The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - Dr. Rhonda Patrick: Diet Essentials For Healthy Living
Episode Date: April 2, 2024Dr. Rhonda Patrick explores the intricate world of nutrition and health. Dr. Patrick provides a deep dive into the role micronutrients play in our daily health, detailing how deficiencies and insu...fficiencies in vitamins, minerals, fatty acids, and amino acids can lead to serious health issues over time. Shane and Dr. Patrick also discuss the science behind deliberate heat exposure. She outlines the optimal sauna conditions—temperature, duration, and frequency—necessary for these health benefits and explains the physiological mechanisms. Rhonda Patrick has a Ph.D. in biomedical science and a Bachelor of Science in biochemistry/chemistry from the University of California, San Diego. She has done extensive research on aging, cancer, and nutrition. (00:00) Intro (04:40) A philosophy for nutrition (15:36) Micronutrients through supplements vs. food (25:43) Wild-caught vs. farm-raised fish (28:44) Organic vs. non-organic vegetables (36:14) On macronutrients (40:20) How protein levels differ in different foods (45:27) The best morning smoothie recipe (54:48) Dr. Patrick grades Shane's "GOAT" smoothie recipe (59:14) Grass-fed vs. non-grass fed (01:04:40) On vitamin D (Is sunscreen killing us more than the sun?) (01:19:48) Deliberate heat and cold exposure (01:44:27) Top three behavioral and diet interventions for life and health improvements Watch the episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/theknowledgeproject/videos Newsletter - I share timeless insights and ideas you can use at work and home. Join over 600k others every Sunday and subscribe to Brain Food. Try it: https://fs.blog/newsletter/ My Book! Clear Thinking: Turning Ordinary Moments into Extraordinary Results is out now - https://fs.blog/clear/ Follow me: https://beacons.ai/shaneparrish Join our membership: https://fs.blog/membership/ Sponsors: Eight Sleep: Sleep to power a whole new you. https://www.eightsleep.com/farnamstreet Shopify: Making commerce better for everyone. https://www.shopify.com/shane Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I did my postdoc training in nutrition and specifically looking at micronutrients.
So these are about 40 or so essential vitamins and minerals.
And these micronutrients are running our metabolism.
They're running everything, our neurotransmitters that we're producing, so our cognition,
just absolutely everything that is going on in our bodies.
So when you think about the micronutrients that you need in your diet, it makes it a little bit easier
to think about what you should be eating.
Welcome to the Knowledge Project,
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so you can apply their insights to your life.
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Today, my guest is Rhonda Patrick, a research scientist with expertise in the areas of aging,
cancer, and nutrition.
I first came across her work years ago, and a friend of mine sent me this mammoth article
she posted online on the benefits of a sauna.
In fact, this is the reason I started to sauna.
Our main focus in this conversation is lifestyle habits that reduce biological aging,
improve health span, and improve our cognition.
We cover a framework for approaching nutrition and decisions about food,
as well as a deep dive into vitamin D, sun, sunscreen, and hot exposure.
It's time to listen and learn.
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When I was thinking about where to start, I think the best place to start is to give people
practical frameworks for approaching topics that we come across every day.
So why don't we start with a practical framework for approaching nutrition and decisions
about the food that we consume?
I, you know, I kind of have my own framework for approaching nutrition in, and it has a
lot to do with, you know, I did my postdoc training in nutrition and in specifically
looking at micronutrients.
So these are about 40 or so essential vitamins and minerals, fatty acids also and amino acids
that we have to get from our diet.
Those are in a variety of foods, and different foods have different levels and quantities
of them.
And these micronutrients are running our metabolism.
They're running everything, our neurotransmitters that we're producing.
so our cognition, just absolutely everything that is going on in our bodies. So it's important
to get them because if we don't get them, we can have deficiencies or insufficiencies,
which is quite worse because insufficiencies are kind of something that you don't notice every
day, but there's like insidious types of damage just happening each and every day. And it accumulates
over time and plays a role in age-related diseases like cancer and neurodegenerative disease. So
These micronutrients are things like, you know, calcium, magnesium, vitamin K, vitamin D, which
I'm sure we'll talk about is actually something you can mostly get from the sun, omega-3.
And so when you think about the micronutrients that you need in your diet, it makes it a little
bit easier to think about what you should be eating.
Well, let's start with like some of the most common deficiencies in micronutrients.
We have magnesium.
So almost half of the U.S. population, they get insufficient magnesium intake.
Magnesium is, it's at the center of a chlorophyll molecule.
So chlorophyll makes plant, gives plants their green color.
So it's really easy to think about foods you should eat to get magnesium.
You should be eating greens, particularly dark leafy greens.
Well, greens are also very high in vitamin K.
And vitamin K1, there's two forms.
Vitamin K one, vitamin K one is essential for all.
your blood clotting processes. So you like in order to like have your blood clotting,
which is important. You know, if you have a cut or something, you know, an injury, you want that
clotting to happen so that you don't have like a hemorrhage, right? So vitamin K is also,
you know, high in leafy greens. You can also get calcium as well from greens. So that's
really an easy way to kind of think about greens. The other way, the other thing is omega
3s, right? So, omega-3s are very high in fatty fish. So this would be wild
Alaskan salmon or cod or mackerel, sardines, like these are good forms of fish that have
the marine types of omega-3. So that would be DHA and EPA. Those are very important for a lot
of functions, including brain health and cardiovascular health. And a lot of work has been done by
Bill Harris and his group at the fatty acid research institute. And they,
They look at the omega-3 index, which is a way you can actually quantify your omega-3 levels.
And that's really good to be able to quantify something because if you don't quantify it,
you don't really know if you are getting enough of it, right?
So the omega-3 index is they're characterizing it from red blood cells, which is different
than a lot of other ways of measuring omega-3, like, for example, plasma omega-3, which is basically
kind of reflective of your dietary intake the last week or so.
the red blood cell or the omega-3 index is more of a long-term status. So it's like 120 days for a red
blood cell a turnover. So the omega-3 index is a good marker of your omega-3 status. People that have
a high omega-3 index, and that would be 8% or more, have a five-year increased life expectancy
compared to people with a lower omega-3 index, which is more like 4%. Now, people in the United
States on average have about an omega-3 index of about 5%. And you compare that to, for example,
countries like Japan where they eat a lot of seafood, their omega-3 index is around 10%. There's
been tons of studies looking at omega-3 index and life expectancy. And there's been also like
data where they stratify like looking at, you know, for example. And this, I like talking about
this because I think it really puts in perspective, the framework of nutrition and thinking about
instead of focusing on what to avoid, focusing on what you need, because if you focus on what
you need, then it's obvious what you don't need, right? There's no nutritional value in
processed foods. You're not getting micronutrients. You're getting calories. You're not getting
protein. You're not getting things that you need. So smoking is something that everyone knows
is bad. You should avoid smoking, right? It's, you know, heart disease, cancer, you're going to
have a decreased life expectancy, emphysema, all kinds of problems, right? What Bill Harris's
group had done, they looked at life expectancy of smokers and non-smokers. And then they categorized
their omega-3 index. And if you look at this data, it's just mind-blowing. So obviously,
non-smokers that have a high omega-3 index of 8% or more have the highest life expectancy.
And the lowest life expectancy is smokers with a low omega-3 index. So that's the worst of the
worst. But when you look at smokers with a high omega-3 index, they have the same life expectancy
as non-smokers with a low omega-3 index. In other words, having low omega-3, or having a low
omega-3 index was like smoking. And when I say the life expectancy, if you look at the graph
in the publication, the curves like overlay perfectly. It's kind of freakish where you're like,
whoa, like the people that are smoking but they're getting a lot of omega-3 have the same
like life expectancy of these people that don't smoke but have very low omega-3. And that's kind of
like I like talking about that because I feel like it puts it in perspective for people because
like I said, no one's really thinking about I'm not eating my fish today. I'm not supplementing
with an omega-3 supplement to get those omega-3s, you know. But people are thinking about,
oh, I shouldn't smoke because it's bad, right? So again, it goes back to that framework of
thinking about what you need and starting there, as opposed to just like, okay, what should I avoid?
Because when you think about what should I avoid, then you're not, like, people aren't thinking
about magnesium.
They're not thinking about, you know, the vitamin K.
They're not thinking about omega-3.
And by the way, magnesium, you know, I said about half the population in the United States
doesn't get enough.
They're not eating enough greens.
And unfortunately, there's not a great test for magnesium because our body stores,
magnesium in our bones. And so anytime we're not getting enough in our diet, our body pulls it
out of our bones to like, because we need it. It's so important. You need it to make energy.
Like without magnesium, you can't make energy. So nothing's going to function. You also, it's needed
to repair damage. Like every time you have, you know, like right now, you and I, we're having a
conversation, you know, we're neurotransmitters are firing. We're thinking about things. Like that's
causing damage. Metabolism. All that stuff causes damage on a daily basis. But our body repairs
that damage. But magnesium is a co-factor for these enzymes. These are proteins that are doing everything
for that to function properly. And so if you don't get enough of that magnesium to do that, what happens
is you don't repair that damage properly and that can increase the risk of getting a mutation
that can lead to cancer. You know, it's been found that, for example, for every 100, you know,
milligram increase in magnesium intake, there's something like a 20% decrease in pancreatic cancer
risk. And there's been lots of studies like this looking at magnesium intake and cancer risk. And so
the higher the magnesium intake, the lower the cancer risk. So again, it's one of those things where
you can't look in the mirror and go, as you're brushing your teeth, oh, I don't have enough
magnesium today, right? Like nothing's like showing you that, but it's happening. That damage is
insidious. And I mentioned you pull it out of your bone, like it's pulled out of your bones. And
that's another thing. It leads to osteoporosis over time. So remembering to eat your leafy greens
is getting your magnesium.
So women need about, I'd say about 320 milligrams a day, adult women,
need about 320 milligrams a day of magnesium.
Men need around 420 milligrams a day.
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You know, this can change based on your physical.
activity level as well. So like if you're physically active, if you're sweating, you sweat
out magnesium, you also use it up for energy. So you might actually require anywhere between 10%
to 20% more than that level. So what's called the recommended daily allowance in the United
States. So, you know, again, and people aren't even meeting that. So there's lots of reasons
to invest in, you know, these micronutrients and to think about the foods that you need to eat.
I have so many questions.
One is, is there a difference between consuming magnesium and omega-3 through food, like
leafy greens or fish, and supplementation?
Yes, let's start with magnesium.
So magnesium, if you're consuming it in the form of leafy greens, it is bound to a, it's
a fiber matrix.
It's called phytate.
And that does decrease the bioavailability of it.
You can do raw, but also cooking them will increase the bioavailability of minerals like magnesium.
And it is good.
You want to kind of get a variety of things.
You want to have some raw veggies, but you also want to have cooked.
And when you cook it, it does actually increase the availability of not just magnesium,
other minerals as well that are bound to that fiber matrix, which has phytate there.
Supplementation is also kind of tricky with respect to magnesium because you don't really
absorb more, I mean, it's about 100, I would say anywhere between 120 to 150 milligrams per
dose. Like, once you get above that, you're not really absorbing more. You're just kind of causing
more GI distress. And it's a little bit of like a laxative effect. So some people actually use it
specifically for that reason. So they do higher doses. Generally speaking, if you are supplementing
with magnesium, you want to make sure you're going at a lower dose.
because you're not really going to absorb more and it's just going to cause like gut issues.
If you want to supplement with more than just 150, you have to spread your doses out.
You know, take it earlier with the meal and then take it later in the day as well.
The other thing is that when you're getting it from food, it is packaged in with other minerals.
And there are, there's some argument to be made that having, for example, there's like, you know,
twice as much calcium as magnesium in a lot of the foods.
And so you're getting this two to one ratio.
And so, you know, there's kind of a reason for that.
I wouldn't say that it's been heavily studied, but it's thought that you kind of want to
keep that ratio correct, like two to one calcium to magnesium ratio.
So if you're just like supplementing with lots of magnesium and let's say you don't get enough,
maybe you don't eat dairy or maybe you're a lactose intolerant or, you know,
maybe you're just not getting enough calcium.
You can kind of have mineral imbalances as well.
And then there's the form that you're going to supplement with, right?
So there's a lot of different magnesium supplements out there.
The most important difference when you're looking for a magnesium supplement is to avoid
the what's called the inorganic forms.
And this isn't like organic pesticide.
What we're talking about is so like magnesium oxide or magnesium sulfate.
Like they're just not very bioavailable.
Like you're not going to absorb as much from those.
But if you get like the organic form, so this would be something that has a lot of,
like an organic molecule. So magnesium citrate, magnesium malate, magnesium malate, magnesium
taurate. These are all forms of magnesium that are relatively the same in terms of their
bioavailability. I personally like taking magnesium glycinate because glycinate is like a form of
glycine, which is a inhibitory neurotransmitter. And so I like getting a little bit extra
a glycine. There's like, there's some science behind, you know, glycine perhaps being beneficial
and supplementing with it. I think that's the main thing with respect to magnesium supplementation
is, is that the forms do kind of matter and the dose.
And what about the omega-3s? Is it, can I just go to the store if I'm not going to eat a lot
of fish and buy an omega-3 supplement? Or is fish the primary way that we actually get bioavailability
from that. Yeah, that's also a great question. It really does obviously depend on quite a few
factors. So with respect to the seafood and fish, the type of fish does matter, right? So, like,
you need, like, there's some fish, like, that's just not that fatty. The omega-3's EPA and DHA are
the marine forms of the omega-3. And those are the ones I was talking about with the omega-3
index and life expectancy. Those are the forms that have been used in randomized controlled trials
with supplementation that have decreased cardiovascular events by like 25% compared to placebo.
Those are the ones that are important.
They're only in the really oily fatty fish.
So one of the best forms is salmon, and wild salmon has higher levels than farmed.
For example, wild Alaskan salmon is probably one of the best salmon to consume for omega-3.
It also has astazanthin.
It's what gives the fish that pink color.
If you are eating quite a lot of fish, you'd have to really get an omega-3 index test to know for sure how much you require.
But, you know, I would say probably like at least, you know, you're eating it four times a week, something like that, which most people do not do.
In Japan, they do, and their omega-3 index is very high.
Like, I don't even know if many Japanese supplement.
They're just, they eat seafood like every day.
The other thing to consider is, well, what type of fish?
So we talked about oily and fatty fish, but also you want to look at, um, you want to look at, um,
contaminants, like larger fish have things like PCBs and mercury because they're eating smaller
fish, so those things accumulate in their fat.
So you don't want to eat swordfish, for example.
The mercury in swordfish is just through the roof, right?
So it's really like the trade-off there isn't very good.
So again, that's where salmon comes into the picture because it's very low in mercury.
It's high in omega-3, smaller fish, so sardines would be another one.
Again, there's a lot of data out there that you can look up, like USDA has all this
like contamination mercury levels versus omega-3, so that stuff is easy for people to find.
I would say by and large the easiest way to get a high omega-3 index, and these studies have
been done, randomized controlled trials, people giving supplement forms omega-3 is definitely
to supplement.
And fish oil supplements, generally speaking, if you're taking around two grams a day of a
fish oil supplement, that is enough to raise someone from a 4% omega-3 index, which is the low end,
to a 8% omega-3 index, which is the high end. You obviously want to make sure you're getting
enough of the EPA and DHA, those two important omega-3s, and you want to make sure you're
not getting a high contaminant level like mercury PCBs. But the other thing to keep in mind is
you want a low oxidation level. So omega-3 fatty acids are prone to oxidation just because
their molecular structure to polyunsaturated fatty acid. And so the way people, companies and
are manufacturing this fish oil matters. So some good third-party testing sites to look at,
I would say consumer lab is one that's really, they go and just go to grocery stores and
where people are generally going and buying their supplements. And they just measure and test all
this stuff. And there's some really affordable brands that have decent omega-3 levels, DHA and EPA
levels, and low oxidation, low-contamined levels. And Consumer Lab, you know, test all those. So that would
be a good site to go to to find a good omega-3 supplement. Another one is the International Fish Oil
Standard Site, I-F-O-S. Those are for the data nerds, to be honest, because there's, like, a lot more
data there and if you're like into this stuff and you want to like really dig because they just
give you everything like all the data like you can imagine that's a great site for people that
are sort of nerd want to nerd out on that but for some people they're like I just want to know my
grocery store what do I get then consumer lab's a great option it's like it's broken down in a
way that like a child could even understand it's okay this is the one I want to buy is there a difference
between wild and non-wild, I guess, or captive or factory farm, whatever you want to call it,
farmed fish, in terms of the nutrient density that we're pulling out of them?
You know, there is a difference.
I mean, the wild salmon, they're out, they're in the ocean, and they're eating fish and, like,
crustaceans and all the things that they're supposed to eat.
Like, that's what they eat, right?
In the farmed salmon, you know, correct, I'm pretty sure there's some feeding of stuff
that's like not even, I mean, we're talking like corn and stuff too. Yeah. If you were to look at the fish
before in the factories before they inject it with astazanthin, they look albino because they're
lack, because they don't eat all the right things. So they're not naturally pink. I said inject,
but I'm not sure. Maybe they actually just give it as a xosanth and they eat it. I forgot. But they're,
they're giving it exogenous asazanthin so that it does have the pink color. The omega-3 content was also higher
in the wild salmon.
So again, to your question, yes, there is a difference between the farmed salmon and the
wild salmon.
But, you know, sometimes when you're out at a restaurant, like, you're not going to get,
they're not going to get the wild salmon.
Is it the end of the world?
In my opinion, no.
Like I said, choose your battles.
I still think you still are getting omega-3s.
You're still getting DHA and EPA.
It's not like it's terrible, but I do think it's preferable if you are getting the wild
salmon.
And you mentioned organic.
Is there a difference between organic and inorganic, I guess, but inorganic in the sense of being
non-organic produce?
Why would we choose one over another?
And what difference does it make from a composition or bioavailability point of view?
So pesticides are obviously something that are used now in agriculture because we're, you know,
these farms are huge and we're growing mass quantities of foods.
And so they're spraying things that will ward off insects, so insecticides or pesticides are
known, and also fungicides and other things to prevent fungus and anything that's going to
destroy the crop, right?
A lot of these types of pesticides are obviously damaging to the insects, but to humans,
the question is, well, are they damaging to humans?
You know, there were a lot, especially things like rote-known perquot, these were used for a long time.
And those are chemicals that actually cause, we use them, scientists use them, I've used it myself, in the lab to induce Parkinson-like symptoms in animals because it disrupts your mitochondria, which are the little organelles inside of almost all of your cells and that are producing energy.
Super important.
And in Parkinson's disease, the mitochondria and your neurons kind of become dysfunctional.
And you can do, you can cause this by just giving them this, this pesticide, paracot, or rotanum.
I remember, it's funny, I remember the first time I was learning about this in, you know,
this was actually even before I was in graduate school, but also in graduate school, I was like,
oh, I'm putting this stuff, you know, to give it to a mouse, to study, you know, Parkinson's,
or to induce a Parkinson's, like human sort of model of Parkinson's.
And this was like put on our produce.
And I was like, that was like really kind of upsetting to think about.
about. There's been studies, even on the newer types of pesticides that are used on produce,
you know, there have been studies that have shown they're probably not good to have on a daily
basis because of that insidious damage that they're causing. And I get, you know, people are probably
thinking of like glyphosate, right? Roundup is a big one as well. When it comes to those pesticides
that are used, there are certain vegetables and fruits that are very thin skin that absorb it. So
So even if you wash the vegetable off, it's already been absorbed through the skin.
And so, like, let's talk about an avocado versus a strawberry, right?
Like, is it so important to eat organic for avocados?
Not really.
It's got a really thick skin.
Strawberries, on the other hand, have a very thin skin, you know, and so that would be something
that you want to choose organic.
I would say that, yes, organic would be the best choice.
If you can't always afford organic, then choose.
Okay, bananas, is that so important?
Probably not.
avocado is probably not, oranges, probably not.
Apples, yes, right, thin skin.
And there's, like, again, there's, like, lists out there that, like, will list the things
that are like, okay, if you're going to not do organic, here's the one, here's the
vegetables and fruits that are the safest to not.
I love the, I mean, the dirty dozen lists, but it's actually more practical to remember
the thickness of the skin is sort of like the barrier, the membrane between pesticides
and you.
How do you wash your produce?
And, like, and I say this, having seen, I think last night on Instagram,
you know, some guy putting baking soda and vinegar and, like, soaking it for 20 minutes.
And, like, is that how we wash produce?
Like, how do you wash produce to, like, get stuff off of it?
What do you do?
I just use water.
I just use water and wash it because I do buy organic as well.
So you're thinking about pesticides.
You're like, oh, well, I don't want to get Parkinson's disease or cancer, right?
It's causing damage.
But so my mentor, Bruce Ames, he's, you know, now 96 years old.
I don't know how many years ago it was.
It must have been back in the 80s.
He had done some experiments with a hematologist from his lab.
And they were looking at what happens if you don't get enough folate.
So that's another one of those essential micronutrients that you have to get from your diet.
Guess what?
Leafy greens are one of the best sorts of folate.
So leafy greens are just, they're packed with certain micronutrients, but they don't have a lot of protein, right?
So folate, again, we have to get from our diet.
And if we don't get enough folate, it actually causes damage to our DNA much more than eating
a pesticide would because folate is required to make new DNA.
You know, we're constantly making new cells in our body.
And if you don't have that folate, the precursor to make one of the nucleotides of DNA isn't
going to be there.
And so your body substitutes something else in there that's from RNA.
That's not supposed to be there.
And it causes DNA damage.
And he had done these studies where it was like he took Amherty.
animals, put them on a low folate diet, similar to what some people in the United States get.
And then he took the other group of animals and he irradiated them with ionizing radiation.
Okay, this is like, yeah, you're going to want to avoid this, right?
And the folate deficiency was like ionizing radiation.
It did the exact same thing.
It caused double strand breaks and DNA, exactly like the ionizing radiation.
So not getting that important micronutrient from your leafy greens,
folate was like getting ionizing radiation.
So again, back to that theme that we started with, thinking about what you need is so important.
And we're sitting here talking about pesticides, oh, we should avoid them, yes, but guess what's worse?
If you don't eat the greens, you're not going to get enough folate.
Foilate's so important, it's, you know, it's in every processed food.
They put the oxidized form of it, folic acid.
It's kind of one of those things where it's like, oh, it's another form of folate.
and it is more stable, which is why it's used in processed foods rather than folate,
but it is not the exact same as folate.
It's preferable if you're going to get the folate from your diet, from leafy greens.
Yeah, let's come back to sort of the framework for approaching this.
And so we've talked about micronutrients a little bit.
Let's talk about macro.
So, I mean, so I'm sitting here talking about all these micronutrients, and it was like
vegetables was a big thing we were talking about, right?
But we also hit on omega-3s, and that was fish.
Protein is, you know, amino acids are something that we need to get from our diet every day.
Much like we store glucose as glycogen in our liver and our muscles, we store fat, like triglycerides, right, adipose tissue.
We don't really store amino acids, although our muscle, skeletal muscle, is kind of a reservoir for them.
and during periods of fasting or low protein intake, we pull from our muscle to get amino acids
because they're essential to survive.
And what does that mean?
That means you're pulling important protein from your muscle, and that does cause muscle atrophy.
So you want to avoid that, right?
And so in order to help avoid that, all these regulatory committees had come up with,
let's figure out how much protein people need to take in every single day.
day to avoid those losses, right? And so studies were done many, many years ago, and that number
came up to be 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight is what was the recommended
daily allowance for protein intake. Fast forward, decades, you know, you've got all this new science
and new technology that's come out and new ways of measuring things. And, you know, any scientists will
tell you that your data is only as sensitive as the tools that you're using, okay?
Data from experts like Dr. Stewart Phillips and others, they started to, you know, look into
how you measure protein losses and amino acid losses and turns out that those studies
that were done decades ago were using tools that were, they were basically underestimating
the losses of amino acids.
It turns out using new techniques that are more sensitive that in order to just prevent your body from like pulling from, you know, your skeletal muscle to get amino acids, the minimum amount of protein needed to take in is actually 1.2 grams per kilogram body weight, which is higher than the 0.8 grams per kilogram body weight, right?
And they also did some studies looking at, well, what if you're physically active, right?
You're causing damage to your muscle.
You're using a lot of energy.
I mean, lots of things going on.
That number goes up to 1.6 grams of protein per kilogram body weight.
This was a big eye-opener for me a couple of years ago when I talked to Dr. Phillips and started
looking and reading his research because I always thought people were getting enough protein.
And turns out a lot of people are not getting enough protein because they are not getting
that at least that 1.2 grams per kilogram, you know, body weight bare minimum, that I think
is you have to think about, okay, well, where do I get my protein? Meat is off, animal meat's
probably one of the best sources because essential amino acids are very highly concentrated in
poultry and meat, fish. If you're a vegetarian or a vegan, you just have to really work really
hard and supplement with protein powders and stuff to kind of get that amino acid composition
up? Is all sort of like animal protein the same? I would imagine you need the complete set of
sort of amino acids for it to be the most bio available in your body. I don't know what I'm
talking about here obviously. But is there like a big difference between steak and chicken and
sort of other sources of protein that we typically think of? There are differences with respect to
their micronutrient profiles. Steak has a lot more iron, for example. You know, there's a lot of zinc
in like shellfish, like oysters.
So with respect to just the essential amino acids, you know, like getting them from
those, any of those sources is pretty good with respect to like protein.
You will find that they'll like per ounce of food that you're eating, maybe there's like a little
bit more in like denser in meat than fish or something like that.
But there are subtle differences between them, but also just in the whole micronutrient profile
itself. But with respect to the essential amino acids, like if you're really trying to hit
that 1.2 to 1.6 grams a day per, I mean, 1.6 grams per kilogram body weight. That's very
important. That's a lot of protein. It is, it actually is really a lot of protein, especially
for people that are physically active. Why is that so important? Well, like, if you're constantly
pulling amino acids from your muscle, it's like pulling from your retirement fund early, right?
Like, because our muscle mass peak is probably, I would say, anywhere between 20 to 30 years old is when we're like peak muscle mass.
After 30, as you get into 40, you start going down.
You want to try to build up that muscle mass reservoir earlier in life, kind of like you do what your retirement fund, right?
Like you want to build it up because you're going to be pulling from it no matter what.
Even if you're working out later in life, you're still going to be pulling from it because you just lose more muscle mass.
and strength as you age. It's just part of the aging process. And so the more you can kind of
counter that with resistance training, with making sure you're getting enough protein, then the better
off you're going to be. If you didn't do it earlier in life, it's never too late. Like that's something
also to like keep in mind. Like don't give up. Like, oh, I'm already 50. It's too late for me.
No, because like you can get gains in muscle mass and really actually great gains in strength,
particularly with resistance training. Protein intake is one easy thing. Like a lot of people,
like elder like our parents like not everyone's exercising right they're not doing resistance training
and so get that protein intake becomes even more important at that that point and something also
that you might find interesting Shane is that we're talking about omega-3s so there's some work from
chris mcglory he had basically done some research that have found omega high dose omega-3s could
prevent disuse atrophy so like when people are older they're not using their muscles a lot
and when you're not using your muscles a lot and you're certainly not getting enough protein,
you start to atrophy even more, right?
But if there was like, if he gave him a high dose omega-3, so this was like four grams a day,
four to five grams a day, it totally prevented disuse atrophy.
They did the study in younger adults and younger females, but it was like 50% less.
He's done some other studies and mechanism and looking into it and he thinks that what's happening
is omega-3s are sensitizing your skeletal muscle to amino acids.
In other words, you're getting more amino acids into the money.
You're getting more bang for your buck.
So more amino acids are getting in when you have the omega-3s there
because, yeah, omega-3s are really important for the skeletal muscle, like, membrane and
stuff, and so it might be easier just to get the nutrients in.
I want to, like, start using this in a practical way, right?
So if I were to make a smoothie in the morning, what is the best thing to put in my body
at the start of the day after having slept, which means I've been fasting, what is like the most
incredible smoothie you can think of that would just be full of health benefits for the day?
So it would have like omega-3, it would have protein powder, it had like leafy, like walk me through
this.
Do you do this?
I do smoothie.
It doesn't have omega-3, but I'll walk you through my smoothie that I do.
I probably about four to five days a week have this smoothie.
Typically, this smoothie is about, I don't know, four or so kale leaves.
And that's usually my green source that I use.
And so I'm getting the magnesium.
I'm getting the vitamin K.
I'm getting the folate.
But I'm also getting something in there called lutein and zazanthin, which is, these are
carotenoids, much like beta carotene or astazanth like we were talking about.
It's another one that accumulates in the eye, rods and cones of the eye, so it helps
prevent macular degeneration, but it accumulates in the brain as well.
And it's so interesting because there's been studies that have shown that giving older
adults, like supplementing with something like 20 migs, which is what like three K leaves
has of lutein.
It improves neural efficiency.
So basically like your brain works better with less energy.
There's been other studies in older adults where giving them lutein and ziazanth will improve
crystallize intelligence.
So that's basically, as you get older, it's the ability to still kind of use all the information
that you've learned throughout your life and, like, still use it.
So that's the kale.
It also has fiber, right?
Fiber is great for your gut.
I also add an avocado.
And the avocado also increases the bioavailability of those carotenoids, the lutein and zizanthin,
by like up to sixfold, anywhere between like three to sixfold.
You're getting more of the lutein in Ziazanthin.
You're basically making them more bioavailable by adding the avocado.
Also, it's a great source of mono-unsaturated fat.
Avocados are high in potassium.
Something like 96% of the U.S. population doesn't get enough potassium.
And then I add a ton of frozen blueberries.
And blueberries are, yes, you're getting your vitamin C and you're getting some fermentable fiber for the gut.
but they're also high in those phytochemicals.
So they have polyphenols in them and they have anthocyanins.
They're like superpowers for the brain.
So there's been so many studies that have been done, randomized controlled trials either
with freeze, dried blueberry extract or actually just blueberries showing it improves cognition.
Yeah, it improves mood.
When I was a postdoc, I did some studies in people.
We were looking at freeze dried blueberry powder.
I was looking at DNA damage in their blood cells.
So markers of those double-stranded breaks I talked about, like if you don't get enough folate,
it causes double-stranded breaks.
People that are eating terrible diets and that are, you know, overweight and obese
have more double-stranded breaks in their blood cells.
So that's something that I've measured.
We were getting a population of people that were overweight and obese and then giving them
this free dried blueberry extract.
And over the course of four, eight weeks, it lowered their DNA damage.
personally it's like I what I notice is like the mood enhancer it's like I get that blueberry and it's
like whoa I used to add bananas to my my my smoothie years and years ago it's not that bananas are
bad for you but they have this enzyme in them called polyphenol oxidase pPO well as the name
implies it breaks down polyphenols which is what you want from the blueberries to get the benefits in
the brain and the benefits yeah exactly there was a very very very very very very very
very recent study in 2023 that came out. And this was a controlled trial where people were given a
smoothie with blueberries, either with and without the banana. And then metabolites of polyphenols
were measured in their urine and blood. And if they had the banana, their polyphenol levels were
just plummeted. Like they weren't getting them from the blueberries. And this is, I'll tell you
what's enraging about it. Is anywhere you go, like if you want to buy a smoothie when you're out
and about everything has a has a banana in it and you know like I'm a parent and so I like you know
I'm out and about and I have my my kid with me and it's like I want to get them a smoothie and it has
blueberries in it and I'm like but it also has a banana and I'm like but you know there's been studies
on children as well and giving children blueberries improves their their cognition so they perform
better on like tests you know it's not just good for adults it's like throughout the lifespan and so now
I have to, like, tell them, okay, don't put the banana.
But, like, everywhere you go, there's a banana.
So that's interesting.
I'm going to give you my smoothie recipe after, and you can create it, but I'm going
to switch out the banana starting tomorrow.
Okay.
So we have kale leaves, avocado, frozen blueberries, and protein powder.
So, um, protein powder.
Especially if I'm doing it, like you said, first thing in the morning when I'm, and if sometimes
I'll have my smoothie in the afternoon, in which case, like, if I didn't work out and
I've already gotten my protein, like, I won't put the protein powder.
But these days, I'm mostly always putting them, to be honest.
I'm like doing something every day.
And so, and I just, it's hard to get the protein requirement for me.
So I usually do some weight protein.
And then I also add a little bit of hydrolyzed collagen powder as well.
If you're getting the protein, you probably don't need the hydrolyzed collagen powder.
But I personally, there's studies showing that randomized control trial showing that it improves
like skin elasticity and, you know, things that I'm also interested in addition with respect to skin.
I mean, there's all sorts of studies also showing it helps.
with joint health and this and that.
And then the other thing I add is I do a little bit of maringa powder.
So maringa, it's high in some micronutrients.
Like it has things like zinc and iron and magnesium.
But it also has something in it that is called maringogen.
And it is a phytochemical that is very similar to sulfurophane, which is found in
like broccoli, broccoli sprouts.
It's really high in broccoli sprouts.
And it activates genetic pathways in our body, the same ones that sulfurophane activates,
that have been shown to increase antioxidants in the brain, like glutathione, that have been
shown to lower DNA damage in our cells, all sorts of benefits.
But the other thing that it does, and I've noticed this, so I used to wear a continuous
glucose monitor, like, for years.
It blunts the post-pranthial glucose rise from a smoothie when I put maringa powder in it.
And so I put that in my smoothie as well.
Now, that's a little spicy tasting.
I would say if you're like in one of those moods where you don't want the like not so great tasting smoothie, you know, you can skip the maringa or go go for a smaller amount.
But I do like a big heaping tablespoon of it.
Do you use like a liquid?
Oh, and then I add some water.
Yeah.
Water.
Okay.
To kind of mix it up.
That's pretty cool.
I'm going to give you my smoothie.
You can give me a great on this.
And keep in mind, I'm a parent of two boys who devised.
devour food. So we came up with this, and I've never told anybody the exact recipe before,
but here's basically what it is. And we call it the Tom Brady. It's got protein powder in it.
It's got AG1. It's got walnuts. It's got blueberries, yogurt, almond milk, but like real almond
milk, no other additives or anything, banana, chia seeds and hemp seeds. Yeah, so you're going for
So the kind of omega-3 that's in those plant sources like walnuts and chia seeds is
ALA.
Okay.
And we were talking a lot about the EPA and DHA, which are from the marine sources.
ALA, I mean, now, walnuts are great.
There's like studies showing like if you eat a handful of walnuts a day, you're, you know,
you have lower cancer risk and cardiovascular disease risks, they're clearly good for you.
They're not the same as the E.P. and D.H.A. So don't substitute, I'll tell you, you can
So your body does convert ALA from plant sources of omega-3 into EPA and DHA, which is essentially
what you're the final products that you need are.
But everybody does it differently.
And the conversion efficiency is about 5%.
Now women, when they're making, when they're high in estrogen, that can go up, really,
that can go up much higher.
And I think that's because during pregnancy and child development in utero, the, the, the
DHA is so important that your body make sure you're just turning all of that ALA into that
that DHA because when you're pregnant, your estrogen level goes and it's like a hundredfold
higher. It's like super high. If there are people that are relying on just plant sources of
omega-3, that is a mistake. And if you do an omega-3 index test and there's, you know,
omega-quant is probably one of the best places to do that. Then you'll figure, you'll figure that
really quick.
Okay.
Well, this is great, right?
So, like, what would we supplement here?
We'd take out the bananas because they're counteracting the blueberries.
We'd add avocado.
That's a lot of fat in there.
What else would we, like, take out or add or switch?
What would you say?
So you're doing the AG greens as your source of green?
I'm doing that as sort of like the base vitamin because they have a daily multivitamin, and I just
count that as their daily multivitamin.
That's their daily multivitamin.
Okay.
But did you add any greens in there?
I didn't.
No, there's no greens.
So that would be, that would be something that I would.
Like, I had some sneak some kale leaves in.
Oh my God.
If they saw that, they wouldn't drink it.
No, don't let them see.
Or do they have to make it to be part of it?
So I put kale leaves in my sons or even romaine lettuce.
Here's the other thing.
So there's really not a lot of foods that can go into a smoothie that would degrade the polyphenols
because they're high in that enzyme, polyphenol oxidase.
But the ones that are are bananas and beets and anything in that family.
So, like, chard.
I used to put chard in my smoothie, like, like, Swiss chard, you know, like, they're so,
it's so good.
And look, these are great foods to eat.
Like, just don't put them in your smoothie with blueberries.
Just not with blueberries.
Just not with blueberries.
Exactly.
So, I mean, I used to put chard in my smoothie and like this, this like changed my world.
I was like, this is unbelievable.
I can't, you know, thankfully I stopped doing the banana on my smoothie.
In fact, I just kind of just got lazy and it was like, okay, kale, I just need like a base
of like greens, you know what I mean?
Thankfully, like years ago.
So even though this study just kind of came out last year, I've been ahead of a game.
I wish I knew that.
They're going to blame me for their poor test results now.
They're going to be like, you know, you sent us to school with blueberries and bananas, dad.
Like, what were you thinking?
Are they physically active?
Cardiorestitory fitness is another thing that's like, it correlates with academic performance.
So like the better fit the child is, like they score better on a lot of academic tests as well.
Okay.
I want to get to fitness and a second.
I want to cover sort of grass-fed and then heat and cold exposure and then we can dive into fitness.
Grass-fed, non-grass-fed fed, is there a difference?
I see this everywhere between grass-fed butter, non-grass-fed butter, grass-fed beef.
Is there a difference from a consumer point of view in terms of what I'm ingesting?
There's slight differences.
There are definitely.
So we were just talking about the omega-3 profile.
So I would say one of the biggest differences is the omega-3 and then the omega-6.
profile in let's talk about meat like grass fed you know cows that are grass fed versus not so
what I mean by that is like they're getting that plant source of omega that a la that that plant
source of omega three they're getting if they're they're eating like grass right they're getting it
from from the plants that they're eating and they're also not getting as much of what would be a
type of food that is higher in omega-6.
So this would be like if they're being fed corn, for example, a corn, you know, oil-ish
processed kind of like pellets or whatever, you know.
Yeah, yeah.
If you're eating, you know, for example, ground beef from a just conventional cow,
then you're going to have a lot more of the omega-6 and less of the omega-3.
I never thought about this before, but like you just said, like we're not supposed to
eat processed foods, but then we're eating animals that are eating processed foods.
Yeah.
Again, this goes back to my take on nutrition and thinking about the framework of how to eat.
First and foremost, I think the most important thing is how do I get these important vitamins and
minerals and fatty acids and amino acids like protein?
How do I get all those, right?
Okay, I'm getting an idea of how I should be eating.
Then it comes the next layer.
Do I need to have organic or, you know, is a little bit of pesticides okay?
Do I need to eat grass fed or, you know, because at the end of the,
the day, food's expensive.
Yeah, totally.
Way more expensive now than years again.
Exactly.
It's even worse now.
And so I do think it is better if you can.
You can afford it.
If you can, yeah.
If not, don't worry about it.
If you, if you, if not like the most important thing is what if you're eating conventional
meat and you're getting a little bit higher omega 6?
Well, if you're supplementing with fish oil over day, who cares?
You're getting that, getting the omega three is what is most important.
And people are so focused on, oh, but the omega-6 is so high when your body actually needs
omega-6.
So if you're getting it from like, you know, dietary sources versus like oils, processed
cooking oils and stuff.
And even that, look, I don't cook with vegetable oil.
I don't use vegetable oil at all.
However, I'm going to be frank, okay, when you look at the data, taking people that are
eating like a high saturated fat diet, so they're eating more like butter, you know, saturated
fat like coconut oil and substituting that with vegetable oil.
There's no effect in their cardiovascular disease risk or they do better.
You can look at this two ways.
You can say, oh, well, if it's the same saturated fat versus vegetable oil, then clearly saturated
fat's not as bad as we thought it was.
That's true.
But the second way you can look at it is, oh, they substituted the saturated fat with
the vegetable oil and it wasn't any worse.
So maybe the vegetable oil isn't killing us as bad as we thought.
And this is the one thing I like to point out because I see.
still don't use them because when I think about it from, like, my mechanistic brain point
of view, it's like, well, vegetable oil is very high in polyunsaturated fat.
Like we talked about omega-3s being a type of poly, they're prone to oxidation.
And when you add heat into the picture, boom, that's like tons of oxidation.
Perhaps in those studies where they're substituting saturated fat for vegetable, were they
putting vegetable oil on salads or were they frying it, deep frying and, you know, like
consuming oxidized lipids?
It's like, we don't really know.
It's still better.
You're still better off avoiding the vegetable oil, particularly for cooking, like, in
anything that's with heat, you know?
And then, I mean, obviously, processed foods have tons of vegetable oil, but that have
been cooked at a high heat when you go out to eat.
I mean, like, those restaurants are using vegetable oil.
It's cheaper.
They're probably reusing it, which is even more oxidized, right?
I mean, these are things like you don't want to think about it.
You'll just never go out.
I mean, like, you have to, like, enjoy life, right?
Be practical.
Totally.
Yeah.
Like, you can't obsess over everything.
or like you become like a maniac.
One thing we can all afford is vitamin D and we're all sort of lacking in that.
Walk me through sort of how we can get that,
the difference between sunlight and supplementation as well as the effect of sunscreen
on our absorption of vitamin D and is sunscreen actually killing us more than just being
in the sun?
So vitamin D, food is not a great source of it.
Like, you can find, like, it's, it is fortified in some fatty foods.
Unfortunately, it's fortified with the wrong form.
It's fortified with D2 rather than D3, which is what we make in our scan from the sun.
The primary source of it is, as you mentioned, it's from the sun.
And specifically, it's UVB radiation from the sun.
That is really important because UVB radiation only occurs during certain times of the year.
In regions where you're more northern, so for example, in Canada, you're not making vitamin D a good, you know, four or five months out of the year.
It's very challenging to make a lot of vitamin D from being out in the sun.
Summertime, you know, different, lots of UVB radiation, right?
So you need to be in the sun and you need to be at a certain time of year, depending on where you live, it all, there's lots of things.
You mentioned sunscreen as well.
there's a lot of factors that are involved in, you know, the ability to produce vitamin D3
in the skin from the UVB radiation, and that has to do with sunscreen.
So anything that blocks out UVB radiation is going to block out the ability to make vitamin D.
Melanin, the pigmentation that is like a sunscreen, it's natural sunscreen and people that some
people have, like in some regions of the world that are certainly more equatorial.
That is also a natural sunscreen.
and it blocks out UVB radiation, which is why your body responds when you're in the sun,
your body tans because it's like, oh, next time I'm in the sun, I need to protect myself.
It's an adaptation.
The other thing that regulates the production of vitamin D3 from the sun is age.
The older you get, the less, I would say, efficient your body is at making vitamin D3 from the sun.
So, for example, a 70-year-old makes like four times less than their 20-year-old former self.
bioavailability of vitamin D3 is important as well, and that's regulated by body mass and weight.
So you make vitamin D3 in your skin, but it gets released into your bloodstream, then it's
converted into another form that is actually not a vitamin.
It's a steroid hormone.
So vitamin D is actually much more important.
It's not just a vitamin.
It's actually a hormone that our body needs.
So basically, the more body fat you have, the less bioavailable vitamin D3 is.
you actually need more vitamin D3, the more body fat that you have.
So this hormone is, it's extremely important because it is regulating about 5% of the human genome,
the protein encoding human genome.
So it's a lot, it's doing a lot of things.
And you can imagine, so what it does, there's actually a little sequence inside of our DNA
in, you know, it's a little repeat sequence that vitamin D recognizes.
and like this whole complex of vitamin D and a receptor goes down and binds that little sequence
of DNA and it turns on a gene or it turns off a gene and it does it in a very coordinated
manner and when you don't have enough vitamin D that stuff all goes wrong and so lots of things
can can happen because of sunscreen because of our modern day lifestyles where inside technology
We're on our computers, less farming, less agricultural work out in the sun.
Majority of people are not getting enough vitamin D3.
And so something around 70% of the U.S. population is insufficient in vitamin D3.
So that is defined as having blood levels of vitamin D less than 30 nanograms per milliliter.
And then another percentage of the population is deficient.
So they'd be less than 20 nanograms per milliliter.
But we've been told like not to go outside. We've been told to, you know, layer up the sunscreen. We've been, I mean, are these things getting in the way of vitamin D? Are they helping us? How do we make sense of all this? Let's not like, let's get, be clear. Like you, you, if you have, you know, fair skin and you're going out in the sun a lot, then you can increase your risk for DNA damage. And, you know, skin cancer is one. Like, for example, Australia.
Australia is like, like, the melanoma cancer is like through the roof in Australia.
And melanoma is like the worst type of skin cancer to get.
You know, there's a lot of fair skin people living there.
And Australia is very close to the equator.
You know, there's definitely many months out of the year where you're just lots and lots of UVB radiation.
But people that were sort of native to that region had darker skin.
They had more melanin.
And so the solution to people that are more fair skin living in Australia is actually sunscreen and hat.
and a vitamin D3 supplement.
Yeah, the question is, where do you find the balance, right?
Like how much sun exposure is enough and do I need to supplement and do I have to wear
sunscreen?
And I think that all depends on a variety of factors.
It isn't like a one-size-fits-all.
It's like, okay, well, where do you live?
Do you live in Southern California, like where I do?
Do you live in Australia?
Do you live in Canada?
Those are all factors to keep in mind.
and then just measuring vitamin D levels.
Where am I at?
Then you can go, okay, well, clearly I don't wear sunscreen.
I don't go out in the sun a lot because I'm indoor work.
I work inside a lot.
So, you know, even without the sunscreen, I'm still not, you know, getting enough vitamin D3.
So you have to kind of measure something.
So is there a difference?
Like if I go out and buy a vitamin D3 supplement, is there a difference between that
in the sun?
And then do I want to take that with anything?
I notice, I think Athletic Greens includes vitamin K with that.
Is that for the bioavailability?
No, it's not for the bioavailability.
Let's address your questions because they're really great questions.
Differences between sun exposure and supplemental form.
Again, vitamin D3 supplemental form, which is key.
So the differences between vitamin D3 from the sun versus supplemental, yes, there's differences.
So, like, let's say you're, like, in, like, sub-Sahara Africa where you're, like, so close to the equator and you're just, you know, you can make vitamin D, you know, three from the sun and you're out in the sun. Let's say you're like a Bushman or something out there all the time.
There's been studies that have measured the levels of people that are, like, Aboriginal to these equatorial regions like Bushmen in sub-Saharan Africa.
And their natural vitamin D levels are something like anywhere between 80 to 100 nanograms per mil.
But they don't really go above that.
And the reason is because your body senses like the vitamin D levels.
And when you're still being exposed to the sun, instead of converting it into like vitamin D3,
it like converts it into this other metabolites.
So it's like, it's like, okay, we're putting the breaks on this.
We're not going to do anymore.
If you're taking a supplement and you don't measure anything, like you can, let's say
you're taking like an insane number.
Like there's upper limits that have been sort of identified as the safe amount to supplement
with vitamin D 3 every day.
So like the Institute of Medicine in the United States has set that as 4,000 IUs a day.
That doesn't mean you can't go above that.
That's just the safe upper limit where you're not going to have any toxicity effects.
But like let's say you're taking like 100,000 I use a day, like way over 4,000, right?
I mean, those natural mechanisms aren't going to kick in in the skin that like they do
when you're being exposed to a lot of UV radiation and your body's like, oh, I have enough
vitamin D3, so I'm going to, you know, stop.
So you can over supplement with vitamin D3.
It is fat soluble and it can be toxic.
It's challenging to do.
Like you would have to take something like 100,000 I use, you know, or something a day for like
a year.
And the biggest effect is vitamin D3 can, you can make your calcium more bioavailable.
So we're talking about bioavailability of other minerals.
Calcium is much more bioavailable in the presence of vitamin D.
So you absorb about 40% more calcium from your.
diet if you have adequate levels of vitamin D. One concern is, well, if I have a lot of vitamin
D and I'm taking calcium, then maybe I'm going to get hypercalcemia, right? Too much calcium in the
bloodstream. There are studies that have shown it's exceedingly high doses that you have to do
for a long time to get that. But that is the concern with taking too much vitamin D3, is that
you're going to get too much calcium in your blood, which can have acute toxicity effects, but also
long-term effects with calcification of, you know, your arteries and your vascular system
because calcium can form a precipitate really easy.
That's the concern.
And then you mentioned your athletic greens.
So they put vitamin K2 in there, which is, so I mentioned vitamin K-1, which is found in
leafy greens, and it's involved in blood coagulation, so clotting.
When you take in your greens, you're getting the vitamin K, one, it goes to the liver,
And it activates all those coagulation proteins, blood for blood clotting.
When you get enough of that from the greens, it stays in circulation and it does exactly
what vitamin K2 does, which is activates proteins that are involved in shuttling calcium
out of your vascular system and bringing it to your bones, bringing it to your muscle,
where you want calcium to be and not in your vascular system where it can form a precipitate
and then a plaque.
But I want to mention one other thing because you did say bioavailability.
And it's related and it has to do with magnesium.
We were talking about it's a co-factor for enzymes like DNA repair.
I didn't talk about a really important one.
It's actually a co-factor for both enzymes that convert vitamin D3 into the circulating form
of vitamin D that we go and we measure.
It's called 25 hydroxy vitamin D and then eventually into the active steroid hormone.
And so there's been studies showing that people that don't get enough magnesium, even if they're
getting enough vitamin D, even if they're supplementing with it, they won't convert it into
the steroid hormone. It's a hormone that we need. As I mentioned, half of the U.S. population
doesn't get enough magnesium. So if you're not getting that magnesium, that's a problem.
So something like athletic greens does have magnesium in it, I think, but also if you're doing
greens, right, that's like a really good source of magnesium as well. So you want to make sure
you have your magnesium covered, especially for the vitamin D as well, because they work together.
You need them both. Let's switch gears and talk about a framework for approaching
deliberate heat and possibly deliberate cold exposure?
Deliberate heat exposure, when we say deliberate heat, it's really, you know, you're going
into a hot environment, right?
So you're going to do something like a hot sauna, a steam room, a hot bath, something
that is either the ambient temperature of the room is elevated or the water and your body
is like, you know, submerged in the water, right?
What is that doing?
Well, that is actually kicking on a physiological response that is in many ways very similar
to moderate intensity aerobic exercise because when you are exposed to this deliberate heat
exposure, when you're exposed to the ambient increases in temperature, you're elevating
your core body temperature, which is what's happening with physical activity, your heart rate
increases, your plasma flow increases, your stroke volume increases, all these things that are
happening during physical exercise are happening during this deliberate heat exposure. And so
there's like, there's like a somewhat of a, I would say, mimicking effect of moderate intensity
aerobic exercise. And there's actually been studies that have compared that head to head. So
they've looked at being on a stationary cycle doing, you know, not, not anything crazy, but like
120 watts and then comparing that to sitting in a sauna for 20 minutes, doing each of those for
20 minutes. And they were comparable in terms of heart rate elevation during the physical
activity or during the heat exposure, the changes in blood pressure during the activity, and then
the improvements after. So blood pressure improved after the stationary cycling, blood pressure
improved after the deliberate heat exposure, resting heart rate improved after the
stationary cycling and resting heart rate improved after the deliberate heat exposure.
Certainly it's important for people that are disabled, people that can't go for a run or a jog
or even get on a bike.
But it's also important for the population, I think, of people that won't get on a bike
or go for a run or they would rather just feel like they're sitting in a spa.
And at the very least, or maybe people that are just so adverse, there are people that are
so adverse to cardiovascular exercise that if you can just get them into a sauna and we can talk
about parameters in a minute, but like if you can get them into something that's sort of
at least mimicking the moderate intensity cardiovascular exercise and they're getting those
adaptations, those cardiovascular adaptations that they would get with at least a little mild
to moderate intensity exercise, that's going to be beneficial in the long run as well.
And then it's also beneficial for people that are physically active.
You might go, well, why is that?
So being physically active, like being aerobically active, doing aerobic exercise, one of the
best benefits is it improves what's called cardiorespiratory fitness.
And that's probably one of the, I would say, one of the best biomarkers of longevity,
like concrete things that you can measure.
It's measured by measuring something called VO2 max.
It's the maximum amount of oxygen you can take in during maximal exercise.
Cardiovascular exercise improves that, particularly if you're doing a high-intensity
exercise training, things that are like high-intensity interval training, for example,
is one of the best ways to improve it, especially if you're doing longer intervals of like
at least a minute.
So there's been two types of studies, observational data looking at people that just routinely
exercise or people that routinely exercise and do the sauna.
And then they measured these, you know, there was measurements of cardiorespiratory
fitness. And it was pretty clear that people that routinely exercised and routinely did the
sauna had a better carter respiratory fitness than people that only routinely exercise. In other
words, there was a benefit to do sauna on top of the exercise, right? And then there's been
intervention studies where it's like, okay, we're going to take people, give them an exercise
workout, I think it was the stationary bike. And then right after that exercise workout, they're either
going to just do passive recovery or they're going to go into a sauna and recover for 15 minutes.
forgot how many weeks it was, something like on the order of four weeks or something like
that, they measured cardiorespiratory fitness and a variety of other biomarkers like lipids,
like LDL, total cholesterol, blood pressure, things like that.
While there was improvements, obviously with exercise, the ones that did exercise plus the sauna
had an even greater improvement in their cardiorespiratory fitness.
So their VO-2X was improved even more than exercise alone.
They also had greater improvements in blood pressure and greater improvements in the
They're lipid numbers and things like that.
So there was every reason to add a deliberate heat exposure on top of exercise as well.
You're the reason I have a sauna.
I think I first came across your work and you had this like 70 page website on the benefits of a sauna.
And I remember like skimming the first like three pages of it going, I really need a sauna.
And so you're the reason I have a sauna.
But when we say doing the sauna, like what does that mean?
in terms of temperature, in terms of duration, is a hot tub the same as the sauna?
Talk to me about that.
So a lot of the studies that have been done on sauna have come out of Finland, where they're using
Finnish slumas, which are generally speaking, it would be what I would call like, it's a regular
sauna where you have like an electric heater with some rocks that are hot.
In Finland, they often use water.
poured on the hot rocks, and so there's a humidity aspect there, anywhere between 10 to 20 percent
humidity.
So a lot of the observational studies and intervention studies showing, like I just mentioned one,
about VO2 max improvements, blood pressure improvements, they're done in Finland, and a lot of those
parameters used, generally speaking, are regular saunas of about 175 degrees Fahrenheit and 10 to 20
percent humidity. The average time spent in this sauna is about 20 minutes for the benefits
to really be, I would say, that robust. And then there's frequency, right? So like, how often do you
do it? And so there have been a variety of studies that have looked at all-cause mortality.
So dying early from all causes that are non-accidental. And then looking at cardiovascular-related
mortality like dying from a heart attack, for example. And people that are more frequently
using the sauna, that's a dose-dependent effect. So people that use the sauna, for example,
two to three times a week have a 24% lower all-cause mortality compared to people that only
use it one time a week. But people that use it four to seven times a week have a 40% lower all-cause
mortality compared to people that only use it one time a week. So in other words, it seems like
the minimal effective dose to get the most robust effect would be four times a week. And the same
goes for other parameters. So dying from, you know, cardiovascular related mortality, it's 50%
lower in people that use the sauna four to seven times a week compared to one time a week. Whereas
if you're only doing it two to three times a week, it's something like 27% lower. And when I said
duration in the sauna, it's really important. So those studies were also done looking at, okay,
let's say people are only staying in the sauna for 11 minutes versus like greater than 19 minutes,
so like 20 minutes, right?
They didn't have that robust 50% reduction in all, sorry, in cardiovascular related mortality
if they only stayed in for 11 minutes.
It was much less.
It was a little bit like it was improved, but it was not 50%.
The temperature and the duration and the frequency, those are three parameters that are
important with respect to using, you know, a regular hot sauna.
And when I say, the reason I say regular hot sauna is because another type of sauna that's very popular are infrared sonas.
And infrared sonnas do not get as hot.
So they're not warming the ambient air around you.
They're working through another mechanism and they're sort of like moving molecules inside your body around and sort of heating you up in a different way.
And you do sweat a lot and you do get your, you can get your core body temperature elevated, particularly if you stay in.
quite a long time. You do have to keep in mind that you can't take those parameters and go,
I'm going to stay in a 145 degree infrared sauna for only 20 minutes because that's what those
Finnish studies have shown because they're completely different. If you're just staying in for 20
minutes, like the same amount of time in each, you're not going to get those blood pressure
improvements from an infrared sauna, which makes sense. It's not as hot, right? It takes longer to
elevate that core body to get your heart rate elevated. And anyone that's done, like I've done a lot
of infrared sauna and I've done a lot of regular hot sauna and, you know, I know, and also
wearing a heart rate monitor, right? You can wear like your Fitbit or your whoop or whatever
into the sauna and you'll know when your heart rate starts to get elevated and it's not
going to be after 20 minutes in an infrared sauna. For me, I have to stay in like 45, like I'd say
60 minutes is more like the duration that I would have to stay in to start to get more elevations
in my heart rate. Again, that's that mimicking of the modern intensity.
exercise, but there's also biomarkers that have been measured. So, for example, we haven't
gone into this yet, but heat shock proteins. These are one of the adaptations that happen when
your body is forced to increase its core body temperature, whether that's through physical
activity, which is making you hot, making you sweat, or deliberate heat exposure. And studies have
been done looking at people that go into a relatively hot sauna. So this would be 163 degree
Fahrenheit sauna. If they stay in for 30 minutes, they can raise their heat shock proteins
about 50% over their baseline levels. And heat shock proteins have a lot of beneficial effects.
So they're involved with preventing proteins from aggregating and forming plaques in the brain
in the vascular system. They also are very important for preventing muscle atrophy. And there have
now been studies that have been done showing that just even locally heating, you know,
so the studies that have been done have been like they're called immobilization studies where
they're sort of mimicking an injury or an event, like, let's say you go and like an older person
goes into the hospital, they have the flu, whatever. They're basically immobilized for a period of
weeks. And so they're not using their muscles and their muscles were atrophying at a rapid rate.
Studies have been done where if you apply even just local heat, that you can cut that disuse
atrophy by as much as 40%. So heat shock proteins are a good biomarker for heat stress.
So is increased heart rate. We talked about like you're getting up.
to 110, 120, you can get up to 120 beats per minute, sitting in the hot sauna.
And that's really an indication that your core body temperature is being elevated.
Your body's doing that work.
And you can elevate your heat shock proteins by being submerged from the shoulders down for
about 20 minutes in about 104 degree Fahrenheit water, which is a standard hot tub level.
I do think there are comparable effects with respect to the modality of heat exposure,
whether we're talking about a hot sauna or a hot bath, perhaps an infrared sauna.
Again, the duration, the parameters will change.
The parameters will change.
But I do think that you can find comparable effects.
There are personal preferences at play.
Like, I like both hot tub and hot sauna.
I find that I cheat more with a hot tub.
Like, I'm, like, more prone to put my arms out when I get really hot.
When I'm in the sauna, like, there's nowhere to go, right?
Like, if I'm getting hot, then I have to get out.
And then I'm like, oh, I'm giving up, like, mentally.
I'm like, no, I'm not going to give up.
But if I'm in the hot tub, I don't feel like I'm giving up,
but I'm just like getting my arms out.
There's an immune benefit, too, like your immune system, isn't there?
There is, yeah.
So there was, there have been some observational data studies as well looking at, like, pneumonia risk.
It's, I think it was something like 40% lower in people that use the son of four to seven times a week.
And there've been a lot of really early studies on, again, these are coming out of Finland where there's humidity.
So, you know, there's steam involved as well.
You're working your cardiovascular system.
I mean, the lungs are affected.
And I don't know all the mechanisms.
And I don't know that they've all been worked out.
But there is some sort of benefit on the lugs and also just the immune system as well.
It seems like immune changes happen as well.
And it's funny, I do get into the sauna when I'm feeling a little under the weather or even if I am sick.
because I find it's easier than getting on my peloton, I get in there and I'll do the steam
and I feel so much better.
I feel so much better.
It's like there's my grandmother or grandfather used to tell me, like sweat it out.
And there's almost like something true to that when you are feeling sick.
Absolutely.
So when you are sick, you get a fever.
And the fever response, your core body temperature is elevated and heat shock proteins are activated.
And heat shock proteins do play a role in what is called in the innate immune response.
So that's the immune response that you have when you've never seen a virus or a bacterial
pathogen before.
It's that like, it's not the antibody response.
It's that like, okay, let's fire away and get.
So heatchalk proteins do play a role in that.
And when you are getting in the sauna, when you're doing some form of deliberate heat exposure,
you are elevating your core body temperature.
And so the fever response is a very important part of our immune's way, our immune system's
way of dealing with the pathogen, right?
It's important.
Like we get a fever for a reason.
The reason I actually got into the sauna way back in 2009 had nothing to do with cardiovascular
effects or even the effects on muscle mass, but it was the effects on my mood.
And that was, you know, I was very stressed out in graduate school and this was like 2009.
And I was using the sauna every morning before I would go into the lab and do my experiments
that would often fail.
It was very stressful.
And I started to notice quite quickly that I was eight.
able to handle that stress a lot better. I was just, I was like, I wasn't getting so depressed after
and so like down and anxious. And, um, and that's when I was like, something is going on here.
Like, it was very noticeable for me. And so then I started to look into the literature and come up
with my own sort of theories, which I connecting the dots where I actually did publish on this
back in 2022. It's in my huge review article on the sauna. It's called how sauna or sauna use can
increase health span. And I think it has to do with, when you get into the sauna, again,
you're mimicking a lot of the same effects that cardiovascular exercise. And so you're releasing
a lot of endorphins as well. Those are the feel-good opioids that were released in our brain.
But what's really interesting is that also the opposite of endorphin is called dinorphin.
So it's also an opioid that we release in our body. And it's that, it's that opioid that's
involved in like the discomfort feeling. So like when you're working,
out when you're getting hot you're like you're feeling uncomfortable your body's making dinorphin
and dinorphin is part of what it does is it cools down your body so it's playing a role and it's
like okay you're you're getting you're elevating your core body temperature and so the adaptive response
is okay we need to cool down somewhat dinorphin plays a role in that but it also is what's
responsible for that uncomfortable feeling when you're like oh i'm so hot i want to get out when you release
dinorphin you have a response a feedback loop in your brain where dinorphin you have a response a feedback loop in your brain
where dinorphin causes your body to make more receptors to the feel good endorphin.
And it sensitizes those receptors.
And it makes sense if you think about it, right?
When your body is not feeling good and you're getting that uncomfortable feeling,
it wants to make sure that it's going to counter that with feeling good.
Yeah.
The next time you make endorphins from a hug, from your child or a joke, you laugh at whatever,
you're going to feel even better because you're going to be more sensitive to those endorphins
from those, it's called mu-opioid receptors, and that's what you make when you increase
endorphin.
Anyways, but now there's lots more research coming out.
So work from Dr. Charles Rezon, and now his protege, Dr. Ashley Mason, it's a type of sauna
that's like a, it's like a bed, and it's a chamber with the head out, and so your whole body
is in it.
They are elevating your core body temperature to about 101.3 degrees Fahrenheit.
So you're getting a fever.
They're inducing a feverish response.
Now, many people have to be in this sauna, and it's an infraredic, it gets up to about 145-ish or something like that, and they're in there for like 60 minutes, 50 minutes to 60 minutes, and they're getting a feverish response.
So it's not, it's a very intense procedure, but they induced this feverish response 101.3 Fahrenheit just one time in people with, like, major depressive disorder, or they did a sham control where they made them feel like they were getting hot, but it like wasn't hot enough.
And the people that got the active treatment had an antidepressant effect that lasted like six
weeks after.
It was like enormous and crazy.
Placebo group didn't get it at all.
It's amazing what our body can do to heal itself when, you know, we're not sort of always
injecting it with stuff too.
There's all these other ways to go about healing it.
It's almost like it knows what it's doing sometimes.
It does.
I agree with it.
I mean, it's so exciting to potentially have a non-pharmical treatment for depression because
it's undeniable that doing aerobic exercise, like they've compared running to classical
antidepressants like SSRI, so serotonin reuptake inhibitors, right?
In terms of the antidepressant effects, it's like the same.
Only the running has all the other benefits, right?
There are people that are really severely depressed that just can't even get out of bed.
Like they're not going to go for a run.
And it's true.
There are people that will not get out of bed.
But will they get into a sauna?
I mean, it's a lot easier.
And so it really opens up doors that are just, it's just so exciting.
Super promising as we age, too, for the aging population, a lot of people who don't want
to exercise when they get a lot older or the, you know, the aches and pains.
And maybe it's a low intensity way to do that.
I can say for myself, during COVID was probably the, you know, one of the most stressful
periods of my life.
And the sauna, like, you know, I think it saved my life a lot.
You know what I mean?
Like, I was using the sauna five, six times a week, and it was just sort of like, A, it was
mentally grounding.
It was something I look forward to as a great ritual, but it sort of kept me out of trouble
for some reason.
And I could never explain it.
And I'm an end of one.
And, you know, I'm not super scientific and all that.
But I was like, this is working.
This is keeping me like happy and going and motivated.
And I got to keep doing more of this because, yeah, it was really crazy.
I want to talk about exercise.
Maybe we'll do that in part too.
I don't think we're going to do it justice here in the next 10 minutes, but maybe we can end
with sort of the top three interventions you can think of from a diet perspective, and then
the top three interventions you can think of from a behavioral perspective that would have the
biggest bang on people's lives.
Diet-wise, like the top three things that people can think about would be to make sure
they're getting enough of their marine source of omega-3.
implementing with two grams of a pretty decent quality fish brand, a fish oil brand per day.
And that's so, it's like low-hanging fruit.
And then I would say vitamin D3, most people, 4,000 I use is a pretty safe bet.
And, you know, I think that at the very least doing 4,000 I use a day of vitamin D3,
as you mentioned, it's like the cheapest supplement.
It's something like a penny a pill.
It's like the most affordable thing, you know, to do.
and then making sure you're eating your greens and getting your protein.
So like thinking about the magnesium and then the 1.2 grams per kilogram body weight a day
are like the biggest bang for your buck, I think.
And then with respect to behavioral exercise and particularly doing a good amount of high
intensity exercise and we didn't get so much into it, but it really is one of the most important
things that you can do.
I mean, there's studies showing that people just doing one.
to three minutes of like getting their heart rate up to 80% max heart rate for like one to one to
three minutes, you know, three times a week is associated with like a 50% reduction in all
cause mortality and cancer related mortality. So it's easy to do. Like you can do that, right? You can
just get up and do three minutes, you know, like it's not, it's not that challenging. Also, I mean,
resistance training and muscle mass super important. Like you need to be, you need to be building
that muscle mass and maintaining it because frailty, you know, you get to a point when you start
to get older and all of a sudden you have an event where you're, you got influenza, whatever,
and then you start to, you're not working out, you lose so much muscle and you get a couple of
those stacked on over a couple of years and then all of a sudden you can't walk,
your mobility goes down and then it's just, the curve just drops, right?
So resistance training is extremely important.
And if you're doing those two things, you're probably going to be.
you know, maintaining a healthy body weight because at the end of the day, calories in calories
that does matter, right?
So if you're doing the exercise and the resistance training and you're kind of focusing
on like getting the proper micronutrients from your veggies and protein intake, you're
probably not going to be eating all the junk.
But then on top, on the last thing I would say, behavioral-wise, I would add, I would add sauna
in or deliberate heat exposure.
I think that's huge for a lot of reasons, you know, for the cardiovascular reasons,
there's mental health effects, as we talked about.
There's also other brain effects.
Dementia risk is lower as well.
And then muscle atrophy, you can do the deliberate heat exposure to help prevent muscle atrophy as well.
So I think those are the three behavioral changes.
And by the way, exercise can forgive a lot of sins, including lack of sleep.
That's why I start with that.
And I don't make the sleep the most important.
I actually think it's exercise.
We're going to have to have you on for part two because I really want to dive in
to both resistance training and cardiovascular exercise with you.
But this has been an amazing conversation.
Thank you so much for your time.
Well, I look forward to your round two, Shane, and thank you for all the great questions.
It's been a lot of fun.
Wow.
What a fun conversation that was with Dr. Rhonda Patrick.
And I just want to go through some of my takeaways and notes from this.
One, you know, I think the big overarching message that we got across today is that
a lot of people focus on the micro and if you notice ronna kept bringing it back to the macro
and i don't mean in terms of nutrients i mean in terms of what we focus on we're we're overly
focused on these little minute things because they're really within our control and we want
to feel like we're doing something when in reality there's these big things that we're not
focused on that nobody's really arguing about so you might argue whether seed oil is bad for you
I think it is or not, but at the end of the day, you know, are we getting the right magnesium?
Are we getting folate?
Are we getting omega-3s?
How are we positioning ourselves?
And this is how I think about food personally.
It's the, this is one of the reasons I'm exploring this with Dr. Ronda Patrick and, you know,
some other guests is the food that you put into your body is sort of a lead domino for a whole bunch of other things.
It affects your mood.
It affects your energy.
It affects how you handle.
stress. It affects how you handle your emotions. It really dictates a lot of what comes downstream.
And so paying attention to the food in your body is a really good way to take control of your
life. It's a really small thing you can do to put yourself on easy mode every day.
We didn't get into talking about sugars. We didn't talk about oils too much. I really wanted
to get into that. Also really wanted to get into exercise routines and talk about that.
But I think we'll try to do that in the next episode. We'll definitely do a part
two of this.
I did take away sort of like, you know, grass fed was better if you can afford it.
If not, don't stress over it.
Same as organic.
If you can afford it, great.
If you can't, don't stress over it.
And again, if you had to pick and choose, I loved her heuristic for using thin and thick
skin as the way to pick and choose.
If you're sort of like, oh, I want to do some organic and not all.
I liked her approach to sort of washing veggies.
It's very practical and pragmatic.
You know, it doesn't have to be sort of the Instagram that you see of the vinegar and the baking soda and the water and soaking it for 15 minutes.
I liked the very end when we talked about sort of like here are three behavioral interventions that you can do that really make a difference.
And here are three sort of supplement dietary things.
And again, they were fish oil, vitamin D3.
greens and protein, and then high intensity, exercise, resistance training, and sauna, which
I really like, in part because I'm biased, I have a sauna.
And I think that that makes a big difference.
It made a big difference for me during COVID.
I think it's made a big difference for other people that I've talked to.
And one thing we didn't talk about was sleep.
And I know a friend of mine, Andrew Wilkinson, has one.
And he says it really, really drives his sleep.
I don't know if it helps me sleep.
Sometimes I get in there and I nap, to be honest with you.
I like talking about this smoothie.
And if you remember, she had a smoothie recipe.
And it was sort of like four kale leaves, avocado, frozen blueberries,
which she actually went out of the way to say a ton of frozen blueberries,
protein powder, collagen powder.
And there was that meringue powder water.
And then we talked about my smoothie,
the one that I make with the kids and how I was unintentionally adding bananas.
and blueberries together and sort of undoing the amazing effect of blueberries.
And I'm going to switch.
I'm going to try to switch it out and see what the kids think,
or even if they notice, switch out the banana and put in avocado.
But again, in mine, we call it the Tom Brady.
It was protein, AG1, walnuts, blueberries, yogurt, almond milk.
I'm going to switch out the banana, chia seeds, and hemp seeds if you want to.
Hemp seeds are a really good sort of source of extra.
calories and fat for for the kids if you are trying to get them to eat more which you know
I have one kid who eats a lot one kid who doesn't eat a lot so I'm always trying to get more
nutrient dense food into both of them what else do we talk about we sort of talked about the sun
and sunscreen and so circumstantial there's not a lot to take away from that other than you know
when you're out in the sun be careful about what you're you're sort of putting on your skin and
also be careful about how much sun you are getting.
You don't want to get sunburned.
And yeah, I just really thank you guys for listening.
And if you have any questions or follow-ups, just send me an email, Shane at fs.
And what I'll do is I'll sort of like create a little sheet and we can make
questions for follow-up for round two.
We're definitely going to do this again.
I really appreciate you taking the time to listen and learn with me.
As you can see, this is my journey, and I'm learning along with you, so I really appreciate it.
Thanks for listening and learning with us.
For a complete list of episodes, show notes, transcripts, and more, go to fs.
dot blog slash podcast or just Google the knowledge project the fernam street blog is also where you can learn more
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guide that hands you the tools to master your fate sharpen your decision making and set yourself up for
unparalleled success learn more at fs dot blog slash clear until next time
Thank you.