The Peter Attia Drive - #145 - AMA #19: Deep dive on Zone 2 training, magnesium supplementation, and how to engage with your doctor
Episode Date: January 18, 2021In this “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) episode, Peter and Bob take a deep dive into zone 2 training. They begin with a detailed definition of zone 2 and continue by discussing the importance of adding i...t to your exercise regimen. They talk about how to program zone 2 training, including intensity, frequency, and duration, and metrics for tracking improvement. Additionally, they provide a detailed overview of all things related to magnesium supplementation. The two conclude with insights about how to effectively engage with your doctor in the pursuit of getting your questions answered and considerations for finding a physician that’s right for you. If you’re not a subscriber and listening on a podcast player, you’ll only be able to hear a preview of the AMA. If you’re a subscriber, you can now listen to this full episode on your private RSS feed or on our website at the AMA #19 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: Defining zone 2 exercise (3:30); The most effective ways to engage in zone 2 exercise (14:00); The process of training a deconditioned individual with zone 2: Dosage, frequency, and metrics to watch (19:45); Training for health vs. performance, and the importance dedicating training time solely to zone 2 (25:00); Why Peter does his zone 2 training in a fasted state (31:30); Improving mitochondrial density and function with zone 2 training (34:00); Metrics to monitor improving fitness levels from zone 2 training (36:30); Advice for choosing a bicycle for zone 2 exercise at home (42:30); Comparing the various equipment options for aerobic training: Rowing machine, treadmill, stairmaster, and more [48:15]; Back pain and exercise, and Peter’s stability issues as a consequence of previous surgeries (51:45); A deep dive into magnesium supplementation, and Peter’s personal protocol (55:30); Advice for engaging with and questioning your doctor (1:03:15); and More. Learn more: https://peterattiamd.com/ Show notes page for this episode: https://peterattiamd.com/ama19 Subscribe to receive exclusive subscriber-only content: https://peterattiamd.com/subscribe/ Sign up to receive Peter's email newsletter: https://peterattiamd.com/newsletter/ Connect with Peter on Facebook | Twitter | Instagram.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek, ask me anything, or AMA episode of the Drive Podcast.
I'm your host, Peter Atia.
At the end of this short episode, I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full,
along with a ton of other membership benefits we've created. Or you can learn more now by going to peteratia-md.com forward slash subscribe.
So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the Ask Me Anything episode.
Welcome to Ask Me Anything. I'm once again joined by my header research, Bob Kaplan in this episode,
aka Ron Tugnut.
In today's episode, we go really deep on zone two.
We touch on exercise a little bit more broadly than that, and we get into a few other tangents
outside of zone two, like what is FTP, zone five, you know, some of the anaerobic stuff. But mostly this is a super deep dive into zone two from a practical level.
So if you've heard the Inigo San Milan podcast, you'll have obviously an understanding of
what that is.
If not, don't worry because we revisit it.
But more importantly, I think we kind of get into how to do it.
What's the dose, what type of exercise, what type of machines,
the frequency, what if your numbers look like this, you know, all of that kind of stuff.
So I hope at the end of this episode, you'll really understand how to bring zone two in
as one of the four pillars to your exercise program. The other two things we get into in
this episode are a kind of lowdown on magnesium. So we had a great question about, Hey, Peter keeps talking about this type of magnesium,
that type of magnesium, this type of magnesium, can you give us the skinny on that?
And so we get into that.
And then we close it out with a short discussion on the, how do you actually talk to your
doctor about some of the stuff that we're getting into here a couple of weeks ago, actually
a couple of months ago now, we had a newsletter that talked about early
screening or more aggressive screening on colonoscopy, which is a sort of point of
you that I have.
And there were many questions from listeners saying, hey, look, sure, that'd be one thing
if you were my doctor, we could have this discussion, but having this discussion with my doctor
was actually much more difficult.
And so I try to offer as many insights as I can into how one would go about doing that
without being off-putting
and obviously trying to get the best care you can.
So without further delay, I hope you will enjoy.
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Hey Peter, how you doing?
Ron Tugnet, how are you? The one and only. I'm doing pretty well. I feel like our AMAs
have turned into basically a game of hockey, obscurity where every time we meet on video, you've got a
different 1980s slash 90s goalie as your ID. That's right. Growing up just love the Bruins and hated every other team, but I
had a lot of respect for Ron Tugnut, Boston Bruins saved 70 shots in a three three tie.
It's just absolutely unbelievable. It's on YouTube, checking out just some of the saves
that he was making was just unreal. It's a great game. Yeah, Mr. Tugnut actually is from
my home borough of Scarborough, Ontario, a little crappy
outpost of Toronto.
I remember that.
We've got a nice Easter egg, if anybody cares to look in the studying study series.
If you go to, I think it's studying studies part two.
And I think it's figure two.
It's about chimney sweeps.
Check out that figure caption.
It's pretty impressive. I's about chimney sweeps. Check out that figure caption. It's pretty impressive.
I forgot about that. Thanks for reminding me. Yeah, you approved it. So it's there. What do we have
on a docket today for? Ask me anything. We have a lot of questions related to exercise in zone two.
related to exercise and zone two. We also have a few questions around magnesium.
And then we got a lot of follow-up questions on a couple of weekly emails, which were,
I think the earlier one was how to find a good doctor and the questions that you should
ask of a doctor.
And then we also had a weekly email on colorectal cancer and colonoscopy.
And a lot of questions that you should ask your GI doc before getting a colonoscopy
And we had a lot of questions around how should I approach my doctor with these questions?
Is there a way to do that that's most effective?
If we can get through all of that in one episode, I'll be delighted, but let's see how far we can absolutely
Okay zone two in exercise questions first
Zone 2 in exercise questions. First, type of exercise.
One of the questions we received is,
what is the best device to buy
if you want to do zone two in your home?
Roar, stationary bike, or treadmill?
Bob, or should I say Ron,
may I take a step back from this before answering it
and create a bit of a broader context
if there's a listener who's not familiar with exactly what zone two is, I'll allow it. I think it'll
be helpful. Thank you. As you know in our practice, we have kind of a framework for how we
think about exercise and it has four components. Those components are stability, strength,
aerobic efficiency, and anaerobic performance. Now, I will focus on one of those today. I just want
people to understand that when we talk about zone two, it doesn't mean at the exclusion of these
other things, stability, strength, and the anaerobic piece, but it is the way in which we think
through the aerobic piece. So you don't want a table that stands on three legs or two legs or God forbid one leg
any more than you want a root canal. And therefore, one has to be very clear that when you think
about zone two, you understand that it is but one component in subsequent episodes of both the
podcast and AMAs will get much deeper into these other things. When you understand that, you understand, okay, well, zone two, it's got a very clear definition,
and this was covered in a previous podcast with Inigo San Malan. I don't remember what number that
is, but obviously we'll link to it. 85. So it is defined as basically your highest metabolic
output, the highest amount of work that you can sustain while keeping your lactate level
below two millimole or two moles per liter.
So what does that mean in English?
To understand that you have to think about what's happening biochemically as you exercise
or frankly do anything.
The process of respiration, which is central to our existence,
is the process of using substrate. And for the purpose of this discussion, let's just think about
glucose and fatty acids and oxygen to make ATP and carbon dioxide. So let's just restate that.
We use glucose, we use fatty acids, we use oxygen, we undergo a chemical
process, so we take the chemical energy that is stored in the bonds of those molecules.
We turn that into electrical energy, people have heard of something called the electron
transport chain, which is the bulk of where that takes place. And then it gets turned
back into chemical energy as we borrow from that energy to make ATP.
And then ATP becomes our currency for how we do everything.
And just again to put this in perspective,
any interruption in that system is fatal.
So when you think about a toxin like cyanide,
what is a microscopic dose of cyanide, kill somebody instantly,
it's because it actually stops that process. Now, people may already appreciate that there are a couple of different
ways that we can go about making ATP. And it basically comes down to how quickly the body is asking
for it. So the first step, and let's just limit ourselves to the discussion of glucose to make this really simple.
The first step is turning glucose, which has, it's a six-carbon ring into two smaller molecules that are each made up of three carbons called pyruvate. And that process doesn't yield a whole heck
of a lot of ATP. It yields a little bit, costs a bit, makes a bit. But when you stop there,
little bit, costs a bit, makes a bit. But when you stop there, the body kind of has a choice. And the choice is, do I continue this process outside of the mitochondria where I make another
byproduct called lactate, and I can generate a little bit more ATP, by the way, or do I take that
pyruvate and shuttle it into the mitochondria and undergo a separate chemical pathway
in a separate process called the Krebs cycle where I can make many, many more ATP's.
So, we'll obviously link to sort of figures that make this much more clear graphically,
but if you need to make ATP really, really quickly,
you'll take that former pathway and make lactate because you don't
need oxygen to do it.
So you're not limited by the amount of oxygen that is being taken up by the muscle.
If you have time on your hands, you'll take the latter pathway, which means you will
utilize oxygen and actually take that substrate into the mitochondria and you will be able
to make tons of ATP. Now all people are not created equal, both genetically but more importantly through training.
And one of the biggest things that differentiates the highly trained from the untrained, the
metabolically fit from the metabolically unfit, the flexible from the inflexible, is that ability to under a greater and greater array of metabolic demands make that input of substrate into the mitochondria.
So mitochondrial health then can be somewhat estimated and proxied by the ability a person has to do this.
So how would you measure this? I mean, shy of doing muscle biopsies and things, which obviously we're not gonna do,
how can we get an estimation of this?
And it turns out, one of the most valuable ways to do this
is to measure lactate levels,
because we can measure this.
This lactate, if you start producing too much of it,
will actually escape the muscle and get into your circulation.
And you can measure it very easily with a finger prick
just as you would measure glucose or ketones or some other metabolite.
A healthy person when they're sitting there at rest has a lactate level of about one
millimole. If they get up and move about their day and walk around and have breakfast and
watch TV and get in the car or do whatever they're doing, their lactate really shouldn't be changing.
and watch TV and get in the car or do whatever they're doing, their lactate really shouldn't be changing.
They're actually demanding more ATP
than if they were sleeping,
but a reasonably metabolically flexible person
and healthy person,
those activities I just described
shouldn't at all be pushing you
to generate higher levels of lactate.
So in other words, you're not accumulating lactate.
Now, what happens if we ask you
to start doing something a little
more strenuous? At some point, you're going to start generating lactate. It doesn't
matter how fit a person is. If you push the fittest person on the planet, at some point,
they're going to have to start generating lactate because you're basically saying,
I need you to make energy or ATP faster than you're able to deliver oxygen to your muscles.
And at some point, they can't clear that lactate.
So at some point, the lactate begins to accumulate in excess of what is cleared, and we can
measure that.
Now, it's a bit more complicated because the organ that is primarily responsible for clearing
lactate is the liver, and it does so via gluconeogenesis, and that takes longer.
So there's a big time lag there.
The other thing is different people have different amounts at which they clear lactate from the cell.
So everything I'm describing is taking place in the cytoplasm of the cell.
It still has to escape the cell to get into the circulation, and it does so via transporters
called MCTs.
So different people can have different levels of MCT expression, but if you put that aside
for a moment, it's crystal clear that the fitter a person is, the healthier a person is,
the more work they can do with less lactate, and therefore for a given individual, we use
this metric of zone two as a place to say how metabolically healthier you, how good are your mitochondria.
And that means how much work can be done while you keep your lactate right at about two
millimole.
We kind of use a slight range.
We'd say about 1.7 to two millimole.
So how does one do this?
So if I'm walking down the street and I run into you and I say,
Hey, Bob, what's your zone to and we were both in the know on this,
you could literally spit out a metric.
You could say, oh, my zone to is 200 watts.
That would assume that you're riding a bike.
And that would mean you could hold 200 watts for a very long period of time
because you're never really going above two millimole and And two millimole is a very, very sustainable level
of lactate production.
People have probably heard the term lactate threshold.
This is well below lactate threshold.
Lactate thresholds for most people
kind of in the four millimole area.
And at lactate threshold, an athlete is really only able
to hold that pace for depending on their level of fitness,
we're talking tens of minutes, if not less.
And obviously, peak output is going to produce lactates easily over 10, and in some cases,
over 20, those are, you know, efforts that can be sustained for seconds.
Sort of all-out two-minute effort might produce that in a very fit individual.
But zone two is functionally thought of as your
all day pace, but there is an enormous variability between what some can do and what can't.
In the podcast we're going to go, we discuss one of the studies that he did, I believe
with George Brooks, where they compare people with type two diabetes to people who are normal
fit people to world class people, worldclass athletes, I believe cyclists.
And the difference in the zone two, meaning the amount of power that they could put out on a bicycle,
while keeping lactated too, was staggering, especially once you normalize for weight,
which is really the way you want to normalize these things, is not just how many watts,
but how many watts per kilo. So I know that was a bit maybe more information than people wanted
up front, but I don't think you can understand everything.
You're probably gonna wanna ask me without that.
So now your question, if I recall, was,
if you wanted to use your own two training at home,
what's the best type of device to do it on?
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