The Dr. Hyman Show - The Benefits Of Strength Training And How to Get Started
Episode Date: April 14, 2023This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health and Athletic Greens. Certain forms of exercise are more effective than others at optimizing our health, metabolism, and longevity. Our aerobic condition, ...strength, muscle mass, flexibility, and agility are essential for staying healthy and aging well. One main reason why exercise is so effective at keeping us young is due to its hormetic effects. Strength training is one of the best practices for activating hormesis, and it’s available to everyone. In today’s episode of my series I’m calling Health Bites, I talk all about the benefits of strength training and how to get started. This episode is brought to you by Rupa Health and Athletic Greens. Rupa Health is a place where Functional Medicine practitioners can access more than 2,000 specialty lab tests from over 35 labs like DUTCH, Vibrant America, Genova, and Great Plains. You can check out a free, live demo with a Q&A or create an account at RupaHealth.com. AG1 contains 75 high-quality vitamins, minerals, whole-food sourced superfoods, probiotics, and adaptogens to support your entire body. Right now, Athletic Greens is offering 10 FREE travel packs with your first purchase by visiting athleticgreens.com/hyman. Here are more details from our interview (audio version / Apple Subscriber version): The hormetic effects of exercise (3:25 / 1:36) What is sarcopenia and what does it have to do with longevity? (4:23 / 2:41) The importance of protein for muscle growth (5:33 / 3:14) The hormetic effects of strength training (9:04 / 7:11) The benefits of strength training (11:18 / 9:23) Tips for incorporating strength training into your exercise routine (12:34 / 10:40) What type of protein is needed for muscle growth (15:19 / 13:27)
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Coming up on this episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Strength training improves your mood, helps prevent dementia, increases neuroplasticity,
makes new brain cells, obviously improves your muscle strength, your bone health so
it can stay above osteoporosis and prevent you from being frail as you get older.
It helps with sleep.
Hey everyone, it's Dr. Mark.
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And now let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. That's pharmacy with an F,
a place for conversations that matter. And if you ever wondered about what kind of exercise you should do to extend your life,
to stay functional, to stave off and reverse chronic disease,
well, you better listen up because we're going to talk about that today
because we're talking about strength training.
And if there were a pill for longevity that would treat every single one of the major factors that goes wrong as we age
in that pill would be bottled up exercise. Now, certain forms of exercise are far more
effective at optimizing our health, our metabolism, and making us live longer.
Now, aerobic conditioning is really important, but there's strength conditioning,
muscle mass, how much muscle we have,
and our flexibility and agility. These are all important parts of our functional health as we
get older and for staying functional. Because the key is you want to be able to get up the floor,
off the floor. You want to be able to get out of your chair. You want to be able to
play with your grandkids. You want to be able to do the things you want to do in life and not be
restricted by poor function. Now, one of the
reasons exercise is so powerful and activating all of our ancient healing mechanisms and reversing
disease and turning on all our longevity pathways is that it works by this process we call hormesis,
which is essentially an idea that it's a stress. It doesn't kill you, but makes you stronger.
When you run like a maniac, you're stressing your body, but you're also making it
more efficient, stronger, and better. When you lift weights or use your body weight or have
resistance training, you're tearing muscle fibers, but then end up causing a rebound effect to make
you stronger. So these are really important. And strength training is one of the best practices
for hormesis. So let's talk about
why it's important. Why is building muscle? Why is maintaining muscle? Why is making your muscle
work better? Such an essential part of health and longevity. It's because of this process that
happens if we don't do it. If we don't lift weights, if we don't use body weight, if we don't
use bands, if we don't do some kind of resistance training, we end up losing muscle. We lose muscle
progressively from our 30s right until we die if we don't do something to counteract it.
And this process of muscle loss is called sarcopenia. Sarcopenia means just less muscle.
Sarco means muscle in Latin, I think. I don't remember. Pena means less. So sarcopenia. Sarcopenia means just less muscle. Sarco means muscle in Latin. I think I don't
remember. Pena means less. So sarcopenia like osteoporosis, osteopenia, sarcopenia. Now it's
pretty much ignored by medicine. I didn't learn much about it in medical school. I learned about
osteoporosis and people don't really talk about it, but it actually is the most important thing
you need to learn because your muscle is an enormous metabolic organ. It's the biggest metabolic organ and organ in your body, period.
It has so many functions other than just moving your bones around and walking and mobilization.
It's a profoundly active metabolic organ.
It's a hormonal organ.
It's an immune organ.
It's a neurotransmitter organ.
It's essential to work properly for you to be healthy.
And it provides all our energy.
So when you lose muscle, it's one of the key accelerators of rapid aging disease.
And unless we actually learn how to build muscle through the right diet, which includes
the right amount of protein at the right time with the right balance of amino acids, which
is super critical because not all protein is created equal.
Just like all fats are not created equal, all carbohydrates are not created equal, all protein
is not equal, right? If you have trans fat, like margarine, that's deadly. If you have omega-3 fats,
that's incredibly powerful healing compound in the body. Same thing, fat, but very different effect. Carbohydrates. Broccoli is a
carbohydrate. So is white flour or white sugar. They have profoundly different effects on the
body. Same thing with protein. So it's important that all protein isn't lumped into one. Vegetable
proteins are very different than animal protein. And by the way, it's the only nutrient we need at macro levels.
We need omega-3 fats at micro levels, a few grams a day.
We need no carbohydrate.
There's no biological requirement for carbohydrate.
If you stop eating any carbohydrate, your body would make what you need, and you don't need any to get from diet.
Protein is the only macronutrient you need in large amounts to survive,
like a lot of it. So 100 grams, not a few milligrams, right? So this is really,
really important to understand. And you have to have the right kind of protein, but you also need
the right kind of exercise. Now, when you lose muscle, what happens? You get more insulin resistant,
so more pre-diabetic. You slow your metabolism. You have higher stress hormone, cortisol.
You have lower growth hormone, which is the hormone to repair, rebuild, and renew your tissues.
You have lower testosterone, so you actually end up in a vicious cycle of losing more muscle
and having to replace with fat.
You have increased inflammation.
And so you have all these horrible things that happen that are related to aging that increase diseases in general. But when you lose muscle, you also get weaker and more frail and disabled and immobile and you lose your independence and you end up more in the hospital or nursing home.
It's because of this muscle loss, sarcopenia. So we've got to fight this entropy-related,
age-related loss of muscle function and of muscle mass. And we have to do it with resistance
training. Now, there's a lot of ways to do that, weights and bands and body weight, and there's a
lot of ways to do it. But we have to do it in combination with eating the right amount of protein now if we don't build more muscle we're going to waste away guaranteed
it's basically use it or lose it now i i personally thought okay i'm running i'm playing tennis
i'm biking i do yoga that's kind of strange training i'm like i don't really like the gym
it's smelly it's stinky a lot of big guys with big muscles that kind of intimidate me.
I just, I better not do that.
I'm a skinny guy.
So I basically never went in the gym.
And occasionally I was like, I'm going to try to lift weights or do push-ups.
And then I would do it and I would hurt like heck for five days or six days.
I'm like, I'm not doing this.
So it was really bad.
But then I decided about 60 years old that I better get on it.
And now at 63, I'm habituated to strength
training. It doesn't take me much time. I've dramatically increased my muscle mass, my agility,
my strength, my stability, my core. I mean, it's pretty amazing. And I feel way more fit and strong
than I did when I was 40 or younger. So basically, how does this work? Well,
the idea of hormesis is that when you stress yourself, the body has to respond by activating
some kind of healing response to deal with the stress, which is a good thing. And it's kind of
a miracle how it's designed. We have these innate healing mechanisms that are designed to respond to difficult situations.
We've had to deal with way more stressors
from an evolutionary point of view
than we ever had comforts, right?
We have way more genes that adapt us to starvation
than to an abundance of food, right?
So it's just how we're designed.
And you have to activate those healing systems.
And they're degraded by our diet, by our environment, by our lack of exercise.
But the science is really discovering how do we activate these pathways? How do we how do we do that?
And one of the key ideas around health, around longevity, whether it's hot and cold therapy, whether it's hypoxia therapy, whether it's hyperbaric oxygen,
whether it's fasting or time-restricted eating, and of course, exercise, is these are stresses.
And the idea that what doesn't kill you makes you stronger is such a central idea for longevity when your system's stressed a little, not too much. Obviously, you don't want to
like go lift like 300 pounds and throw out your back, right? You don't want to go in, you know, 30 degree water for two hours.
You're going to die of hypothermia.
So you have to have the right dose and the right amount and do it properly so you don't hurt yourself.
But you have to understand how to use exercise to activate these hormesis pathways.
There's two really important ways.
One is HIIT training training which is intensive cardiovascular
fitness and that that works by uh increasing the vo2 max and your mitochondrial efficiency
and your ability to burn calories it's really important but strength training is also really
important if i would probably pick between the two i'd probably hate to say it but i'd probably
pick strength training especially as you get older it's one of the most powerful things you
can do and you don't want to choose but if if you have to choose, and I do actually a HIIT
strength training routine, which I get both cardio and exercise strength. I kind of cheat,
but it's okay. So we know really deeply how this works. What does strength training do?
How does it improve all the hallmarks of aging? How did it look at the root causes of disease and aging?
I talk about this in my book, Young Forever.
If you haven't gotten a copy yet, please get a copy.
It's the number one New York Times bestseller.
Thanks to all of you.
Thank you so much.
And here's how it works.
Exercise improves your mitochondria, which are important to produce energy in your body.
And as we age, we lose mitochondria in terms of both their number and their function.
So they become less efficient and we get fewer of them.
So when we do strength training, we build up more muscle and we get more mitochondria and we make them work better, which is really, really important.
It also improves your blood pressure, cholesterol, lowers risk of heart disease. Strength training improves your mood, your motivation, your cognitive function.
It increases something called BDNF, which increases like miracle growth for your brain.
It helps prevent dementia by doing that as well and increases neuroplasticity, makes new brain cells.
It's pretty impressive, actually.
Obviously, it improves your muscle strength, your bone health, so it can stay above osteoporosis and prevent you from being frail as you get older. It helps with sleep, helps with libido and sexual function because it
helps testosterone boosting in men and women. So there's a lot of benefits to strength training.
So what should you do to incorporate strength training into your routine, into your exercise
routine? Well, just first understand that preserving muscle building muscle optimizing muscle function are
the keys to the fountain of youth so try something anything please weightlifting resistance bands
body weight those are the three main ones and there's a lot of things like trx and this is
often using body weight but i i love it and i i find my body works better it feels better
and i don't really like going to the
gym that much sometimes I go but I basically do a home strength training program I use
Tom Brady's system called TB12 sports you buy the bands online you can get the app for 50 bucks
I don't have any relationship with I'm not selling it for them but basically it's changed my life so
that's why I love it and it's portable I travel with it everywhere i can use it any place a hotel room any place there's a floor and a doorknob basically
and it's incredible and i find uh i can do my routine in half an hour i'm in and out
and i i love it and i feel so good afterwards uh the bands tend to cause less injuries uh
then you get older you might be more prone to injury you can start with lighter bands and work up to heavier bands. But if you haven't done any strength training, I started off working
with somebody to make sure my form was right, that I was doing it right, that I had my body
position right, because you can hurt yourself. So you want to make sure you do it properly.
Never too late to start. My dad was like 89. He couldn't get up out of a chair. He was sort of
frail. And I'm like, hey, dad, you know, I know you walk every day, but you need to do strength training.
And I got him a trainer and he got so much fitter.
We ended up playing tennis at 89 years old.
Pretty impressive.
So what puts people in a nursing home is not a disease usually.
It's their lack of ability to do their daily activities.
And that's what you don't want, right? You want to
have high functioning. What is the biggest risk factor for death as you get older? One of the
things is falling. If you fall and break your hip, it's like getting a terminal diagnosis of cancer,
like pancreatic cancer. You're basically 50% likely to die in a year. It's really bad news.
You don't want to fall. If you have more muscle, you can brace yourself. You can resist your falls.
You probably won't fall.
So basically try to do three times a week of strength training, 20 to 30 minutes.
It helps in every possible way in terms of your fat burning, muscle, function, energy,
longevity, pathways.
It's just, it's dope.
So whatever you do for any of your health practices, aside from what you eat,
this is one of the most important. And if I had to sort of pick two things to do for longevity
would be cut out starch and sugar and, and eat, uh, and eat the right protein to get muscle
building and strength training, do strength training. And let's just talk about protein
for a minute. You know, I wish it were true that you could get all the protein you need from beans
and grains and plant foods to get the proper muscle building as you get older. It's just not
possible. You need to eat enormous amounts of plant foods. You have to have six cups of brown
rice to get 30 grams of protein. You have to have two cups of beans to get 30 grams of protein.
You just can't get enough. However, you can if you have protein powders, so you can get plant protein powders.
And if they have added to them the right amino acids, particularly leucine, which is a rate-limiting amino acid for building muscle, and that's super important to get.
If you have seen all these big bodybuilders who are vegans, that's how they do it.
It's not from eating greens and beans.
They have all these extra supplemental proteins in
order to actually build muscle. So it's possible, but you have to know what you're doing. You just
need the right physiological compounds to build muscle. And it's just science. There's no debate
here about what the science is. You can go look in my book, Young Forever. I quoted all the studies,
look at the data, the review of all the data by the top world's protein experts. And this is just
how it works. So make sure you have protein about an hour or two after you do strength
training. And I love whey protein. It's my favorite. I use goat whey, but that's a great,
that's a great way to build your muscle. So I hope you've enjoyed this health bite about exercise and
strength training. It's a heavy lift, I know, pun intended, but strength training is one of the
most powerful hormetic therapies you can possibly engage in. It creates health, extends your life. It's available to everybody. Uh, so if you want
to be healthy, live a long time and prevent frailty and disability as you age, get moving
and get lifting. Uh, all right, that's it for today's health bite. Hope you enjoyed it. Hope
I inspired you and, uh, tell us how you found strength training or resistance training to help
your health. What's happened to you?
Share this with your friends and family.
Leave a comment about that.
Benefits you found.
And subscribe to every year podcast.
And we'll see you next week on The Doctor's Pharmacy.
Hey, everybody.
It's Dr. Hyman.
Thanks for tuning into The Doctor's Pharmacy.
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