at the proper dosing and the proper frequency with the proper
support there's up to 60% and as high as 67% remission of PTSD. Remarkable with
support, okay, not just taking Molly and like dancing in the desert. We're talking
about, we're talking about in the eye mask, we're talking about going inward,
we're talking about relaying your experience, we're talking about talking
about the challenging experience or experiences with someone who's qualified
to help you deal with all of that, et cetera, and someone to drive you home
because you feel like a puddle afterwards.
Talking about all of that,
we're not talking about eye gazing with your partner,
telling them how much you love them.
We're talking about empathy for self, love for self,
which is a concept that frankly,
I've often struggled with.
I've thought, you know, people would say,
you gotta love yourself.
I'm like, what is that?
Like, what is that?
I love my bulldog, I love my friends, I love cuttlefish, but like what is that? And I think through the use of
MDMA you can, there seems to be this ability to develop empathogenic states
to yourself, but of course the reason for the clinical trials insisting that
people stay in the eye mask and communicate their experience, maybe
popping out of it every once in a while and talking with somebody in a trusted
sort of trusted person in a way that can be helpful towards dealing with the trauma
is that the problem with having that much serotonin and that much dopamine in
your system is that you can become empathic toward anything. So we've all
known people that take MDMA listen to a particular soundtrack and they're like
I'm gonna become a musician. I love music.
And again, I'm not recommending anyone do MDMA,
but in recent years I've really changed my stance
on psychedelics.
Five years ago, 10 years ago,
I never would have had this discussion,
certainly not with a microphone in front of my face,
anything being recorded.
Would have worried about losing my job
at Stanford or elsewhere.
But we now have many laboratories at Stanford and elsewhere
that are doing work that is federally funded
on these compounds.
And if you think about these compounds,
while they have been used recreationally,
are simply ways to adjust levels of neuromodulators
in the brain, serotonin, dopamine, et cetera.
That's really all they are,
although they do it very potently,
and therefore, caution needs to be applied. And as long as we're on that topic, I
should mention that ketamine, everyone's excited about ketamine. When I was
growing up, I was taught that there's a compound that's really dangerous. It's
called PCP, vancycladine, they are the same compound.
They don't tell you this.
Ketamine and PCP, same thing.
And I learned about PCP as the compound
that was gonna make criminals like punch light poles
and beat up 12 cops.
And yeah, I watched too much Chips when I was growing up.
For those of you old enough to remember,
it was like Punch and John,
they were on the motorcycles with the shorts.
My sister watched it too,
but for completely different reasons.
So PCP was like this demonized drug, but ketamine and all this stuff about ketamine is now legal
in the US.
I don't know its status here in Sydney, so I'll see if I get arrested on the way out.
But you know, ketamine is potentially addictive.
People talk about the K-hole, etc.
Weird name, by the way. The whole business with ketamine is,
again, it's a potent MDMA, N-methyl-D-aspartate blocker,
which blocks neuroplasticity in the short term,
expands it in the long term.
So the way to think about these compounds,
these drugs, is by way of their mechanism.
And so it should be no surprise
that they're able to induce neuroplasticity,
but the goal is not plasticity. This is very, very important. The goal is not plasticity. The
goal is plasticity directed toward a particular positive outcome. Anytime you
have plasticity, you have the potential for maladaptive plasticity as well. And so
that's an additional cautionary note, as I often say on the podcast. I don't say
that just to protect me, although I am a little bit worried now
about what I just said over the last five minutes.
I say that to protect you.
Next question before I get myself in trouble.
What about what?
DMT.
Yeah, dimethyltryptamine.
Yeah, it leads to lower threshold for impulsivity
like screaming out, what about DMT?
Just kidding.
I don't, sorry.
So I'm just joking.
I'm just joking.
You seem like you could take it.
So, yeah.
So I've never done DMT, but I've heard it's a high-speed freight train into your consciousness, behind
the circuit board and back again.
So there are a few great studies on DMT in Ayahuasca, just as long as we're expanding
into the full trip down to the jungle.
And the data are interesting. It's harder to know what's going on
in these very short trip, massive neuromodulator release
type drug scenarios.
Robin Cardart Harris at the University of California,
San Francisco is somebody who's looking at DMT
more extensively and I don't want to avoid
giving you an answer, but I do want to avoid giving you an answer,
but I do want to avoid giving you a wrong answer
that's not informed.
One thing I'll say, and this is just,
rarely do I plug anything related to the podcast,
but we are actually providing some support
to Robin and others' laboratory
for the study of things like DMT.
One of the things that we do at the podcast,
and this is not a request for anything,
we do take a significant portion of the proceeds from our premium channel and
we fund human studies of exciting things like DMT. We're supporting Robin's Lab
this coming year. I've pooled together some other donors to provide support for
all human studies, no animal studies, and the goal is really to fill in important
blanks like the study of DMT as well as other things. We're currently funding the Eating Disorders Laboratory
at Columbia University.
Eating disorders, by the way, anorexia nervosa in particular,
the most deadly of all psychiatric disorders,
really tragic challenge there.
So I just mentioned that getting funding for science
on really kind of next level stuff is hard for reasons that
would take up the whole night.
So that's one thing that I'm really trying to do in the next few years, and again this
is not a request, but to pool together donors and get them to give money to laboratories
to do the kind of stuff that's going to feed back to the general public very quickly, because
I think we're all getting a little tired of the like okay mouse study which are great you know but in
ten years this might lead to a blank for Alzheimer's or blank for autism I think
we're all getting a little tired of that narrative so we're trying to accelerate
the process okay the yeah thank you the and it's not a sole effort it's just I
do happen to know a lot about the way that funding mechanisms can get a little
bit clogged and so just trying to you know clear some of those clogs. The brain
and gut axis is this a thing? It is most definitely a thing. So I think one of the
more exciting areas is the so-called gut-brain axis. We all now hear about the
gut microbiome. I must say down here y'all are really evolved in this
dimension. The other day I noticed
probably from jet lag and travel and I don't know maybe I swam in some stuff
that too much chlorine or something I was getting like some little like skin
thing on my face I was like all right I'll go get some triple antibiotic
ointment like I do back home clean it up because I forgot mine. So I go to the
pharmacy here what you call the chemist I go to the pharmacy here, what you call the chemist. I go to the pharmacy and the guy behind the counter says,
well, first of all, you can't get triple antibiotic
ointment here.
You need a prescription.
I'm like, all right, well, this is going to get tricky.
Now I've got to forge a prescription.
And I'm just kidding.
Don't do that.
Don't do that.
And he says, but you know, have you considered
whether or not maybe your skin microbiome is struggling
because of the lack of sleep, the jet lag,
and maybe you were exposed to some chlorine or something?
I thought, you know, that's a logical way to think about it.
Because we just did an episode in oral health
where I'm telling everybody,
hey, like avoid these like high alcohol astringent
mouth washes that kill your oral microbiome because all the dentists and periodontists are
telling me yeah they'll make your breath fresh but actually it's wrecking your
gut microbiome and it's bad for but so I take the probiotic you guys have
amazing probiotics here and in a day boom it's done now I didn't do a control
clinical trial I don't know whether or not that was really what did it but it's
an interesting idea this I we know for instance that we have a distinct microbiome niches, different bacteria
that live in our nasal passages, on the surface of our eyes, on the surface of
our skin, and the urethra in essentially every orifice mucus membrane but
everywhere in and around our body and that these little microbiota are
provided they are supported they do many
things but among them the gut microbiome which of course starts in the mouth as
the oral health episode describes with a lot of protocols as well the gut
microbiome when it's well supported creates certain fatty acids that are the
precursors or catalysts for the production of certain neurotransmitters in the brain. And it is
now oh so clear that enhancing the diversity of flora of microbiota in the
gut and mouth is great for the nervous system.
So much so that some of the studies on relief
from certain neuropsychiatric conditions
are being achieved through, and I know it's not pleasant,
but microbiota transfer between individuals,
so-called fecal transplants,
which always makes me a little bit uncomfortable
to think about, never had one.
But it's pretty interesting, you know
despite the discomfort of thinking about that process, at least for me, the
whole business of taking the gut microbiota from one individual that's not
suffering from something and putting it into another individual and seeing
relief from certain symptoms of given conditions is really compelling. So I
think that we should all be thinking about ways to
support our gut-brain axis. It's very clear that the best low-cost, no
supplement way to do that is going to be to consume one to four servings of some
fermented food. No, beer doesn't count. Low sugar fermented foods, I suppose beer
does count, but it comes with some other issues,
such as, you know, kimchi's or sauerkrauts or kefir's, or you know, every culture seems to have its own
probiotic, prebiotic foods,
and that's gonna be the best way.
And it's clear that it has immense benefit,
and then when you don't have access to those foods,
doing things like taking a pill probiotic,
now and again is probably not a bad idea if you're traveling or you're sleep deprived. don't have access to those foods, doing things like taking a pill probiotic now
and again is probably not a bad idea if you're traveling or you're sleep
deprived. The challenge with that sort of thing is that it's a generalized
effect of supporting multiple systems in the brain and body, so it's going to be a
long time, maybe never, before you see a really nice clean study that says that okay increasing the
amount of lactobacillus in the gut by taking you know X number of milligrams
of lactobacillus improves your cognition you're not going to find that study why
because in science it's important and in health to distinguish between moderating
effects and mediating effects lots of things can moderate a given feature of
your brain or health. So for instance if, you know, God forbid a fire alarm went
off tonight, it would moderate our attention or, excuse me, modulate,
modulate. Kentucky's in California and now I'm saying moderate. Modulate your
attention, but it doesn't mediate attention. On a normal basis, you know, the
fire alarm isn't involved in your attention, whereas certain other things mediate those
mechanisms of attention. So when you improve sleep, you're going to see
positive effects on any number of things. When you sleep-deprived people, you're
going to see deficits in any number of things. These are not direct effects,
these are indirect effects. Likewise with the microbiome. So I think gut microbiome
sits in the various,
what I call pillars of mental health,
physical health, and performance.
These are the things that we should try and tend to
on a regular basis to give buoyancy to our mental health,
physical health, and performance.
But I wouldn't get too caught up in wondering
which exact microbiota are important.
I think diversity of the microbiome is key.
If you're taking antibiotics, you wanna do something
to counter that through pill probiotics, et cetera.
And certainly antibiotics aren't bad,
but the overuse of antibiotics certainly can be.
And I'm good on you for having chemists
that know better than to just hand me a bottle
of triple antibiotic ointment.
Quality of sleep, going to bed early
compared to sleeping late but still for eight hours.
Depends, depends on whether or not your chronotype, which for
a long time I did not think was real but based on newer data it's absolutely clear are real,
whether or not you feel best going to bed early waking up early or going to bed at a
more typical time of 10 p.m. to say wake up or 11 p.m. and waking up at 7 a.m. I see that
you know for any
folks leaving there though I'd like early to bed right I get it I'm not
offended they just find the I get it it would not be the first time that if you
will I always say if nothing else the podcast will cure insomnia because the
episodes are very very long you know for some people they just feel
spectacularly better going to sleep early and waking up early.
Spectacularly better.
I'm one such person.
Other people feel much better staying up late,
waking up late.
The total duration of sleep is important.
The regularity of sleep, it turns out,
is becoming a very important variable,
or it has always been an important variable,
but the data are pointing to the fact that
if you are somebody who feels best going to sleep around 11 p.m. and waking
up at 7 a.m., trying to keep that to bedtime within plus or minus one hour,
anytime you can, except on a time and on night when there's a lecture at the ICC
theater, is a good idea. But in general, five nights out of the week you want to
go to sleep within plus or minus an hour of the same bedtime that's kind of the general goal and in
the sleep series with Matt Walker he talks about the quality quantity
regularity and timing QQRT quantity quality regularity and timing of your
sleep being the four key features of your sleep to try and dial in but of
course life isn't about optimizing everything it's good to get out and party every once in a while,
stay up all night, watch the sunrise,
and just live life also.
So I think sometimes people get the impression
because I wear the same shirt all the time
that I do everything in a hyper-regimented way.
But actually it's quite the opposite.
I try and do things regularly and as consistently
as possible so that deviations from those protocols don't impact me negatively much at all. That's the idea. I have ADHD
and I'm struggling to focus. What would be the best way to go about regaining my
focus? Nick. Okay, so I think that nowadays many, many people struggle with issues
with focus. I think we have our do's and our do nots and I'm obviously not a
psychiatrist and I can't diagnose you Nick from a question on a slide but
there I just want to start off by saying that there are indeed people who truly
struggle with focus to the extent that they have clinically diagnosable ADHD
and I did two episodes on ADHD in focus, one that was mainly focused on behavioral tools
and nutrition and to some extent supplementation.
And when I put out that episode, about half of the comments out there were, how could
you?
You don't respect modern science.
You have no integrity.
How could you suggest that people use these tools?
It's all about prescription drugs. And the other half were like, yes, finally some tools and
some acknowledgement that these things actually matter and can help, maybe even
in conjunction with pharmaceutical aids. And then we did a second episode which
was all about the prescription drugs and it was the exact reverse. People writing
to me in droves saying, thank you so much, I've been prescribing these drugs,
or I've been giving these prescription drugs to my child,
rather it's really been helping,
but I'm embarrassed to tell everybody,
because then people demonize me and tell me
I'm poisoning my kid, that they're on meth.
And then the other half saying,
how could you, the pharmaceutical industry,
big pharma is out to get us all.
I must say that, and I'm happy to be in this role,
we're not happy, but I'm willing to be in the role of I try and cover it all and give
people options. I don't tell people what to do. I don't prescribe anything. I
profess many, many things and you should do as you decide is best for you, but
just know what you're doing. And here's the deal, that drugs like Adderall,
Vyvanse, etc. are indeed amphetamines. That's true.
In the young brain, they can help enhance some of the neuromodulators that allow for
elevated activity in areas like the prefrontal cortex and elsewhere that allow for more focused
attention and less impulsivity because the main function of the prefrontal cortex, as
you may all recall, is to say shh to the particular areas of the brain that want to move or
cause us to move or cause us to blurt things out like DMT or whatever it is
and sorry I didn't mean to pick on you. We'll do DMT together, we'll do some MDMA
also and then we'll like people would like for a heart medicine. So the
reality is that there are neurochemical tools
that can help with ADHD, but there are also behavioral tools. And in countries outside of the US, namely in China,
there are extensive efforts to train young people
to focus for longer periods of time.
And believe it or not, they're not doing that
through any, at least in these experiments, through any draconian approach.
They actually have them do what? They have them focus on visual targets. The
longer you focus on a visual target, we know the longer you bring about the
activation of certain neural circuits in the brain that allow for better focus
and while not everything is about vision, it is certainly the case based on those
studies and the data. I've looked at them quite extensively that even a short And while not everything is about vision, it is certainly the case based on those studies
and the data.
I've looked at them quite extensively that even a short period of time of learning to
entrain one's focus on a fixation points, this would be the virgin's eye movement.
This is the cuttlefish ready to eat or mate, not the cuttlefish swimming around looking
for potential predators in panoramic mode.
Doing that for a short period of time of if you've been a minute or three minutes, can allow one to bring online the neural circuits
that allow for enhanced focus
in the subsequent 10 to 20 minutes,
which is a pretty reasonable bout of work
if you think about it.
And here's another important point.
None of us, none of us, ADHD sufferers or otherwise,
should expect ourselves to be in perfect trenches,
deep trenches of focus all the time.
That's an unreasonable request for your nervous system.
You can build up a capacity to focus,
and of course, we can all focus best
on things that we really enjoy.
In fact, children and adults with ADHD
are known to have tremendous focusing capacity
if they're focusing on something they really enjoy.
This has been shown over and over again,
which means that the capacity to focus is there,
it's just that the threshold to focus is higher,
which means that it's harder to access.
And these visual fixation, they're not even experiments,
you can literally just place a visual target on the wall,
you know, one to three feet away,
force yourself to stare at that visual focus point,
and then move into your work.
And you'll notice that your mind will flit away
from whatever it is you're trying to focus on but with some training you
can build up an enhanced capacity to focus. It does require you flip your
phone over, you turn it off, you leave it in the other room, you remove
distractions. Some people even find children will find if they wear a brimmed
hat and a hoodie which basically took me through most of high school for other
reasons. If you do that you can create a more narrow tunnel,
a vision that this is the reason they put blinders on horses.
So it sounds somewhat medieval.
It sounds somewhat primitive or crude.
But once again, what we're really talking about
is removing the expectation that focus is like a square wave
function, where you sit down, you open your book and boom you're focused. I mean you wouldn't
expect that of physical performance would you? There's a warm-up, there's some
dynamic stretching, there's perhaps some just getting your mind in the groove, you
know this sort of thing. Neural circuits are not on off. It's not a square wave
function. It takes some time to ease into a mode of focus. And so my suggestion, Nick, is that you and others that struggle with focus think about
the do-nots, the distractions that clearly are intervening in our ability to focus nowadays.
But also as you think about the things to explore, which may include these pharmaceutical
tools, of course prescribed by a licensed physician, but that you consider that
perhaps the expectations that you're placing on yourself to focus are too
immediate and that you should train these up more gradually over time, which
is not to say that you should settle on having limited focus, but that this is a
skill that you can develop like any other skill that your nervous system is
capable of plasticity throughout the lifespan we absolutely know that and
given that I'm presuming I don't know why I'm presuming that you're a young
person but even if you're not that you can increase your ability to access
these narrow trenches of focus even for things that don't delight you but I hope
you are you are also doing some things that delight't delight you. But I hope you are
also doing some things that delight you. So I was told that's the final question.
I'm going to take that very seriously and somewhat unfortunately for me
because I could go all night. I've really enjoyed tonight. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you so much.
Just thank you.
Thanks so much.
Thank you.
Truly thank you.
I really appreciate this opportunity to connect with you all.
Thanks for coming out.
The fact that people come out to listen to a bunch of science and and health discussion is greatly appreciated. You know, all the tools, all
the protocols, all the mechanisms, all the information, while some of it, a very,
very small fraction of it, was developed or discovered in my laboratory.
Virtually everything that I cover on the podcast I have talked about tonight are
the great discoveries of other people who deserve the credit, and I've tried to
give credit where credit is due. The most important
thing to me of course is that as you each learn and try these different tools
and protocols as you see fit for you that it would be wonderful if you'd pass
them on to other people. Please, please, please remove my name from that passage.
This is not about me or the podcast. It's really about the one thing we know to certainly be true
about our species is that we can communicate information
to one another, hand off tools, and that in the case
where these tools can help relieve suffering,
wonderful in the case where these tools can help
improve mental health, physical health, and performance.
We need to, I believe, and should do that for one another.
And last, but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.