The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - The Exercise & Nutrition Scientist: The Truth About Exercising On Your Period! Women Were Right About Menopause! These 4 Supplements Give Women Optimal Health!
Episode Date: January 6, 2025Is mainstream exercise advice sexist? Dr Stacy Sims reveals the science-backed secrets for optimal health and fitness every women needs Dr Stacy Sims is an exercise physiologist, nutrition scientis...t, and expert in female-specific nutrition and exercise. She is the author of books such as, ‘Next Level - Your Guide to Kicking Ass, Feeling Great, and Crushing Goals Through Menopause and Beyond’. In this conversation, Dr Stacy and Steven discuss topics such as, how to optimise your menstrual cycle for fitness, the biggest myths about menopause, why women need more protein than men, and the truth about creatine for women. 00:00 Intro 02:20 What Is the Work Stacey Does and Why Does She Do It? 09:52 Stacey's Academic Background 12:10 Main Physiological Differences Between Men and Women 14:35 Q-Angle 17:05 Fat Differences in Men and Women 17:48 Heart Differences in Men and Women 19:10 Lung Differences in Men and Women 20:20 Muscle-Building Capacities in Men vs. Women 20:48 ACL Injuries 22:10 What Is Quad Dominance? 23:04 How Much More Likely Are Women to Get ACL Injuries? 25:21 ACL Injury Prevention in Women 28:01 Does Science View Women as Smaller Versions of Men? 33:01 Differences in Weight Loss Advice for Men and Women 36:04 What Is the Hypothalamus? 42:46 Fasting and Exercise Differences for Women vs. Men 50:18 Stacey's Thoughts on Ozempic 52:11 When Should We Eat Around Training? 53:23 Stacey's Thoughts on Keto 54:53 Keto and the Microbiome 56:38 Saunas and Cold Plunge Differences 01:00:38 Women's Use of Creatine 01:05:53 Recommended Supplements for Women 01:11:28 Blood Glucose Sensitivity 01:15:16 Adapting Nutrition and Exercise to Your 28-Day Cycle 01:17:45 Are There Days in the Cycle We Shouldn't Work Hard? 01:20:51 When Are Women Strongest in Their Cycle? 01:21:48 Unasked Questions About the Menstrual Cycle 01:24:49 Why Is Bone Health So Important? 01:26:19 Sleep Differences Between Men and Women 01:28:05 Jet Lag Differences 01:30:12 Chronotypes 01:31:47 How Important Are Meal Timings? 01:35:30 Let's Talk About Menopause 01:41:25 The Perimenopause Phase 01:49:59 HRT (Hormone Replacement Therapy) 01:54:41 Nutrition, Exercise, and Endometriosis/PCOS 01:56:25 What Is the Most Important Thing We Haven't Talked About? 01:59:05 Why Don't We Learn About Women's Health in School? 01:59:40 The Most Important Message Stacey Would Pass On to Her Kids Follow Dr Stacy: Instagram - https://bit.ly/4j10BhK YouTube - https://bit.ly/41WFZAY Website - https://bit.ly/4a8xB3C You can purchase Dr Stacy’s book, ‘Next Level - Your Guide to Kicking Ass, Feeling Great, and Crushing Goals Through Menopause and Beyond’, here: https://amzn.to/4a4gYGk Watch the episodes on Youtube - https://g2ul0.app.link/DOACEpisodes My new book! 'The 33 Laws Of Business & Life' is out now - https://g2ul0.app.link/DOACBook You can purchase the The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards: Second Edition, here: https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb Follow me: https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: 1% Diary: Join the waitlist to be the first to hear about the next drop of The 1% Diary!  https://bit.ly/1-Diary-Megaphone-ad-reads Shopify - https://shopify.com/bartlett ZOE - http://joinzoe.com with code BARTLETT10 for 10% off Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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A lot of women come with their partners to see me and say,
I don't understand.
We're both doing the same training.
He's leaning up and getting fitter.
I'm putting weight on and getting slower.
And that is because we have puberty,
we have our reproductive years,
we may not have pregnancy in there,
we have perimenopause, we have postmenopause,
we have menstrual cycle.
Each one of those is a different hormone profile
that can affect the way we eat and the way we train.
But no one told us this or what we can do.
Until right now.
Dr. Stacey Sims is an exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist
whose best-selling books and over 100 peer-reviewed studies
is revolutionizing how women can optimize their health, fitness, and longevity
by working with their unique physiology.
We're looking at sports science research.
Everything from training to eating to recovery is based on male data.
And women have been generalized to that data.
Things like we see men do really well on calorie restriction and fasting,
but for women, it doesn't happen that way.
And we'll talk about that.
And we also know that during puberty, girls' hips widen, shoulders widen,
which changes our angle of the knee to hip, what we call the cue angle,
so they don't feel comfortable running or swimming or jumping.
And because they're not taught this stuff, we see that by the age of 14,
girls who previously were sporty, over 60% of them drop out of sport.
The problem is, it's never about how we can empower women
to use their physiology to their advantage.
So let's change that.
Let's go.
As it relates to nutrition and exercise,
how do I need to adapt across the menstrual cycle?
What's your view on cold plunges and supplements like creatine?
And what's the variant between men and women as it relates to sleep?
And then let's talk about menopause, starting with perimenopause.
I'm excited.
The diary of a CEO is independently fact-checked.
For any studies or science mentioned in this episode, please check the show notes.
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Dr. Stacey Sims, what is the work that you do and why is it so important that you do
it?
I look at sex differences in exercise and nutrition,
because when we think about everything that we know for protocols,
from training to eating, recovery, it's based on male data.
And as a female athlete and working with women across all ages,
just trying to maximize their potential, you have to lean into different data.
But people aren't aware of it.
So as I'm looking at what I do
and trying to empower women to understand their own bodies,
realize that there's a lot of research
that still needs to be done.
So if we think about something like caffeine
and caffeine intake, right?
And people are talking about how it
either boosts them or not. Yeah.
If we look at all the data on performance, about caffeine enhancing performance, there
isn't anything that's been done on women. So if we're looking at how does that work
for a woman, we have to look and say, okay, how much exercise have you done? Where are
you using caffeine? When are you using it? Because we fuel differently during exercise. We go through blood sugar quickly. Caffeine clears blood sugar. So a
woman is going to have to eat when she uses caffeine, whereas a man doesn't have to.
You said it's based on male data. How can you quantify that? Like paint the picture
for me that proves this is the case for someone that might not understand the significance
of what you just said.
So if we're looking at sports science research, and I'll just bring it down to sports science because that's the exercise and nutrition research. If we're looking at who's around the room when
we're recruiting for studies, for the most part, the language around recruitment is geared for
getting men because we're using a lot of aggressive language in sport.
So it's off-putting to a lot of women.
The other aspect about sports science research is there's limited funding.
So then we're looking at, okay, how can we get people in that can come in for day after day or week to week?
Most often it's men.
When we look at what we're doing, we might be doing muscle biopsies, we might be doing
blood draws, and if that's not explained in advance, it's a little off-putting to people.
So when we're looking at the major recruitment strategies and the people that will say, yes,
I'll come and do this study, it's 18 to 22-year-old college-age men.
And that's just been the norm.
And when we look at how studies are designed, and we're looking again at who's in the room who's designing studies,
primarily it's men. Why?
Because we see that most of the PIs on the studies
and most of the, I guess, scientists that are coming up in academia
are primarily men.
When did you realize this?
The first time I realized it from an academic standpoint was when I was a second year at
university.
And I was a participant in a metabolism lab and I was one of the only women.
And I standardized properly.
I did all the things I was supposed to do because I come from a military family.
I know how to follow rules.
And at the end of the two weeks of experiments,
they threw my results out.
Why?
Exactly.
So I asked why.
And they're like, well, your results
don't jive with what we thought we were going to see.
They don't mesh with the results that we got from the men.
So they're an anomaly.
So we're not going to put them in for the context of talking
about how carbohydrate
metabolism was going.
And I thought that was very strange.
And I was like, well, I've done everything properly.
How come mine are the anomaly and those guys aren't the anomaly?
How do you know that?
And they didn't have an answer for it.
So that was like the sticking point for me to understand why would my results be an anomaly
when I've done exactly the same thing as what the men had done?
And it came down to menstrual cycle. It came down to understanding that one week I was in a low
hormone state and then the next week I wasn't. So when I started talking about that, this is where
the professor who was in charge of the metabolism labs, like, well, we don't study women because
they have a menstrual cycle.
And we just study men because they're easier and we don't have to worry about hormone fluctuations
interfering with our results.
And at that point, I was like, excuse me, what are you talking about?
So that was a defining point from an academic standpoint. But the seed had been planted two years prior when my dad, who was a colonel in the army,
was like, so what do you want to do when you finish graduate or when you graduate from
high school?
And I said I wanted to be an army ranger or a Navy SEAL.
And he said, well, you can't.
And I said, well, why can't I?
And he said, because you're a girl.
I was like, what does that mean?
And he said, well, they don't accept women in the SEALs or the Rangers.
It's a special ops and they don't accept women.
And that was the first time in my life I've ever heard that I was limited because I was
a female and I didn't match what the norm was.
Because my whole life I'd been playing with boys, competing against boys.
I mean, like it was just a normal. Didn't matter if you were a boy or a girl.
It just was what you wanted to do.
And then when my dad said, well, you can't because you're a girl.
That was the first seed that had been planted and really made me upset and
said, well, this doesn't make sense.
And then when I got to university and that happened, that was the definitive
seed that just really pushed me into the whole academic and sporting career
that I've led over the past 20 some years.
Give me an overview of that career,
the sort of significant milestones in the research
that you've done that's fed into everything
that you know today.
I've been a competitive athlete most of my life.
So I would, I raced bikes professionally,
I did Ironman, I did Xterra, and I'd have
teammates who would ask me questions of, you know, like, how am I fueling, how am I going
to perform my best? So we take those questions into the lab. So we were looking at how do
we optimally fuel or how do we optimally acclimatize the heat when we're at a point in our menstrual cycle where we
don't have as much heat tolerance.
So that we see when progesterone comes up after ovulation or core temperature comes
up, we don't have as much heat tolerance.
So how do we adjust for that?
So there are a lot of questions that would come through just by the nature of being surrounded
by competitive athletes and being a competitive athlete.
So we look at things like we know now that when you want to do a climatization to the
heat, and I bring this up because if I live in New Zealand in the winter time and I'm
trying to train for something like Kona, that happens in Hawaii, and we max out at 10 degrees
Celsius in the winter, but we have to face 40 degrees Celsius to raise Ironman.
And we get into a sauna and we want to accommodate for that heat.
We know that men can go seven days in a row and be fine to then raise in the heat.
But for women, it depends on which phase of the menstrual cycle.
And if you are going in the high hormone phase, then we say, okay, well, you don't need a
primer. You can just go in, you don't need a primer.
You can just go in and do nine days in a row.
But if you start in the low hormone phase,
you actually have to go into the sauna for five minutes,
come back out, and then go back in
and do that during the low hormone phase
for nine days in a row.
So there are different nuances in the way
that your body responds to the heat
and is able to accommodate for those
heat shifts versus a man can just go in and accommodate for that and be ready for the
race.
So give me your CV.
Oh, gosh.
Not the whole thing.
It's pretty varied.
What did you study?
Exercise physiology and metabolism. Okay.
And then got into ultra running when I was doing my masters at Springfield.
And then I started getting into more Ironman distance stuff before I started my PhD.
And you went to Springfield College as well?
Yeah. So that was my masters.
Your masters. What did you study in your masters?
That again was exercise, phys and metabolism. And then you did a PhD. Yep. What was your PhD on as
well? So my PhD was looking at differences between men and women in heat performance,
and how you acclimatize to it and how you hydrate for it. Um, as well as looking between menstrual cycle phases and oral
contraceptive pill use in women.
Um, and again, all of these topics were designed because of
questions I had for myself or teammates had.
And then from PhD, I went to Stanford and was working in the high
performance lab and then moved over to do a postdoc with
Marsha Stefanik, who was the PI for the women's health
initiative. So looking at hormone replacement therapy and
menopausal women, but also looking at exercise as a cohort
to that. And I had another hand in the high performance
research in human biology. So I would mesh human performance with public health. And then that transcends into a lot of
stuff that I do now, looking at what can we do taking some of the ideas from high performance
and apply it to a general population? And how does that improve people's longevity, well-being, but also for those
who are trying to be parents who have a high-performing job, who want to do well in their age group
race, whatever it is.
How can we maximize some of the things we know from high performance with regards to
sleep, heat, cold, and apply that to a person who's just trying to get everything done and
what small things they can tweak to improve their own training and
performance. And you've authored more than a hundred peer-reviewed studies on
exercise physiology. Yeah. And you're a research scientist at University of New
Zealand? I am a research scientist at AUT. That's where most of my PhD students are, and we have a women's health program.
And then I also have an adjunct with the lifestyle medicine at Stanford.
So that's where a lot of the public health research comes in.
And when we talk about the differences between men and women, what exactly are those differences?
Is it just the menstrual cycle that causes these differences? Or is there other physiological differences that we need to understand in order
to understand the subjects we're going to talk about today around exercise, nutrition
and the variances between men and women there?
There are sex differences in utero. I mean, when we look at-
What does that mean?
So the sex differences when the baby's developing. So we look at stress and the mom under stress, we see that there's a higher incidence of
a miscarriage if it's a developing boy fetus than a girl fetus and it has to do with XX
versus XY.
Then after birth, we see that there's relatively little sex difference that is apparent until
the onset of puberty.
But when we're looking at those sex differences that aren't that apparent,
there are there. We see that there's a sex difference in what we call muscle morphology. That means that men are born with more fast twitch fibers. So they have more anaerobic
capacity as they get older. They have more ability to produce power. We see that girls are born with more endurance type fibers.
So this means they have more mitochondria for oxygen consumption and oxidative stress
and being able to go long and slow.
Then when we get to the onset of puberty, we see an expansion of these sex differences
with the exposure of the sex hormones.
So what we're seeing is now the boys are getting leaner, they're getting faster, they're getting
more aggressive, but girls' bodies completely change because center of gravity drops from
the chest down to the lower abdomen area because their hips widen.
And their hips widen because being XX, they have to then accommodate for getting pregnant
and eventually having a baby
from a biological standpoint. Hips widen, shoulders widen, this changes the angle of
the knee to the hip. So we then have a, yep.
So for anyone listening, there's an image I have here which I'll put on the screen and
I'll also link below and it's called the Q angle.
The Q angle, yes.
Which is like the angle of my knee to hip.
Yep.
And it's showing that women's Q angle,
basically like the shape of the gap between your leg,
is it roughly 15 degrees?
What is it? Do you know?
Yeah, yeah.
And so when we're looking at girls whose bodies are changing,
we see that by the age of 14, girls who previously were sporty, over 60% of them drop out of
sport because they're not taught that their bodies are changing, so they don't feel comfortable
running or swimming or jumping or landing.
Because they have a new cue angle, they become quad-dominant, their center of gravity is
different, their shoulders are wider, so they don't feel comfortable running because their
whole running mechanics change. So, you know, when we're looking at girls who are
eight, they can keep up with the boys, right? Their bodies haven't quite started changing it.
By the time they're 10, they're starting to see a discrepancy. And I say that because my daughter's
now 12, and I've seen it over the course of the elementary school years, where they used to be
on par with the boys playing soccer
and rugby and stuff on the field.
And then you start seeing a morph
where the boys are becoming more aggressive
and they're kicking the balls faster and running faster.
And the girls are starting to develop a little bit more,
getting a little bit more body fat,
feeling a little bit more comfortable running.
They can't do the monkey bars anymore
because their center of gravity is lower. So they can't get up and do the monkey bars as well.
But no one explains this to them.
So then we see this discrepancy of being sporty, not sporty.
We see the changes in body composition.
And all of this is in those early stages of the teen years, which is another knock because we also
have brain changes where girls become more self-aware and boys don't.
They're like, okay, you know what?
You piss me off.
I'm going to beat you up and we're going to get on with it.
But girls are very self-aware and they hold things to themselves in a more negative fashion.
And this creates a lot of mood changes.
And this also creates a feeling of negative body positivity.
So they don't feel that comfortable with how they look
or who they are.
And society doesn't help that either.
So this all perpetuates in a sociocultural
as well as a biological change with regards to exercise.
And as it relates to, we'll talk about the Q-angle a little bit more in a second when we talk about exercise,
but as it relates to the other changes, fat differences in men and women.
Yeah. So if we see essential fat for men is around 4 to 8 percent,
so that means what we need for our nerves and just survival.
For women, essential fat is around 12%.
So this is for nerves and looking around our central organs
to survive.
We look at body composition itself.
We see that women tend to sit around 20%
as a normal, healthy individual, although the data's
changed over the years.
And men sit around 15%.
And what about the heart? How is the heart different in men and women?
So women have smaller heart and lungs relative to relative body size to men.
We also have less hemoglobin. So that means our oxygen carrying capacity is lower.
Because if we are looking at our red cells
and we have four different, what we call heme molecules
in a red cell and each one carries oxygen,
our red cell count is lower as compared to men
because the red cell count is driven by testosterone.
So men have around 100% more aromatized testosterone
as compared to women. So this increases the carrying capacity of oxygen, which means it goes to the muscles, can deliver more fuel
to the muscles to be able to contract better, have more power, more strength.
Does that mean women breathe more when they're exercising the same? Not that they breathe more.
When we're talking about oxygen carrying capacity, this is the amount that you're taking into
the lungs, how it transfers to the red cells to then be able to go to the working muscles
to give the muscles the available fuel to do a contraction.
So it's not a respiratory rate, it's the ability for you to
breathe in and how fast that can be conducted to the muscle. So there's going to be an impact on
endurance then? It's more of a power and speed factor. Okay, okay, okay, because the speed in
which the oxygen can get to the muscles is what's being impacted and the volume of oxygen that can
get to the muscles. Yep. Okay, fine. And then you said the lungs are sort of 25 to 30% smaller than a
man's lungs typically. Yeah. And what's the impact of that as it
relates to exercise?
So when we're looking at, I guess, world records, right,
that have been kept, and we see there's a gender gap there. And
this is slowly closing in the endurance world, but that has to do with muscle morphology
with regards to being able to go along and slow. We're looking at the sprint capacity
where we have to have a quick transference of oxygen and quick muscle contraction,
that gap isn't closing. And that is because we have smaller, long, smaller heart, we have less
blood volume, we have less red cells. So the overall capacity for quickly developing power
and speed is at a smaller, I guess it's a limited capacity in women versus men.
And in your book, Raw, on page four, in the opening of the book, you talk about how women are 52% as strong as men in their upper bodies and 66% as strong as they are in their lower bodies.
When women train, they can become 70 to 80% as strong as men.
So we're looking at resistance training itself. We see that women, relative to men, can accommodate and develop muscle just as well as men in the lower body, but
upper body not so much.
Okay. And we talked about this cue angle thing. One of the things that I'm really fascinated
by is there's been a big conversation recently around ACL injuries in sport. And from reading
your work, it seems that I'm just doing some research online, it seems that this increase
in women getting ACL injuries
links somewhat to this Q-angle situation,
which again is the, I don't know how to explain it
for someone that is listening on audio and can't see,
but I will link it in this description.
So I highly recommend you look at this picture
because the minute you see it, it makes a ton of sense.
But it's essentially like,
and this is me probably butchering it,
as a man, because my hips don't widen,
my legs are effectively quite straight.
So from my hip down to my toes, it's quite straight.
Which means that I'm gonna be more sturdy.
Say if I jump up in the air, when I land,
I know this because my dad's an engineer,
the center of gravity being straight means that I'm less likely to get injured.
But if you're... Is that right?
Yeah, because your forces are going to be in a more linear fashion.
So you have more even distribution of the force through the knee.
But for women, as you're going to describe, our hips are wider,
so we have more of an angle to the knee.
And the forces aren't distributed evenly when we land.
So when we land.
So when we look at that, as well as the quad dominance that develops for women,
so that means that we use our front muscles of our legs, our quads, a lot more than our hamstrings,
our posterior chain, so we don't use our glutes and our hamstrings by default as well as men do. So we're being pulled forward more and we put more emphasis
on the front of our body because those tend to take the quads,
tend to take the bulk of the muscle work that we're trying to do.
Unless we're really trying to train hamstrings and glutes to fire,
which isn't the default for women's bodies because center of gravity again is lower
and you tend to lean forward.
So when we're looking at ACL injury, again, it
comes down to one, training stress, two, mechanics.
And if we're not taught again how to land, how to run,
how to jump with the new angles, it predisposes people
to severe ACL injury.
And how much more likely is a woman to have an ACL injury than a man?
It is a higher rate, but the thing about the research is that there hasn't been a
direct comparison because we hear incidentally that women tear their ACL.
And so we see a lot of observational studies that women have torn their ACL.
And we have lots of retrospective studies
that are going back to,
oh, where are we in our menstrual cycle when we tore ACL?
But there hasn't been a definitive comparison
between men and women.
If we were to look at the current research,
we see a three to four to one ratio
of ACL tears of women versus men a three to four to one ratio of ACL
tears of women versus men.
Three to four.
So either three to one or four to one, depending on the
research that you look. So three women for every one man, or four
women for every one man.
Okay, so 300% difference.
Yeah.
Okay. So interesting. I know I absolutely never knew that.
And in fact, it wasn't until I was looking through your work
that I'd seen, I went and did some research
and there's a big conversation online,
a lot of sort of news coverage around women's football
because I think it's the fastest growing sport in the world.
But I read that the probability that a woman
tears her ACL muscle is significantly
like hundreds of percent more likely than a man because of this, in part because of this Q angle.
In professional sport is not as much as when we're looking at recreational sport, because when we're getting into professional sport, we have specific warm ups, especially for football, put up a FIFA to prevent ACL tear to make sure that you are actually properly warmed up and engaging the right muscles and learning how to stop pivot because it's a, it's a mechanism in action usually is a twisting angle.
But if we're looking at more age group or grassroots sports, because people aren't aware of this Q angle, they aren't aware of the quad dominance, women haven't been taught again how to work with these new mechanics.
Then we're seeing a greater incidence of ACL tear.
30 female football players missed Women's World Cup in 2023
due to ACL injuries, including in the UK,
Lioness, Beth Mead and Leah Williamson,
which is staggering to me.
Yeah, it's very high incidence.
So is there something that can be done if you're a woman that's
exercising, that's doing things like jumping and running
and sprinting and the fast sort of twitch sports?
Is there something you can do to avoid having an ACL injury?
It's all about being strong.
So if we're looking at what is the biggest thing for ACL
prevention, and I'll bring in one of my PhD students who's graduated, looked at ACL rehab after surgery, and it
comes down to the definitive difference between quad and hamstring strength.
So if we're looking at improving the strength capacity of the hamstrings, then it offsets
some of the default strength that
the quads are taking.
So if we're able to balance it from being front loaded to being more even loaded, it
comes down to, you know how we were talking about distribution of forces through the knee
with men being more linear and women having an angle.
Well if we're able to take that angle and we can evenly distribute the load between
the muscles of the hamstring and the quads, so the front and the back, then it pulls the
forces more centrally, which reduces the stress of one point of contact.
So for developing the strength through the whole posterior chain, we're looking at glutes,
we're looking at hamstrings, we're doing a lot of calf work, and we can develop that
whole posterior part.
It reduces the incidence of being pulled in one direction and the misalignment of forces.
The other is the cutting motion.
More we're looking at lateral movement.
So a lot of times when we're looking at warmups and you're observing on like kids' sports,
there's not a lot of lateral development.
So if we're looking at prevention of ACL tear,
we have to work a lot of the explosive lateral movements,
as well as jumping and single-leg jumping.
And these are things that aren't really done in grassroots,
but as we start to get more into professional sport,
it's becoming more and more apparent
that we have to do specific mechanism of injury prevention.
So they're looking at the sport.
We're a football player.
We have a high incidence of ACL potential.
So we have to really develop our posterior chain.
We have to work on our power for our lateral movements, our step and our jump.
So this is part of what FIFA has put in for the warmup because there is such a draw.
And as you're saying, that 33 women in the World Cup
tour their ACL.
Part of it is loading, part of it is a little bit maybe
over trained before they go into the World Cup.
But a lot of it has to do with this imbalance
between the muscles and now having to address it.
Did science just look at women as a different version of men?
Sorry, did they just look at women as like a...
Smaller version of men?
Is that how they looked?
Yeah, for the most part.
Because I mean, a lot of the stuff when I was going through school and even now textbooks.
So I was standing in the metro in DC a few months ago and there was a young girl who has just gotten
into exercise physiology and I overheard a conversation
and she was talking about some of the experiments
that they were doing, but she never talked about
like we have to make, you know, we're doing women specific,
we're doing men specific.
And I asked her, I was like, has anyone talked to you
about how women's bodies are different than men's from angles and muscle morphology? And she's like, has anyone talked to you about how women's bodies are different
than men's from angles and muscle morphology?
And she's like, no, what are you talking about?
I was like, this is the second year in ex-phys now.
And if you look at the textbooks, it's still a representation of men in the textbook with
regards to images.
You have him or they, you never have her.
They might have a very small section in there about the female athlete, but usually it's about the female athlete and anemia or relative energy deficiency in sport.
It's never about how we can empower women to use their bodies and their physiology to their
advantage. And it's what almost 2025 now. Is there any element of people being too scared to talk about differences in physiology amongst
men and women?
I don't think so.
I mean, I always explain it from a historical perspective.
When we're looking at the history and when we started seeing the modernization of medicine.
Prior to the modernization of medicine, it used to be women who were the caretakers.
If you're thinking about you get sick, you go and someone has an herbal remedy for you.
But when we started medicalizing and becoming more nuanced in the medical education, women were excluded.
So when we start looking at the origins of medicine and who was in the room, it was men.
When we start looking at the origins of science and science development, it was men.
So all the scientific experiments and everything
have always been a default to men.
We look at AI now, and they're learning from algorithms
based on male data.
So even now, health care is still heavily male oriented.
So when we start looking at why women haven't been included
or why women have been generalized to male data,
it's just been the nature of how things have developed.
Now that we're aware of it,
and now we have more research money
coming into women's health,
we're starting to see a change.
And part of the two definitive moments
in healthcare research that really invoked this change,
one was when we started seeing a lot of incidences
with Ambien and the dosage of medicines where women were getting into a lot of accidents, car
accidents, after they take an Ambien because it was still in their system the
next morning. It's Ambien. It's a sleep aid. It's a prescription strength sleep
aid. So then people are like, whoa, what's going on here? Oh, the dosage for 180 pound
man is the same as a 120 pound woman. And we also
know that there's differences in body composition and metabolism. So a 180 pound man can take this
dose and be fine in the morning, but 120 pound woman can't take that same dose and be fine in
the morning. And then we have COVID and the outcomes of long COVID and the differences
between the sexes with regards to women ended
up with more long COVID, men ended up dying.
So then during the COVID time period, people were like, whoa, there's sex differences in
the outcomes of this disease.
We have to really start looking at that.
So there are slow things that are really impactful on society that now people are starting to
step and say,
wait, we have to really look at women as women, we have to look at men as men.
And is there an element of hormones impacting injury at all?
There's always an impact of hormones.
We're looking at the overlay of hormones and sex hormones, and then the protocols
that have been developed,
they don't take into account estrogen, progesterone, and to some extent, testosterone.
So if we're looking at injury and the way that estrogen makes more laxative ligaments,
that means that our ligaments become more lax when estrogen comes up, which is why people
assume that around ovulation is when people will have
more ACL tears.
It's not because we also see that progesterone comes in and can have a different effect on
the tendons.
But that isn't accounted for in a lot of the protocols that are out there for training
and prevention of overtraining.
We see that when we're looking at male and testosterone,
there tends to be the more testosterone,
the better for developing muscle and recovery,
but that's not necessarily true either.
So there's nuances in the sociocultural idea
around sex hormones that also impact
on our actual guidelines and protocols.
If a man and a woman came to you and said,
I wanna lose weight, they said, I'm 200
pounds and I'd like to lose some weight.
Would you give them different advice on what to do?
Absolutely. Absolutely would.
And it comes down to a lot of we see this on social media all the time, calories in
calories out. Right.
So when we're looking at calories in, calories out, that idea of that algorithm
can work well in men. And the reason for that is the hypothalamus. So if we're looking at
the hypothalamus, which is an area in the brain that controls appetite, it also controls
our endocrine system. So for men, they don't have as many of what we call our kiss-peptin neurons activated. So this is neurons that are responsible for when we have nutrients coming in, they fire
and they're like, yeah, okay, we got enough nutrition coming in that we can now accommodate
for developing muscle and losing body fat.
For women, we have more areas that are very sensitive.
Sensitive to?
To nutrient density.
So when I say this, when we're talking about four grams of carbohydrate that come in,
and say they're carbohydrate from fruit and veg, not from ultra-processed stuff,
those four grams of carb will affect the bodies differently between being a man and a woman.
For a man, those four grams of carb coming in
primarily will go blood sugar and then be stored as liver muscle glycogen. For women, it's blood sugar.
It doesn't get stored because for women in order to store muscle
and liver glycogen, you have to have an activation of
some enzymes from the liver, as well as some enzymes
within the skeletal muscle itself to say,
yeah, okay, we want to store this.
We don't want to circulate it.
So then we start looking at how the brain is perceiving that.
So if the brain is saying, yeah, we can store this
because there's still enough muscle tissue around,
there's still enough blood glucose that we can keep going
and we can survive the day.
But for women, it sits there, the blood glucose sits there, and
when it starts being used, the hypothalamus is like, okay,
where's the extra food that's coming in so we can keep going and
countering the stress that's coming in?
And the best way from a numbers perspective to look at it is when we
are looking at baseline calorie intake just to exist and not get into any kind of
endocrine or hormone dysfunction and appetite dysfunction. For men, it's 15 calories per
kilogram of fat-free mass. For women, it's 30. So we start to see men do really well on things like
fasted training. We see men do really well on calorie restriction because the hypothalamus is not as sensitive to lower calorie intake or to low carb
intake or to high protein and high fat intake. But for women, because the
hypothalamus has more areas that are sensitive to nutrient density.
What does that mean?
Sorry, I'm not even sure what the hypothalamus is.
So the hypothalamus is an area in the brain
and it's sensing.
So you have blood that circulates through the brain.
It senses temperature, how hot your blood is.
Like the thermostat or something of the body.
Yeah.
So it's, yeah, it is a thermostat.
It's the appetite control center.
It's how your body responds to salt,
how your body responds to protein, carbohydrate.
Do I need more?
Do I need less?
So it's like the control center for the most part.
So for women who come in and they're doing fasted training,
the hypothalamus is like, wait a second,
we don't have any blood sugar.
We don't have enough carbohydrate
to actually do this kind of training. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to create a
little bit of dysfunction here, and I'm going to start
downturning all the other systems that need the same kind
of fuel, because I don't have enough just to do these muscle
contractions.
So that means you could end up losing muscle.
Absolutely. So if a woman comes to me, it's like, I want to lose weight.
And I've been doing fasted training.
I get up, I have a black coffee.
I go to the gym.
I do my lifting.
I do some of my cardio.
My girlfriend does exactly that.
And then I'm not that hungry because I did a hard workout at the gym.
I might have a protein recovery shake and then I'll hold off
eating my first meal until noon.
I always turn to
them and go, well why did you go to the gym? Because all you've effectively done
is burn through your lean mass. So your body needs to have some fuel and the
first thing that goes is lean mass because it's a very active component of
the body. So it would be better for you as a woman to have maybe 15 grams of protein, if you're
going to do strength, or 15 grams of protein with 30 grams of carb, which isn't a lot,
before you go do cardio and strength.
Because this is just enough to raise your blood sugar to circulate to the hypothalamus
that yes, there's some nutrition coming in.
I'm able to get that blood sugar working. I'm able to get that blood sugar working.
I'm able to get that blood sugar into the muscle.
I'm able to stimulate the mitochondria in the muscle
to actually use some more free fatty acids.
I'm able to tell the liver that I can actually get through this
and use these free fatty acids instead of storing them.
It only takes a little bit of food
to then have benefit for what you're doing.
For a man, if he's like, comes in, I have a black coffee,
I go to the gym, I do my strength,
I might do a little cardio, have my protein afterwards,
and then I might delay my meal, that's all right.
Because you have a longer window for recovery.
The hypothalamus isn't as sensitive,
you're not burning through a lean mass,
you're developing a stress on the body.
And we know that it's really good
that you had that protein post exercise,
because that's going to create some muscle protein synthesis
and hold you over till you have your meal.
Okay, so I'm gonna try and explain this to you,
like I'm a 10 year old, which is the exact level of IQ
I have on this subject matter.
So you've got this hypothalamus in the brain,
which is basically the sensor is trying to figure out make sure everything is in.
I'm trying to think of that big word that someone taught me.
Homeostasis.
Homeostasis. Everything is level, right? And a woman's hypothalamus is more sensitive. So
if my partner wakes up, goes to the gym, has her black coffee, goes to the gym,
does a big workout, as she always does, her body, her hypothalamus,
is going to panic a little bit more,
because it's going to assume that there's stress on the body now,
and it's going to look around to see if it has sufficient blood glucose levels.
And it's not going to, because she's not had anything for a while, she's not going to have
the sufficient blood glucose levels. So it's going to start burning her lean muscle mass.
Which means that she's essentially going to, it's like one step forward, one step back.
Right, super simplified. For a guy, has his black coffee in the morning, goes to the gym, does the workout, the body looks,
and because the hypothalamus is less sensitive,
it's less requiring of there to be higher blood sugar levels,
doesn't care as much, so it's going to...
It can also tap more into our liver
and muscle glycogen stores.
Okay, so it's tapping into the storage. Okay, well, we have a little bit of blood glucose,
we need a little bit more. So let's tap into the stores and pull them out.
So it's less reluctant to go straight for my lean muscle mass.
Exactly.
Okay.
As an alternative fuel source.
That's interesting. And what's the evolutionary story of this? Why does this make sense?
When we look tribally, like there, I might get hit by some sociologists who are like,
wait, this isn't completely true. But for the exception, there are some tribes that didn't
fit into this. But for the general idea from a biological evolutionary standpoint,
when we had times of low calorie intake, so we had to go find the beast or we had to go out and find calories,
it was at a disadvantage for the woman to be pregnant or to have a baby, an extra mouth to feed.
So in times of low food intake, the reproductive system or the endocrine system of a woman would wind down.
So she would become amenorrheic or lose her menstrual cycle for a while.
But it didn't affect men in that same way because they had to lean up and get fitter
and faster because they had to go fight the beast or they had to go find the calories
and bring it back.
So when we're looking from that evolutionary standpoint, in times of low calorie intake
or low food intake, a woman's body will start to conserve and wind down,
because it thinks that there's a famine coming. But for men, they're not as sensitive, and the
body's like, oh, not a lot of calories coming in. That must mean there's a fight that I have to
prepare for. So I'm going to lean up. I'm going to address all of my fuel systems so that I can tap
into all these alternative fuel systems so that I will tap into all these alternative fuel systems so that
I will have the energy to be able to go and fight the beast to bring the calories back.
So when there's adequate calories available, we see that women will lean up.
They'll become more acutely aware.
Cognitive function comes up.
Carbohydrates are really important.
So we see that there is a development of egg maturation.
We have better endocrine pulse.
So that means that our hormones that pulse on a daily basis, they actually have the full
pulse and return to baseline to encourage the body have a really robust endocrine system.
So that's thyroid, that's our menstrual cycle, it's all of the things.
But when we start pulling the calories back, all that stuff winds down.
So what does that say about fasting?
So this is the big debate, right?
So we look at fasting and where it first came out and it's like, okay,
we see that obese sedentary individuals who had to lose weight rapidly for surgery,
they're put on a fasting type program to lose weight quickly for surgery. They were put on a fasting type program
to lose weight quickly in order to survive surgery.
And unfortunately, a lot of those times
we look at clinical research and it gets transposed
over to health and fitness
without actually asking if it's viable.
So then we look at the lower end of the fitness population.
People who are just learning to move and wanting to move. And like, I also want to lose more body fat so that I can move better. Oh, I'll
start fasting. And when we see a lot of the like push on it, it comes from male data again.
So when we start looking at women, and a lot of women used to come with their partners
to see me and say, I don't understand, We're both doing the same kind of fasted training.
He's leaning up and getting fitter.
I'm putting weight on and getting slower.
I'm like, okay, well, we have to separate it out.
If you're a woman and you want to fast for all the health reasons that we hear about
with regards to telomere length, improving longevity, improving our body's metabolic control. Then we work with
our circadian rhythm where we stop eating at dinner. So we have dinner and we don't eat
two to three hours before bed. We have the overnight fast and then you want to have food
within a half an hour of waking up to blunt that cortisol peak that's natural upon waking.
For men, you can have variations of fasting. You can do
intermittent fasting, you can do warrior fasting, and you can still have benefit.
But for women, when we look at the data, and if we were to do a warrior fast,
which is a 20-hour fast, 4-hour eating window, for men we see more parasympathetic
drive so they get that more focus. They have better blood glucose control.
They get an acceleration of body fat loss.
They become more metabolically flexible, meaning their body is able to transfer between carbohydrate
and fat utilization.
For women, it doesn't happen that way.
For women who do a warrior fast, so that's a 20-hour fasting
and four-hour eating window.
They end up with less blood sugar control.
We have higher resting blood glucose.
We have more fat storage.
We have more sympathetic drives.
So that means the body's under stress
and you're not going to be able to sleep or recover well.
And we see a downturn of the thyroid
within four days of doing this. So
when we're looking at the data of fasting, again, it's pulling from the men and generalizing
to the women. But when we start really looking and narrowing it down and looking at female
specific data, the type of fasting that's out there in the health and fitness world
is not appropriate for women. But you would say that the sort of overnight fast, eating dinner at an earlier time.
At six, seven.
Six, six o'clock and then eating breakfast when you wake up at say eight in the morning
or nine or something.
Six or seven.
What about the like three day fast you hear about to get into like autophagy or whatever
it is?
Exercise is a stronger stimulus for autophagy than fasting.
So we look at exercise in itself as a fasting state.
What happens during exercise?
You start exercising, your body is trying to provide fuel.
So it's breaking down fat, it's breaking down glucose.
It's breaking down amino acids.
It's also creating in a recovery standpoint,
a boost of growth hormone,
a boost of testosterone in both men and women,
that creates the cell cleanup, which is autophagy.
If we're looking at the difference between fasting and exercise,
exercise is a stronger stress.
All the things that we hear about fasting and longevity,
exercise does the same.
It's a stronger stimulus for it.
But the problem is we've become a lazy society and people think exercise does the same. It's a stronger stimulus board. But the problem is
we've become a lazy society and people think exercise is too hard. As an exercise physiologist,
it breaks my heart to see people who are struggling to walk down the street because we are so
used to being conditioned to a certain temperature in a room to having a car, automatic opener
or Uber come so we don't have to walk
down the road.
And I bring up that movie WALL-E from the early 2000s with the little robot who's like
wandering around society and you see all these people on these floating beds watching a screen
and one of the guys gets kicked off by WALL-E accidentally, falls down and can't get up.
And he's looking around going, why can't I get up?
What's going on?
I'm like, that's today's society
where people are not able to actually
pull their own body weight around
for a significant amount of time
because it feels too difficult.
Whereas we look at all the stuff
that comes out with nutrition
and all the trends that come out with nutrition
from fasting to carnivorous diet to the old-fashioned paleo, all of these things that people are
trying to do.
We turn to exercise and we change the modalities of exercise.
Are we doing intense exercise?
Are we doing low intensity?
Are we doing resistance training?
Are we doing cardio?
What are we doing?
All of these things in exercise are significantly stronger
stress on the body that create more adaptive changes
than all these crazy diets.
But people find exercise too hard
where they don't have time.
So if I, in that example where a man and woman come to you,
you wouldn't recommend the woman to fast
in the same way that you'd recommend a man to fast.
Is there any differences that you'd recommend in training if their goal was to lose weight?
Yep, absolutely. So when we're looking at regardless of age for women, because we see that women don't age in a linear fashion like men. So we had definitive points. We have puberty, we have our reproductive years, we don't have pregnancy in there, we have perimenopause, we have postmenopause. Each one of those is a different hormone profile that can affect the way we train.
For men, you know, you just kind of go, oh, and we start to see a decline of testosterone
when we get into our late 50s.
So we're talking about women and training.
If someone is coming in and they're in their mid-30s and they're like, I want to lose weight,
okay, resistance training.
If someone comes in and they're in their mid 40s,
then perimenopause, resistance training.
Doesn't matter.
Resistance training is key for mobilizing abdominal fat
and for creating more lean mass
and also increasing the amount of crosstalk
between their skeletal muscle and our stored fat
through little things called myokines, which are hormone signals that are released during exercise
and released from the skeletal muscle.
So if we say, okay, let's do resistance training to really re-comp the body,
we also want to increase our protein intake, because we see if you're doing resistance training
with a higher protein intake, then we have complete re-comp over the course of 12 weeks.
And it's a very powerful motivating tool for women because for the most part, women
have been excommunicated from the strength world until recently.
It wasn't kosher for women to have a lot of muscles.
We see, like I grew up in the 90s with the super models that were super skinny, right?
It wasn't kosher for women to be in the gym lifting weights, but we're seeing
this evolution change.
And so we're starting to see more research come out in women in resistance
training, and it's so imperative for body composition change to invoke
that resistance training.
What about a Zempek?
A Zempek, yeah.
So I find it interesting because of all the impact it's having on society.
And it is a very powerful tool.
The problem with it is no one is being necessarily taught how to come off it.
So if we look at Ozimpek and how powerful the GPL-1 is, we see it does invoke an appetite
switch where it mutes the appetite, it dampens cravings.
So we see rapid weight loss, but that rapid weight loss is lean mass.
So that comes back to the Wally picture where you can't get up because you don't have lean
mass.
I fear for society who doesn't have the opportunity to learn how to come off it through proper strength training, exercise modalities, and nutrition
to support the weight loss that comes with those Impec use.
It's absolutely a brilliant tool.
It's absolutely a brilliant tool, but we're falling on the behavior change.
If we were to really teach people how to create that behaviour change while they're using the tool,
then they can come off it and not be afraid of putting weight back on.
Okay, so would you recommend it for people that come to see you or ask you for advice?
No, because most of the people that come to see me have this ten vanity pounds they want to lose.
I call them vanity pounds because they're the ones that creep up and you can instigate
little changes within the daily life to actually lose them and keep them off.
For people who are struggling, who have severe obesity, they're pre-diabetic, they have other
medical conditions, and exercise is definitely in the too hard basket because they get breathless
just getting up out of their chair.
We need to lose some weight first so that we can then implement some of the adaptive changes of exercise.
And do you think women should be eating immediately after they exercise?
And men? Or is there a variance there at all?
There is a variance because when we look at what we call metabolism coming back down to baseline,
so that's your overall body coming back down
to its resting state.
For women, it happens within 30 to 40 minutes
after exercise.
For men, it's two to 18 hours, depending on the intensity.
So in that, we see that if we wanna maximize
our body's resistance training, muscle building capacity,
we need to give it some food.
We need to give it some really good hit of protein.
For women who are in their reproductive years, we see 35 grams of protein post
exercise within 45 minutes.
We'll tip the muscle into muscle protein synthesis.
For men, it's 20 grams and it can be two, four, whatever hours later.
When we're looking at returning our muscle glycogen back to normal, we don't need as
much carbohydrate post-exercise as a woman as men need more because they tap more into
their stores.
So, the window of opportunity for women post-exercise is around that 45-minute mark, but for men,
it's open a lot wider.
What about the keto diet for women?
I am kind of anti-keto for both sexes.
And I say this because when we look at the gut microbiome,
that is so important.
We see a decrease in diversity as we become more and more,
I guess, city dwelling, and we are having less and less of a variety in
our food chain, we have to take care of the gut microbiome.
If we look at the ketogenic diet and the high fat intake that comes with it, it significantly
decreases that gut microbiome diversity, which reduces the body's ability to synthesize
vitamins, to produce serotonin, to have this conversation between the gut and the brain.
And for women, we're already metabolically flexible
by the nature of being born with more of those endurant fibers,
that there's no reason to try to do a ketogenic diet.
Could I not take a pre-biotic or something,
or just eat more fruits and veggies and stuff?
So, if you're eating a lot of fruit and veggies...
Sorry, not fruits and veggies and stuff. So if you're eating a lot of fruit and veggies. Sorry, not fruit and veggies.
No.
If you're eating a lot of fibrous fruit and veg,
then that's how we increase the diversity.
Taking a probiotic pill just affects the upper intestines.
But even that is a little bit suspect
because there's only two to three companies that
are making all the probiotics that are B2B.
So that means business to business.
And we don't really know the long-term outcome,
and we can have the overgrowth of some probiotics that again can cause some dysbiosis.
Could I be on the keto diet and still protect my gut microbiome?
I don't think so.
Not from what I've seen.
Because I thought the gut microbiome was predominantly about like plants.
It is, but you also need some protein that comes from a wide variety of different sources.
And the amount of fat that is taken in through a true ketogenic diet is 70 to 80% of your
total intake coming from fat.
And then that will cause the overgrowth of the bacteria that relies primarily on fatty acids,
which down regulates all the good bacteria that relies on our fibrous fruit and veg.
Because you're not going to be able to consume as much fiber as you need on a ketogenic diet
to really invoke this diversity.
If we're thinking about invoking diversity, you want 30 different plants across the week.
And on a ketogenic diet, you're just not capable
of being able to eat as much to create that diversity.
And the reason why it's really important for women
to have that diversity is because we have some gut bugs
that are responsible for our sex hormone metabolism.
So we think about estrogen progesterone, people think, oh yeah, well, it's released
from the ovaries and the adrenals,
and it goes and it hits our target tissues.
But we have this thing called the second pass,
where our sex hormones will be taken up by the liver,
bound by sex hormone binding globulin,
shot into the intestines through bile,
unconjugated or unpacked by these little gut bugs,
and then shot back out into circulation to work. If we have a lower diversity of the gut microbiome, we don't
have those bugs that will help with our sex hormone reactivation and the ability for the
sex hormones to work optimally.
What about things like saunas and cold plunges? Is there a difference, a variance there between
men and women?
Absolutely. So if we're looking at cold plunge, and it's all the rage, right? So we're seeing,
let's get into ice water, it's going to invoke this massive parasympathetic response, I'm
going to have lots of cognition and focus. It's going to create a hormonal response that
improves my blood glucose. It's going to invoke a lot of autophagy
and all the things that we see with fasting as well.
And it gives me this incredible sense of being in control, male data.
We look at women who were in ice bath, it's too cold to invoke those responses.
And the reason for that is we have differences in our skin sensation
between men and women with regards to thermoregulation. So women have
more subcutaneous fats and more fat under the skin and we tend to vasoconstrict
and vasodilate first. So that means that blood vessels will constrict tightly and
then we'll start to have some internal changes.
Or if we're too hot, we'll vasodilate first
and then we'll have internal changes to create sweating.
So we look at a cold plunge, there's too much constriction
and it becomes too much of a threat to women
and their bodies don't have the same response to ice water.
We see that 15 to 16 degrees C,
around 55 degrees Fahrenheit,
is optimal temperature for women to experience
the same effect that men have with ice.
So there's a sex difference in the temperature
to invoke the same response
between cold water immersion responses.
In the sauna, everyone responds.
And we see that the adaptation for sauna is different again for men and women.
Because for women, with the difference of the vasodilation and the heat before they start sweating,
it takes a longer time for core temperature to come up.
So women can spend more time in the heat before they start to get changes in their hormone
responses and blood volume adaptations.
For men, they can go in and I kind of laugh.
My husband will come in with me in the sauna and I'll sit there for like 10 minutes and
not sweating yet.
And he's like pouring.
He's like, I got to get out.
And it takes me like 20 or 30 minutes in order to get the same response.
So when we look at the actual research and data
that looks at acclimatization and looks at sauna invoking changes, we see again that women need
more time, both longer time for an acute out and longer time across the weeks in order to get the
same cardiovascular adaptations as men. Interesting. I didn't realize that. A typical ice bath is what temperature? It's minus
one or something?
I think it's zero to four degrees C.
Oh, okay. Zero to four. Okay. So you're saying that a woman should be near a 15 for the same
benefits.
Yep.
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One of the conversations I had with my partner last year at New Year's Eve was about creatine.
I had some with me on the counter in our home and we were
away from home and I said to her, I said, oh, you should take some. And her response
was no, that's not for women. And she went on to explain that she felt it was for effectively
like bodybuilders and that it would like put on weight. And I was like, I don't think that's
true. I said, some people on my podcast have told me that everyone should be taking it.
And so we sat there and Googled it.
And after Googling it for a couple of minutes,
she was scooping it into her drink
as fast as she possibly could.
But there is a prevailing narrative here.
Actually, before you came,
I asked AI a couple of questions
about women's perceptions on creatine.
And the number one thing was women thought
that it would gain muscle and gain weight. And they thought it was
for bodybuilders.
Yep. That is the prevailing myths around creatine. And
what's the expression people use the dose or the poisons in the
dose? Right. So that's part of the creatine. So if we're
looking at the bodybuilding set and how it increases muscle capacity and training status.
So if we're using a lot of creatine,
the dosing for bodybuilding is five grams four times a day
with one gram of carbohydrate.
And we see that creatine helps store water
within the muscle with glycogen.
And we want that for muscle performance
because the idea of being
able to train harder with creatine is to enhance the amount of enzymes that are available for
muscle contraction. And creatine is part of the buffering system of that. If we're looking
at creatine for health and for women, the dose is three to five grams only once a day without carbohydrate.
And the reason for that is women have around 70%
of the stores that men have by the nature,
for the most part, don't eat as much
creatine-filled food as men.
And we see that we use it for a lot of our fast energetics.
So like for our gut health, for our brain health,
and then also for muscle performance.
So if we're having women take three to five grams once a day, it does not have the same side effects
as the bodybuilding set of taking five grams four times a day. Yeah, because on the label,
it tells me to take it a few times a day. Yeah, you don't have to. And it says about loading.
So this is all the bodybuilding stuff, right?
So if you want to load, we see a loading protocol over the course of two weeks,
and you're starting to really saturate the body with those five grams four times a day.
But for women, we see that three to five grams will fully saturate the body over the course of three weeks.
So that means that all our fast energetics, like I said, are gut, the intestines.
We're looking at the integrity of the intestinal cells and the mucosal lining.
And we see that there is greater incidence of GI distress in women.
I think it's something like a five to one ratio of women to men having GI distress running.
And it has to do with estrogen, but also has to do with what we call the mucosal lining
of the intestines. So we want to maintain what we call the mucosal lining of the intestines.
So we want to maintain the integrity of the mucosal lining, and creatine is really important
for that.
So if we're looking at saturating the body over three weeks with three to five grams,
we improve that integrity so we have less GI distress.
We also see that there have been randomized control trials looking at mood, and specifically
with regards to depression
and anxiety.
And women who are taking three to five grams of creatine will come out of a depressive
episode more so than women who are just using an SSRI.
So it's really important for brain metabolism.
And when we're looking at that whole loading strategy for men, that's all about muscle
performance. It's not about gut health, it's not about brain health, it's about muscle performance.
Just looking at some studies, creatine supplementation for both men and women
enhances muscle strength, increases lean muscle mass, improves high intensity exercise performance,
improves recovery, has potential cognitive benefits and supports in neurodegenerative diseases.
Yes. So Abby Smith Ryan is a colleague at a UNC and she's done a lot of work in creatine for women.
And yes, we see that there is an improvement in muscle capacity because you're increasing the amount of
buffer that's available for muscle contractions, but it doesn't have to be the same loading dose as men.
If you are looking for performance enhancement
because you want to improve a training block
or you're in physique building or you're
going to do something like high rocks
and you need to have greater muscle capacity,
you might want to try the loading strategy.
Yes, you will gain water weight because you're also storing
more within the muscle. But for the general
woman who's looking for health and performance benefits, you
don't have to do a loading strategy, you just have to do
that three to five grams a day.
That loading strategy for anyone that doesn't know is basically
some of the creatine boxes will tell you the labels will say,
for the first week or two weeks, whatever, have a huge dosage of
it. And then then thereafter, you can
kind of ease down the dosage. But I think that's kind of been debunked to something that we all
need to do in all cases. Yeah. Are there any other supplements that you recommend women to take based
on the way that we live our lives and the food that we eat? Vitamin D. Okay. And why? And what
does that do? So if we're looking at vitamin D, especially vitamin D3.
What's the difference?
So you have vitamin D2 and vitamin D3. Vitamin D2 is more of a storage form. It's not converted
to being a functional form. So if you take D3, it's already a functional form. So that means your
body is going to take it in and use it as it should be. So we're looking at a vitamin D3
supplement, then we are able to boost circulating levels of vitamin D3 or vitamin D that's usable, and it's used for every system in the body.
And it's really important now, especially I'm coming from the southern hemisphere just out of winter, you're in the upper parts of the northern hemisphere in the middle of winter, and we don't get enough sun. And when we're looking at now all the worries
for skin cancer, people are slip, slap, slop,
sunscreen, hat, clothes, and we don't get enough.
And then if we're looking at our food supply,
there's not a lot of proper vitamin D rich foods.
You're looking at mushrooms or fortified dairy products,
and those tend not to be consumed a lot nowadays.
So if we're improving the amount of vitamin D3
that we're taking in and the amount of vitamin D
that's circulating, we have better recovery,
we have better muscle function, we have better brain health,
we have pretty much every system
is affected in a positive way.
Omega-3?
Yeah, omega-3s are good, especially as we get into
peri and postmenopause.
We want to look at how inflammation affects the cells.
So if we look at using a really good vitamin,
or sorry, a really good omega-3,
and omega, I guess we're looking at the types
of omega-3s that are in there,
then we're enhancing cellular integrity
that our estrogen used to help
with anti-inflammatory properties.
It's not something that everyone needs to take. It's something that we have to consider when
we start getting into our late 30s, early 40s, maybe get a blood test for it, see how your
omega-3 levels are, and then consider dosing with a really good fish oil.
What about iron levels? Because I've had a friend of mine who is a woman
tell me that their iron levels were low. This is common and we see that there's
the incidence of a change in the norms when we're looking at the reference ranges.
And I find it really interesting that the reference ranges
that we have for all of our blood markers
are shifting to a sicker population.
What's that mean?
So if we're looking at the bill curve
and we're taking population data,
overall our societies become sicker.
So now we're seeing that the norms for iron
used to be a ferritin of 50 or lower was considered
low ferritin.
Now it's 26 for women.
We look at testosterone, lower testosterone now for men is normal.
And it is because that is just what a sedentary population now presents.
But if someone is active and comes to me and says, you know, I had my iron tested and it's
sitting at 26.
And they say that it's normal, but I feel awful.
It's like, that is not normal.
If you were part of my high performance athletic crew, we want to see minimum 50, preferably
100.
So we have to supplement you to bring it up.
And it's a really specific area of how we supplement. It's supplementing every other day with a very high bioavailable iron.
And when we start looking at how we are supplementing every other day with either a carbonyl or a glycanate,
then we're really able to boost that ferritin and people start to feel better.
What does iron do and how does someone who's iron deficient feel?
So iron is responsible for those heme groups that I was talking about with oxygen carrying capacity.
Hemoglobin, the blood cells.
Yeah, the blood cells. So iron is responsible for allowing those heme groups to carry oxygen.
If we have low iron, then we don't have enough oxygen circulating throughout
the body or being used by the body. So you feel very flat, very tired, you start to get
really dark circles under your eyes. It's a mission to do anything. So it's like a dead
end fatigue. And people are like, this isn't stress oriented fatigue or jet lag oriented
fatigue. This is fatigue where I can't even walk
up the stairs without getting winded.
What foods have iron in them are iron rich?
So primarily red meat is where a lot of people turn to. But if
you are more plant based, then we look at leafy greens, we look
at nuts and seeds, but using a lot of vitamin C with that,
peripherally adding a little bit of olive oil on our salads. We look at nuts and seeds, but using a lot of vitamin C with that.
Preferably adding a little bit of olive oil on our salads.
Maybe cooking in an iron skillet to improve the amount of iron that comes into the food.
And we also know that we have to time it with what we call a hepsidin or hepcidin, depending
on where you come from in the world.
It's an enzyme that decreases the body's availability
of iron absorption.
It increases with inflammation.
So it's higher after training for about five hours
in men and in reproductive women.
And it can be elevated for up to 24 hours in late peri
and early postmenopausal women.
So basically, how do I supplement?
Supplement before training or at night away from training?
When you think about men's and women's diets,
is there anything to be aware of when we're thinking about?
Because me and my partner will sit down for dinner
and we share the food.
So if food comes out, even when we go to a restaurant,
sometimes we'll order the exact same thing
and we'll both finish it. Yeah.
Is that okay?
Is it working for you guys? I think part of the reason I ask is when I did some blood glucose tests,
I think if I recall this correctly, my partner was more glucose sensitive than me
and I recall them telling me that women have a greater blood sugar sensitivity than me. And I recall them telling me that women are have a greater blood sugar sensitivity than men.
So this is the interesting part. So when we're looking at blood
glucose and insulin sensitivity, it changes across the menstrual
cycle. So it depends on is she in the high hormone phase or not,
if she's in the high hormone phase, which is after ovulation,
we have more insulin resistance.
And the reason for that is when progesterone comes up, it's trying to take in everything
as a building block for the uterine lining.
Insulin resistance. What does that mean?
So insulin is the hormone that is a signal for your muscles to uptake glucose, to store it.
Okay, so it sends a signal to grab the glucose out of my blood,
store it, which brings my glucose levels down?
Exactly.
Okay.
Exactly.
When progesterone is in the picture, insulin doesn't do its job very well.
Okay.
Because progesterone wants to have more carbohydrate available to be able to then send it to the developing uterine lining,
the endometriosis, because the endometriosis becomes a really thick layer of tissue that is really rich in glycogen.
So progesterone increases lean mass breakdown or you increase your protein intake to have more circulating
amino acids.
It also makes your body less apt to store glucose because it wants both amino acids
and glucose to build this lush uterine lining.
When we get into perimenopause, we have more insulin resistance because there's confusion
across all systems of the body.
And the body is like, I don't know if I'm going to need this glucose or not, so I'm not going to store it. And there's a misstep in the liver and a misstep in the mitochondria, which is responsible
for tapping into using free fatty acids with carbohydrate. So the body is having a higher
level of blood glucose because the body doesn't know if it should store it or not.
So when your partner gets tested, it depends on how old she is and what phase of the menstrual cycle or if she's well beyond that.
So the part of the menstrual cycle where her progesterone is highest is when she's going to be most sensitive to sugar.
Exactly.
And that is typically between day 19 and 23 if she has a normal cycle, a regular cycle or whatever.
Well, the caveat there is ovulation. Is she ovulating or not?
Okay.
And unfortunately, we're seeing in the modern fertility literature that women are having more and more anovulatory cycles.
But you won't necessarily know that because you'll still have a bleed. What and more anovulatory cycles, but you won't necessarily know that
because you'll still have a bleed.
What's an anovulatory cycle?
You don't ovulate.
Why?
They're looking at a lot of the stress that's coming on today's
society, the food system, a lot of the, I guess, trendy diets
that are out there.
A lot of women are eating enough to support their immune or their menstrual cycle function to allow the egg to actually develop to then
instigate ovulation. And it's not just in active women, it's across the board.
So as it relates to this menstrual cycle, 28 days, I'm going to put on the screen for
anyone that doesn't understand it or doesn't know what I'm referencing right now.
I'll also link it below in the comments in the description. Sorry.
28 days long, there's the early follicular stage, the late follicular stage, the mid luteal.
Luteal.
That's exactly what I said.
Yep.
And the late luteal phase.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
As it relates to nutrition and exercise, how do I need to adapt across these 28 days? And
why do I need to adapt? So again, it comes down to the ovulation, right? So if we're looking at
the low hormone phase, so that's your follicular phase. So day one to six, roughly. Yep. And even
up to ovulation. Which is where? So around day 12 or 13 on a 28-day cycle.
So right at that peak.
12 to 13, oh yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, there.
So this is where the immune system is really robust,
and we're really resilient to stress.
And we can have a lot of carbohydrate and protein
intake, and we're not going to be that affected.
We're more sensitive to glucose.
It's going to be pulled into places it needs to be.
If we ovulate, after ovulation, like I said, progesterone comes up.
It's only produced if we ovulate because progesterone is produced from the breakdown
of the housing of the egg.
Progesterone, like I said earlier, will hold everything in the blood.
It will tell the body we need more blood glucose and we need that glucose to come to the endometrial lining.
We also need more amino acids.
So we're going to break down lean mass or I'm going to make this person crave more protein oriented foods
so that I can have amino acids to come in.
So if we're looking at adapting, the only real thing that we need to
be aware of is after ovulation, if we're going to do a high intensity workout, we need to
make sure that we have some more carbohydrate. So we're actually eating before and after
having some good carbohydrate that comes in.
Which is from day 14 onwards. So from day 14 onwards, if we are going to do a lot of
high intensity workout, or workout or a big workout,
then we need to just make sure we're having more carbs.
Yep.
And then we have around a 12% increase in our protein needs because we have a higher amount of amino acids that are needed.
One, because we're developing tissue, but two, we also have skeletal muscle turnover that we need to keep up with.
Interesting.
So is there any day in the cycle where we shouldn't be working out hard?
That's individual.
So it used to be early days
when menstrual cycle research was coming out.
We saw on a molecular level that the low hormone phase
was where we could really push it
and we could really get really good adaptations
because our body was really responsive to stress.
Then after ovulation, we see a fuel shift.
Like I said, progesterone is really conserving or pulling glucose away.
Estrogen is also sparing it and saying, you know, you need to go to the uterine lining.
So with the change of hormones, we have a change in our fueling system.
We also have a change in our core temperature, where it goes up by about
0.5 degrees Celsius or around 1 degrees Fahrenheit.
So our heat tolerance isn't as great.
But because we're seeing more and more anovulatory cycles,
we have to rely on the woman to track her own cycle.
Which is hard.
Well, it doesn't have to be as hard as what people think.
It's the nuance of how do I feel today.
So I tell women, instead of really dialing it in and saying,
oh, well, I think I ovulated today,
so that means I should back it down.
When you go to the gym, use what we call sessional
rating of perceived exertion.
So I tell people, most of the time you're gonna go in,
you can have a physical and a mental, right?
Physical, how are you on a one to 10?
Mental, how are you on a one to 10?
If physically you're an eight and mentally you're a two,
warm up really well and see if that mental capacity
comes back up.
If not, then we're not gonna push too hard,
we're not gonna work on technique
because mentally you're just not there.
Physically, maybe you are.
If you go in and you're low on both of them, then it's going to be a technique in recovery
day.
You're not wasting time at the gym.
You're going to make it work for you by really working slow under the bar, nailing technique,
not getting the heart rate up so much.
And as we're going through and tracking how we feel, we're going to start to see patterns
across our cycle.
And we can anticipate those patterns and say,
okay, well, I know on day 21, I always feel flat.
So I'm not gonna schedule a high intensity workout that day.
I'm gonna sleep in, maybe do some mobility,
recover and really know that I'm not gonna nail it that day
so I'm not gonna go push myself because I don't want to beat myself up mentally.
Because women do this, they're like, I suck, I don't know why.
But it comes down to that physiological variability.
And for a woman to track her own cycle, understand her own nuances.
If you're really onto it and you know when you ovulate,
then you can take those molecular structures into play.
Where you know you can hit your PR and you can really push it in the low hormone phase.
After ovulation, you're going to switch it to more endurance, maybe not so high intensity
but more tempo type work.
And then about the four or five days before your period starts where your immune system's
more compromised, you just kind of want to dial it down and use this as D-load.
So we can take the strength and conditioning ideas
of building up macro micro cycles and deload
across the menstrual cycle.
So where in this cycle am I going to be strongest
if I'm a woman?
So if we're looking from a cognitive
and a physicality aspect,
it's right around where that estrogen starts to come up.
So around day six.
Day six.
To about day 13, 14.
Day 13, okay.
And where am I gonna be least strong theoretically?
From about day 23.
Yeah, yeah.
Yep, as those hormones start to come down.
Yeah.
To 28.
Oh, okay, so the very end, okay.
The very end.
And the variation of those hormones coming down is what instigates a total inflammatory response.
So if we're looking at inflammation, which drives the menstrual cycle to start the bleeding phase, we have a change in our immune system.
Bleeding happens at 28?
Around day 28. So we say bleeding is day one. In a cycle is day 28.
Oh, of course, yeah.
Day one to day six typically.
Okay, fine.
Yeah.
I guess the question is what questions should I be asking about the menstrual cycle?
Well, you know, the questions that are never asked is like, what is a typical menstrual
cycle?
Yes, we have a textbook, like from one to 28.
That's very, very rare.
Most women have a cycle that might be 21 to 40 days.
The bleed cycle is something that's never talked about.
What does a bleed cycle look like?
Is it really six days?
No, every woman has a different one.
And if you're tracking what that bleed is,
maybe you have two heavy days, a light day,
and another couple of days of spotting,
and then a heavy day, that's your norm.
When you start having changes in the norm,
that's when you want to look and say,
am I getting into low energy availability?
Am I not recovering well enough?
Or am I in my late 30s, early 40s,
and I started getting into perimenopause?
The bleed pattern is so important for people to understand
because that's how we have a true, inherent identification
of stress.
So we see changes in the bleed pattern,
as well as the length of the menstrual cycle itself,
when the body's not adapting to stress.
And stress isn't just our daily life stress,
it's exercise stress.
And that disruption could also be
just not having a bleed.
Yes.
Cause a lot of women talk about that,
they talk about having irregular periods
or just the period didn't come this month.
Is that often an indicator of the body being under stress?
Yes.
And that stress can be not just bad emails at work,
but it could be you're working out too much or something.
Yeah, working out too much,
not eating enough is a big one.
We've done some really interesting research
looking at recreational female athletes.
So people who go to the gym three or four times a week, right?
They're not training specifically for anything but life.
And they tend to fall into some of these trendy diets like fasted training or maybe they're
eating too low carbohydrate because they're on a low carb, high fat or high protein diet
and they're missing on the carbs.
And again, that interrupts the hypothalamus.
So we call it low energy availability.
When someone isn't eating enough for the hypothalamus to say, yeah, all of our systems can work
and we can adapt to exercise.
So we see on the upwards of 55% of recreational female athletes in a low energy state or subclinical low energy state, and
it comes out as changes in the bleed cycle or missed period.
That's why I tell women, look, if you're tracking, you can do sessional RP, but really
track that bleed pattern and the length of the cycle.
Because if you start to see changes in the length and changes in the bleed pattern or
just changes in the bleed pattern, it's an opportunity for you to take a pause.
Say what have I done from a training perspective or a sleep perspective or somehow increased
my stress that my body's not adapting well?
Because if we do that first, then we don't get into a clinical position of amenorrhea,
which is no menstrual cycle, and poor bone health and psychological
issues and things that all come with endocrine dysfunction.
Why is bone health so important for women in particular?
When we see bone, it is driven by estrogen progesterone and interplay between estrogen
progesterone. We see peak velocity or peak bone mass hitting around the time we're 20-ish, and then we'll
start to degrade it if we're not creating multi-directional stress on the bone through
jumping, through resistance training.
And if we start to lose bone density and we become osteopenic or osteoporitic,
meaning we have very thin bones, they break easily.
And it's really, really difficult for someone who is in their reproductive years
to be able to do all the things they want to do
if they don't have a really strong, robust skeletal system.
And this is why vitamin D is also so important?
Yes.
Okay.
And men and women have
different bone density. Yep. Men have thicker bones and tend to not have as much degradation
of the bone because they don't have estrogen progesterone perturbations that are changing
the signaling to increasing bone density or stopping the growth of bone. Right. So women
have this perturbation throughout their menstrual cycle that will change how
their bones are responding.
And then when we don't have a menstrual cycle or we get put on an oral contraceptive pill,
we have changes in that signaling which changes our bone density.
And you mentioned sleep a second ago.
How is sleep relevant and what's the variance between men and women as it relates to sleep?
Sleep is really important because that's where we have our
parasympathetic drive and our ability to recover. So the
whole, I shouldn't say the whole reason because nobody really
knows why we need to sleep other than the fact this is where our
physical and our mental capacities become solidified. So
that means that our body fully repairs while we're sleeping,
our memories get solidified, our brain becomes a little bit relaxed and can repair itself while
we're sleeping. For women, we see changes across the menstrual cycle in our sleep phases. So when
we are slow sleep phases, meaning our deep sleep versus our late sleep versus our dream sleep,
and we need to get in that really super deep sleep in order to have optimal reparation.
When we are getting close to the bleed phase,
then we see more interruption in the sleep.
And it's really, really apparent for women
who have really bad PMS or other conditions
that happen to affect estrogen progesterone.
We have an increase in our core temperature from progesterone. We have changes in melatonin pulse because of estrogen. So when women are
talking about having really poor sleep right before their menstrual cycle, it is because
we have these sex hormones that are interfering with our sleep phases. For men, they don't
have that perturbation. For men, we see that chronologically, they tend to have a melatonin peak that's later
than women.
So they tend to want to stay up later and they can sleep in, but they can also have
shorter sleeps.
So there's a chronobiology aspect that comes to it with regards to how our body actually
falls asleep and wakes up.
And there's a sex difference in that chronobiology.
Do men or women suffer more with jet lag?
Women suffer more with jet lag.
And if so, why is that?
Because if we're looking at our circadian rhythms and how long they are,
like I said, melatonin peaks earlier for women than men, and we have a slightly different-
What does that mean, sorry, melatonin peaks?
So melatonin is what allows our body to actually get into sleep.
And our wind down for that is melatonin production.
So a lot of people will start to feel really sleepy at like four in the afternoon.
It's just a natural occurrence.
Our core temperature comes up, we start to have melatonin production.
And for women, melatonin peak for sleep onset hits around 9 p.m. on average.
For men, it's about 10 or 11 p.m.
Because our circadian rhythms are different.
So women are on a shorter side than men.
So we're talking about jet lag.
For women going east, it's a little bit easier because it's a shorter.
For women going west, it's a little bit harder because it's longer.
So there's a difference. Men will do better going west and worse going east.
Women go better east than going west.
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Use this term chronobiology.
I have no idea what that word means,
but that's the biology of our crony... circadian rhythm?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah, yeah.
And is there anything else that men and women should understand about our chronobiology that's pertinent to making
sure that we're high performing and healthy? Yeah, so this comes down to our
hormone and pulses throughout the day. So we see that cortisol, which everyone
talks about, as being a bad thing. It's not a bad thing. We have a peak about a
half an hour after wake up and for women we need to eat in order to dampen that peak. For men it just naturally dampens
so you don't need the food to instigate dampening of that peak. We see a luteinizing hormone
pulse in both men and women but the amplitude of that pulse is greater in women because
it's responsible for how our body responds to developing an
egg so that it can be fertilized.
We also see estrogen pulses again to pulse throughout the day and then throughout the
week before we can come to one of those estrogen peaks.
So our body is aligned for these pulses and we have a 24-ish hour clock. And within that, we have cellular clocks.
So we have a cellular clock that's telling us to pulse
luteinizing hormone every so often.
We have an internal cellular clock
that's telling estrogen to pulse every so often.
And we can change that through differences in sleep,
change that through our light wake time,
and through food intake.
How important is it to time our meals
and be intentional about when we eat?
It's pretty important if we're looking about
how our clock is aligned,
and how we are repairing while we're sleeping.
Because if we're eating late,
and we've shifted everything late,
because people eat late, they go to bed, they wake up, they're not hungry,
they don't dampen that cortisol peak for women,
and then they don't sleep very well, because if you are eating right before bed,
your body is using parasympathetic response to digest instead of invoke really good sleep.
So we see a lot of this circadian misalignment that's occurring. We see it a lot
in shift workers. We see it a lot in our global society of staying up late and working and having
screens. And the impact on metabolism is that it changes appetite hormones for women, where it will
increase the craving for carbohydrates and the desire to eat more, and they don't ever feel full.
carbohydrates and the desire to eat more, and they don't ever feel full. For men, it's just a craving aspect.
And so they'll eat according to cravings.
It's called hedonistic eating, rather than a true change in appetite hormones.
So people who are having difficulty sleeping and difficulty changing body composition for
overall health, we shift it.
We're like, okay, we want to shift to be able to eat during the day and to have regular
food at regular intervals so that our body has fuel to do what it means during the day.
We stop eating at dinner time, which is around six or seven, have a good two to three hours
before we go to bed so that when we do go to bed, all our parasympathetic responses
can go into
getting really good sleep architecture. So that means that we get really good phases
of sleep for optimal physical and mental recovery. Because if we have that, then we have better
blood glucose control, so better insulin responses. We're able to have more energy during the
day and all of our systems work better. I had noticed something intriguing about me, which is when I wake up early to go to the
airport, so say I have to wake up at like 4am to go to the airport, I am so hungry.
Yeah.
And I've never understood why, because if I wake up at say 9am, I don't wake up as hungry.
Yep.
Why?
Your brain is perceiving a stress.
And this is that hedonistic where you're like,
my brain is like, I'm under stress and I need fuel.
I need glucose.
So it thinks like a lion has woken me up.
Fuckin' hell, that makes so much sense.
Honestly, it's always confused me
because sometimes I have to wake up super early.
So 2, 3 a.m. to go get a plane or something.
And when I get to the airport, I'm so hungry.
But like a day today, what time is it? It's 1 p.m.
And I haven't eaten yet.
I know you're mad at me.
But I haven't eaten yet because I don't want to eat before I do a podcast
because then it's going to like, it like messes with my articulation.
So I can't get the words out of my mouth.
Okay.
Maybe that's bullshit. I'm saying this to someone that knows what they're talking about.
But maybe there's something else I could eat. But I that knows what they're talking about, but maybe there's something
else I could eat.
But I just find that if I eat something heavy, or if generally if I eat the way that I've
always rationalized it is all the oxygen is like going to my digestive system.
Is that nonsense?
That's nonsense.
Is it actually?
Yeah.
So can I eat before I do a podcast?
Yes, you can.
And it won't impact my ability to articulate myself.
If you're really worried, then you can have like a protein shake or protein water.
You can sip protein water while you're having a podcast.
So then you're getting amino acids circulating,
your hypothalamus is like, sweet, okay,
we're all good to go.
But I hear you,
because I don't like to have a lot of food in my stomach
when I'm going to be concentrating a lot
or trying to articulate.
So I eat things that are high in protein,
but easy to digest.
You can try that.
So like protein water or protein shake would be a good idea before?
Or hard boiled eggs.
Hard boiled eggs, okay. Okay. Let's talk about menopause then.
Yeah.
Starting with perimenopause.
Yeah.
You got a smile on your face.
Oh, it's something that I'm really excited is coming into conversations now because
three years ago, no one would say the word. I knew we had made it as Women in Society
when the nightly news was talking about menopause.
So let's go. I'm excited.
One thing I saw, which is quite an interesting observation,
is in the UK this year on Apple,
the most shared podcast episode in the whole country of all podcasts
was a conversation I had about menopause.
Nice!
And...
Congratulations, that's awesome. It gets even better. a conversation I had about Menopause. Nice. And. Congratulations.
That's awesome.
It gets even better.
And in the US, the most shared podcast episode of all podcasts in the US on Apple was the
same guest on Mel Robbins' podcast talking about Menopause.
I go, that's incredible.
And also crazy that in both countries,
the number one most shared podcast episode
was the same guest talking about the same topic.
Yep.
That doesn't surprise you?
Nope.
Why?
Well, I know this guest and she's very good at articulating,
but also we have seen this upsurge of women like myself,
my age group, put myself out there.
We all grew up on the understanding that we were women,
we were a little bit different from men,
but no one told us about menopause.
And now all of a sudden, there are these extreme changes
that are going on and people are like, what's going on?
And if I were to take a typical case scenario of a woman who's in her 40s and goes to a doctor and goes,
you know what, I can't sleep. I am trying to exercise, but I'm so tired. I can't do it. My body is changing, and I just don't know what's going on."
The general response to her three years ago would have been, well, look, you're a woman
in her 40s who's highly stressed.
You have kids on one side.
You have older parents on another.
You're trying to—you're right in the middle of your career.
You have a really busy life.
Here's an SSRI for anxiety and depression.
It's going to help you sleep.
But now, with all the conversations that have been going on, a woman in her 40s will go
to a GP and for the most part will be told, well, you're in your 40s, it might be perimenopause.
And this is such a relief to so many women because they're not being gaslit anymore.
They're not being told that what they're feeling isn't true, it's just something to do with stress.
Now they're being told, you know what? All your systems in your body are being affected because
your sex hormones are changing. So remember puberty? When everything was changing and no
one wants to live through puberty anymore, you're on the other side of that. You're in reverse puberty
where all of your hormones are starting to downregulate.
So every system in your body is being affected.
Let's unpack it.
Let's see what's going on.
So when Mary Claire comes on and talks about menopause as an MD and talks about all the
things that she's seeing in her clinic, women are like, that's me.
Now I understand I'm not alone.
And that's the power that's coming through
all of these conversations and all of these groups
like Naomi Watts Swell Group, right?
They're talking about menopause.
So now women are listening and keying in
and going, wait a second, there actually are things
that are occurring to me and I can get information,
which is why these podcasts are taking off
because now women are like, I'm not just crazy. occurring to me and I can get information, which is why these podcasts are taking off.
Because now women are like, I'm not just crazy.
There are actually things happening to me and people understand that.
Now what can I do to help myself?
Because it isn't being taught in med school.
A lot of the doctors that are out there are getting information because they are seeking
it out themselves and looking to people like Mary Claire
and other like Louise Newsome in the UK,
who are actually talking about and saying,
these are the things that are happening
and these are the things that we know that we can do.
Gosh, it's a shame, isn't it?
It's a shame that there must have been so many women over the years
that went to their doctor and got really bad advice
and were given antidepressant medications and stuff like that.
Well, the other side is women who are in their reproductive years
who have something like PCOS or endometriosis,
or they're having irregular periods,
and they're put on an oral contraceptive bill
because the doctors don't understand
that there are other things that are going on that will cause
a misstep in menstrual cycle.
So I get frustrated when teenage girls go to a doctor with irregular cycles and they're
handed OCs like Skittles.
It's like, that's not appropriate either.
We have to actually understand what's going on.
We know that there's irregularity in a menstrual cycle until people are around three years
post the onset of their first menstrual cycle.
It's not unusual.
And OC is not the answer.
If someone's still having irregularity,
we have to look at lifestyle and say,
hey, what's going on?
They're having really heavy menstrual bleeding.
It's not about using an OC to control it.
Let's look and see why is that happening?
Maybe we use an IUD or maybe we use
some other medication to help.
But there's a lot of things that are not taught
in med school that women are having
to find out for themselves. And so when we listen to podcasts and we're hearing information from
medical doctors who now have a vocal aspect of being able to touch so many people, it resonates.
So now doctors are trying to find that information if they have the time. But we know the health care
systems in most countries, doctors are so pressed for time, they don't have that opportunity.
So let's talk about perimenopause.
What do I need to be thinking about?
What age group typically is perimenopause?
I guess it can be a wide spectrum, but when does that typically start?
And how do I need to be thinking about my nutrition and exercise in that phase?
So around age 35, up to, I think they say now
the average age of menopause is 52 years old.
Okay.
So what's happening in that 15 to 17 year span
is you're having such a change in the ratio
of estrogen and progesterone.
Early days, a lot of it appears as,
I'm not adapting to my training.
It's not working well.
I'm putting on more body fat.
I'm becoming squishy.
I'm not sleeping well.
I'm having lots of mood changes.
It must be this is why a lot of doctors say,
oh, it's because you're busy and stressed out.
Here's the serotonin reuptake inhibitor.
But no, it's changes in the ratios.
How can we dial it in?
We look at menstrual cycles and is it becoming shorter or longer?
What's our bleed phase?
When we get into our mid to late 40s, it's very apparent because there are a lot of different
changes that are occurring.
We're seeing a change in our blood lipids.
There's an increase in our low-density lipoprotein, which is the quote, bad cholesterol.
Even if a woman's never had an issue with it,
now all of a sudden she's having issues with her cholesterol.
We see A1C coming up, which is a marker for diabetes,
pre-diabetes, without any real change in what they're doing,
other than the fact that their exercise isn't working,
their sleep is a little bit disrupted,
and their body composition is completely
changing.
When we're looking at what's happening, we see the decrease in gut microbiome diversity
because we don't have as many sex hormones.
That impacts serotonin, that impacts vitamin production, that impacts parasympathetic drive.
We're also seeing a misstep in the way liver is reading fat and fat circulation.
So we're seeing free fatty acids that are coming around, and because we don't have as
much estrogen, we don't have as much anti-inflammatory responses, so we can't pull as many free fatty
acids into the mitochondria and the skeletal muscle to be used as fuel.
So they circulate, and the liver has a signal that goes,
we're going to change that free fatty acid into what we call
esterfied fatty acid, which then gets stored as visceral fat.
And visceral fat is that dangerous fat that gets stored
around the organs, which is why women start to get like a
minnow pot or develop a lot of abdominal adiposity.
So people will start seeing this and going, I don't understand
what's going on. Over the past six months, I put on 10 pounds or I put on four stone, right? What's going on? My
training is not working. Become very despondent. And if they don't know they're in perimenopause,
then they don't know that that's what's happening. And how can they find out if they are? Well,
it's really symptomatic because we can't use blood tests. There isn't a definitive blood test to say, hey, you're a perimenopausal.
You have to have a history of everything, of getting blood tests like every week, and
no one does that.
So we have to go on symptomology.
It's really using the sociocultural aspect of how a woman is experiencing life with her
symptoms and really listen and say, OK, well,
here are the things that are going on.
And we try to instigate non-hormonal options.
There's exercise.
There's lifestyle.
And then if all else is really going to shit,
then we can look at using some menopause hormone therapy,
just like we were talking about as Zimpak being a tool.
So hormone therapy can also be a tool.
Does it matter my preexisting health
when I approach menopause?
If I've got more weight on my body,
is that going to impact the amount of symptoms
that I experience of menopause?
It can, yeah.
It can.
We see that there is a greater incidence
of vasomotor symptoms or hot flashes for women
who have a greater amount of body fat.
We also see that if you have more lean mass, then you're going to have less of an incidence
of insulin resistance.
So body composition has a huge play in symptomology.
And then you also have to look at what your
mom went through. Because if your mom had a really, really horrible time with lots of
vasomotor symptoms and body composition change, there's a genetic link. Doesn't necessarily
mean that you're going to experience the same thing, but you have a greater predisposition
to having more severe symptomology.
How should I be thinking about exercise as I'm going through my menopause journey?
So we look, as I said earlier, exercise is a really good stress for adaptive change.
So when we start getting into all these ratio shifts of estrogen and progesterone, we can't
rely on our hormones to create those adaptive changes.
And so what I mean by that is like, estrogen's responsible for muscle protein synthesis
and strength and power for women.
Progesterone and estrogen are responsible for bone,
bone growth, bone density.
We can't rely on our hormones for that anymore.
We have to look for an external stress.
So this is where exercise comes in.
So we're looking specifically at how to invoke a stress
to change our insulin sensitivity.
In other words, improve our blood glucose control.
We need to do proper high intensity work.
So that sprint interval or it's true high intensity work
to create a stress that's high enough
to have the brain say,
hey, this is a really, really, really strong stress.
I need to invoke changes within the skeletal muscle to be able to store more glucose.
I also need to invoke more changes in the mitochondria so that it can use and store more free fatty acids.
And I'm going to have more myokine released from the skeletal muscle to tell the liver,
don't esterify those fatty acids. I want to use them at rest so we don't get the serial fat gain.
So HIIT workouts.
Yeah.
Plyometrics.
Yeah.
Which is jumping and stuff.
Jumping, yeah.
Resistance training.
Absolutely.
Weights, right?
Yeah, but specific to the type of weights that you're doing.
What about frequency of training and how long I train for?
We want to think about less volume and more quality.
Okay.
So we're not going to the gym for an hour and a half every day.
We're looking at doing short, sharp, high intensity cardio,
or we're looking at doing power-based resistance training
three times a week, and the cardio can be two to four times a week.
Why shortage durations of training?
We're looking at intensity.
So if we're doing long, slow stuff
or we're doing moderate intensity zone 2 stuff,
that's not really going to
create the kind of stress that we need
to invoke change.
What about saunas and stuff like that?
Yeah, absolutely. We see that
women who go into the sauna
get better control
over things like hot flashes, because it's
all about temperature and temperature control.
So if the blood going through the brain is really hot, it understands, hey, this is what
hot is, and can then have subsequent peripheral changes for controlling heat and understanding
heat as well as sensual changes to understand heat.
And what about food through menopause? Is there a specific diet that I should be
thinking about for menopause?
We want a higher protein intake, of course, because as we get older, we come
more anabolically resistant to protein. So that means our body isn't responding
as much to the amino acids. So we need a higher dose to invoke muscle protein
synthesis and bone regeneration, nerve regeneration. Also knowing that the
recommended daily allowance that's out there for protein, especially for women,
is based on sedentary older men. So it's not really adequate for what we're
looking for. So we want higher incidence of protein at regular intervals across
the day and again taking care of that gut microbiome. So we want higher incidence of protein at regular intervals across the day, and again,
taking care of that gut microbiome. So we want a lot of colorful fruit and veg. That also helps
with blood glucose control, as well as creating that diversity so that we are able to reduce
the amount of bacteria that is responsible for storing body fat.
We want to have that great amount of diversity of gut microbiomes,
or great diversity of the gut microbiome, to have more of the bacteria that says,
hey, you know what, we want more lean mass, we want to have less body fat.
I noticed earlier on when you talked about hormone therapy,
you referred to it as menopausal hormone therapy as opposed to hormone replacement therapy.
Most people say HRT.
Right.
Right.
Why do you?
Say something different.
Yeah.
I got a lot of my chops in menopause work through the Women's Health Initiative, and
I'm not going to apologize for that cohort because this study was designed to look at
older women going through perimenopause or going through menopause and does it work.
So there's a whole issue around WHI and other things.
But when we look at specifically women who are going through menopause or perimenopause
into menopause, we're not looking to replace hormones.
We're looking at a therapy to attenuate change.
If we're looking at hormone replacement, that could be thyroid.
That could be premature ovarian failure that we need to have some estrogen progesterone.
We're looking at menopause and perimenopause in itself, we're looking at using a hormone dose that is a
very low physiologic level so that we don't have symptomology.
So the body is not going to have vasomotor symptoms and is not going to have mood changes
and is not going to really have an incredible amount of body composition change.
If we're replacing hormones, people
have the idea that it's going to be the same physiologic level as when we are in our reproductive
years, and that's not the case.
Is there also a bit of an underlying notion that women are using these hormones as a way
to stay young? And when you say replace, you're kind of implying that they're fighting against
something. Yep.
That we are replacing our hormones to stay young and be in our reproductive years.
So we look at Western society, and I like to use the cast of Friends as an example,
from, you know, 90s to now, right?
And we see that the cast of Friends women all have a certain look that they've had to maintain in order to be viable in Hollywood,
which means that they're thin, they have good body composition, they don't have any wrinkles, they have really good lustrous hair.
And that's the image that women have now of how they're supposed to age.
We're men, not so much.
We see the images of men who are aging becoming more demure, I guess.
They have gray hair, they have some wrinkles, they're very distinguished. And that's the image we have of men who are aging becoming more demure, I guess.
They have gray hair, they have some wrinkles, they're very distinguished, and that's the
image we have of men aging.
There's a huge disconnect in society.
So when women start to experience perimenopause, it's a definitive point of aging.
And people are afraid to age.
Everyone's afraid to age for the most part.
The idea of aging gracefully or embracing it hasn't quite gotten to the mainstream.
So when someone's like, here's some hormones to replace so you can stay young, people are
like, great.
But we look at the research and it's not about staying young.
It's about slowing the rate of change that's so severe that creates quality of life distress. And we also see that the research isn't there
for maintaining brain integrity to prevent dementia,
which is the other thing that's floating around.
It's not there.
There's no evidence to show that taking hormone therapy
is going to stop dementia.
So there's lots of things out there that's a disconnect,
and trying to say it's menopause hormone therapy
is one way of getting people to understand
that it's not an anti-aging agent.
It's something to help with this phase of a life
and to help get through so that we don't have severe changes
to our daily life and who we are as a person.
Is there anything else that we need to talk about
as it relates to menopause? Just want to make sure we've as a person. Is there anything else that we need to talk about as it relates to menopause?
Just want to make sure we've covered it all.
It gets better on the other side.
I think that's something people don't talk about.
Is perimenopause is such the conversation now
with all the conversations around hormone therapy,
exercise, lifestyle, but no one talks about the other side.
Once you've gotten through perimenopause,
do my joints stop hurting?
Do I stop having all these sleep interruptions?
Do I stop having to worry about my bones?
And if you're putting in the right lifestyle changes
to maintain bone health, yes.
On the other side, everything becomes a new normal
without the pain and dysfunction.
Because it's the shift in hormones that's creating so many different issues with every system of the body.
So if we get through this with really good interventions for preventing or attenuating the changes that are happening,
the other side is much better.
And for women with PCOS or endometriosis, is there anything that they need to be thinking about
as it relates to exercise or nutrition?
Yeah, so there's, I guess, a huge misstep
in the understanding that endometriosis
is an inflammatory response.
Yes and no, there's some more emerging evidence
that it could be a bacterial or a viral cause.
But with regards to endometriosis, we see that if you're able to use some cold water
therapy, for the most part, so your cold water plunge, around the time that you think about
ovulation, where after ovulation you have endometrial growth. It reduces the total inflammatory response so that the endometrial lining doesn't grow as much,
so you don't have as much growth of endometrial tissue outside of the uterus.
So we're looking at how do we stop that extra growth.
We can use environmental cues to help with that.
So that's that cold therapy.
If we look at PCOS, it's all about a higher androgen count,
and we have more insulin resistance.
And how we're training for exercise is all about how do we
control that insulin resistance.
So we look at high intensity, we look at using resistance training.
So women who have PCOS, they have irregular cycles.
So we can't use the menstrual cycle
as an indication of stress.
So we have to look at things like heart rate variability.
We have to look at properly putting in intensity
and resistance training to work with blood glucose levels
to, again, attenuate some of the symptomology
that comes with PCOS.
What is the most important thing we haven't talked about that we should have talked about?
That this conversation isn't just for women.
I'm very grateful that you're very excited about the menstrual cycle.
But I think a lot of people kind of tune out when we start here, conversations about women and conversations about sex differences, but it's for everybody.
Because if we're going to push forward and understand how we need to do research to improve
the health of women and men, then it's a combination in the conversation.
So I'm very appreciative to men who come into the conversation and men who are in the room,
and very appreciative of you for having these conversations
because then it pushes it out
and makes it normal across the board.
Yeah, and the reason I have these conversations
is because it's a lot of my conversations
at home with my partner.
We spend so long talking about her menstrual cycle
and about when she's ovulating,
and she talks to me a lot about how she's feeling
because of that and certain things we should be doing.
Even when we're thinking about like how to spend the weekend,
it's often decided through the context of like her cycle.
And then obviously we're trying to,
we're in the phase of life where we're going to try
and have kids now.
So we're thinking a lot about it there,
but then just more broadly, you know,
if something is having such a significant impact on a woman's life, which I think it does, I think it does have significant impact,
things like menopause in the menstrual cycle generally, then I'm going to interface with women
my whole life. If I have a daughter, I have a sister, I have a mom, I have a partner. So if I
can better understand them, because I understand how their body is working, then we're going to
have more successful relationships. And frankly, a year ago, I didn't even know what menopause was. So, to
be fair, I didn't even know what a menstrual cycle really was a year ago. I knew that women
had periods, but I kind of told you with great confidence that different things happen throughout
the cycle and that it was 28 days long. I really had no idea. And I'm like 32 years
old and I don't really care about admitting that.
People are like, oh, you do.
But I don't really care because I know
there's a lot of people out there that feel the same way.
And we're like not allowed to admit that
because then you get people attack you or whatever.
But who goes?
I had a PhD student who came up to me and he's like,
my partner has something to tell you
and it's gonna come through me.
I was like, okay, what is it?
He said, she said to tell you that I know more about the menstrual cycle than she does.
Yeah, really?
I was like, awesome.
Because he was looking at women in the heat versus men in the heat.
So we had to understand the menstrual cycle and how all of that came.
And then that upscaled her.
So it came in the opposite.
Instead of her trying to upscale him, he upscaled her.
We don't really learn about this stuff in school.
No.
Nobody ever told me about it in school.
Do women learn about it in school?
Not anymore.
It's been cut.
All the health programs and everything have been cut.
So yeah, it's really like I give talks
and the rooms get full of parents
who want to know what's happening.
Like I give talks for young kids who are, you know,
surf life saving or whatever,
just explaining it all. And then I'll get questions from women, well, what about perimenopause? What
about menopause? What about IUD? What about this? What about that? Because it's not taught.
And it's really scary. All of the subjects we've discussed today are in these two excellent books.
Well, there's even more in the books, but all the subjects that I touched on, pretty
much all of them are in either of these two books.
Next level, which is your guide to kicking ass, feeling great and crushing goals through
menopause and beyond, and your book raw, which is match your food and fitness to your unique
female physiology for optimal performance, great health and a strong body for life.
I would not have been able to read that if I had eaten today.
Maybe if you had had a protein shake, you would have been able to read that if I had eaten today.
If you had had a protein shake you would have been able to read it.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest not knowing who they're going to be leaving it for. And the question that's been left for you
is if you have children, what is the most important message you would pass on to them?
If you don't, then what is the most important message you would have
passed yourself as a child?
I have a daughter. And the most important messaging that I keep
giving to her is to be empowered, to ask questions and
to be empowered. And she'll often say, Well, what does that
mean, Mom? I'm like, you have a question, you ask it. Don't be
afraid to ask it. Because if you don a question, you ask it. Don't be afraid to ask it
because if you don't know, you don't know.
So society is very changing.
I want you to be empowered and be educated
and have the confidence to ask questions.
Stacey, thank you so much for the work that you do.
It's incredibly important.
And it's so wonderful that people are shining a light
on some of these differences between men and women.
Because yeah, like me and my partner is trained together.
We work out. It's a big part of our relationship in life. And now, having studied your work, which
was absolutely fascinating to me, because it was again, it was a first for me to understand
that there was any differences in these sort of things that have been pushed on us in culture
in terms of exercise, nutrition, cold plunges, fasting, etc. Absolutely fascinating. But
it's been a huge conversation now between me and her. We were talking before I came on air about this and it's really turned the lights on.
And it's actually made a lot of things make sense. Excellent. A lot of things make sense
that we were pondering. So thank you so much for the work that you do and I highly recommend
everybody goes and checks you out. Thanks so much. I appreciate it. Are you going to make her eat
before you go training now? Well, I don't know. I actually did send her a screenshot of that,
of that particular part. Because we have the same routine, especially on the weekends when we're together.
We get up, we have the coffee, then we go to the gym.
Yeah.
And we train, and then we go and try and find something to eat after.
So, I'll leave it up to her.
She could have refreshing coffee.
Yeah, maybe that's a good idea. Maybe I'll leave it up to her.
Listen, I'm never going to tell her what to do, so I just sent her the research.
Okay.
Encourage her. Yeah, I was like, look at this, you do, so I just sent her the research. Okay. Encourage her.
Yeah, I was like, look at this.
You'll find this interesting.
So we'll see.
Awesome.
Thank you so much, Stacey.
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