The Peter Attia Drive - #313 - AMA #62: Protein’s impact on appetite and weight management, and uric acid's link to disease and how to manage levels
Episode Date: August 12, 2024View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter In this “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) episode, Peter dives into t...wo important health topics: uric acid and protein, examining them from unique perspectives. For uric acid, he explores its metabolic role and connection to various diseases, focusing on the potential causal link with cardiovascular disease. He also discusses factors influencing uric acid levels, such as diet, genetics, and lifestyle, providing practical tips for effective management. Shifting to protein, Peter delves into its role in appetite and weight management, the consequences of insufficient protein, and the “protein leverage hypothesis” linking protein deficiency to obesity. He covers optimal protein intake and its impact on energy expenditure, and he compares the satiety effects of solid versus liquid protein. Finally, Peter shares his strategy for incorporating protein into a comprehensive weight management plan. If you’re not a subscriber and are 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 our website at the AMA #62 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: Overview of episode topics (and an important discussion on fanny packs) [2:00]; Understanding uric acid: its role in metabolic processes, its association with gout and kidney stones, its impact on blood pressure, and more [6:00]; Non-modifiable factors that influence uric acid levels [11:00]; Modifiable factors that influence uric acid levels [14:15]; Association between high uric acid levels and cardiovascular disease [20:00]; Evidence suggesting a causal link between high uric acid levels and cardiovascular disease [24:00]; Inconclusive evidence about the cardiovascular benefits of lowering uric acid pharmacologically [28:15]; Exploring the potential risks of low uric acid levels in neurodegenerative diseases [37:00]; Managing uric acid levels: dietary interventions and pharmacological approaches [42:00]; The impact of protein on appetite and weight management [44:00]; The consequences of insufficient protein on eating behaviors and satiety [52:15]; The relationship between protein deficiency and obesity: exploring the “protein leverage hypothesis” [57:15]; The impact of protein intake on energy expenditure [1:02:15]; Determining optimal protein intake to avoid deficiency and support health [1:05:45]; The role of different amino acids and protein sources in promoting satiety [1:08:15]; Comparing the satiety effects of solid vs. liquid protein sources [1:10:30]; Peter’s framework for incorporating protein intake into a strategy for controlling body weight [1:12:00]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
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 Atiya.
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 peteratiamd.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 episode number 62.
I'm once again joined by my cohost, Nick Stenson.
In today's episode, we're going to focus on two different topics, uric acid and protein.
Now we've spoken about both of these in prior episodes, but today's conversation focuses
on a different aspect of them.
So when it comes to uric acid, we discuss how one should look at uric acid levels and what the relationship is between your uric
acid level and various disease states, most notably of course, cardiovascular disease.
What we try to establish here is not the obvious correlation between high levels of uric acid and
disease, but more the idea of causality because of course, if uric acid is causally related to cardiovascular disease,
then lowering uric acid would indeed lower the risk of cardiovascular disease.
We then move on to protein, which of course is a topic we've covered many times
in the past, but here we talk about it in a different way,
which is we ask the question and explore all of the literature that
examines the relationship between protein and appetite and its impact on
satiation. We discuss what happens when someone is not getting enough protein and what to understand
about the relationship between protein deficiency and obesity. We discuss how much protein someone
might need to avoid deficiency, which amino acids are important, and how one might compare
protein sources. If you are a subscriber and wanna watch the full video
of this podcast, you can find it on the show notes page.
And if you're not a subscriber,
you can watch a sneak peek of the video
on our YouTube page.
So without further delay, I hope you enjoy AMA number 62.
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Peter, welcome to an AMA, how you doing?
I'm good, thanks for having me back.
By the way, you never comment when I say that, thanks for having me back. By the way, you never comment when I say that,
thanks for having me back.
It's such a stupid thing to say,
I don't know why I say it.
It's just natural probably for you,
but yes, it's one of those if you're not here,
it's a lot different of an episode for sure.
Well speaking of that, there is something
that I've been waiting to talk to you about,
may or may not have been due to your fashion or lack of fashion choices.
Does that help ring another bell?
Fanny pack.
Yes.
Do you want to let people know what you were rocking and how big that thing was?
Unless we're planning to do a dedicated AMA on the utility of the fanny pack, I don't
know that we want to go down this rabbit hole.
Are you worried that you have to justify it
with a full 90-minute podcast
to why you should be wearing that in the first place?
Well, I mean, north of 25,000 people voted
in disfavor of the fanny pack,
which, look, I would bet that the same number of people who think that the
fanny pack is a faux pas are probably equal in proportion, not necessarily the same people,
but equal in proportion to the number of people who think HRT causes breast cancer or TRT causes
prostate cancer. And so it requires deep, thorough, nuanced discussion to explain the merits of certain approaches.
And I think the fanny pack is no exception.
That was quite a leap that you made there, which I didn't see coming.
The biggest argument against the fanny pack that I saw was a photo where you had the big
old fanny pack on and your phone in your pocket.
So what's the point of the fanny pack
if the phone's not even going in there?
That was one photo.
For the most part, the phone is in the fanny pack.
I think in that moment, the phone out of habit
was just placed back in my pocket.
It was just a weak moment on your part.
I mean, there is a slight friction to the fanny pack
because you have to undo the zipper to put it in
and then put it back in.
And if you think I'm gonna use this phone again
in five seconds, sometimes it's just easier
to put it in your pocket.
Mm-hmm, mm-hmm.
All right, well.
I was very amazed at how many times the fanny pack
showed up on social media
that I'm not even paying attention to,
but somehow you are and you keep sending me these pictures of me with a fanny pack all over the place.
I mean, it was shocking how much it made the rounds and a little alarming as well, but that's all right.
We'll save it for another podcast. But for this AMA, we're going to touch on two different topics.
The first is one we've spoken about before,
but it's been a really long time,
and actually since then a lot of new information
has come out, and that's on uric acid,
which is a blood-based biomarker.
A lot of times when people think about uric acid,
they naturally go to gout.
However, we'll cover it as it relates to diseases,
metrics that you look at for yourself and your patients.
And then from there, we'll go into protein.
Obviously, a topic we've covered in great detail,
but for this conversation,
we're going to cover a piece that we haven't before,
and it's something we get asked about a lot,
which is the relationship between protein and appetite.
And so I think we'll cover some pretty interesting
effects of protein and how they're unique to protein
compared to other macronutrients on
appetite, energy expenditure, and what that means for protein intake, weight control, and how different types of proteins compare within that. So I think it should be a pretty interesting conversation. But with that said,
anything else you want to add before we get started?
No, I think this is a really interesting couple of topics that are also somewhat adjacent in terms
of the relationship between protein and uric acid,
which obviously we'll discuss.
Yeah, and also I assume you had a lot of protein
in your fanny pack in those photos, is that correct?
I did, that's one of the beauties of the fanny pack,
is you can transport protein.
There you go, you should have led with that,
and I think people would have been
a little more understanding.
All right, well, I think people would have been a little more understanding.
All right.
Well, I think it'd be helpful to start off on the uric acid.
Just reminding people briefly, what is uric acid?
Why should people even care about this metric?
Great question.
Look, I think uric acid is probably something that many people have seen on a blood test.
It's not something that is commonly ordered, but it wouldn't surprise me many people have seen on a blood test. It's not something that is commonly ordered,
but it wouldn't surprise me if people have at least seen it once or twice on a blood test.
I think the other thing that may rouse some familiarity is that people will associate
uric acid correctly with gout. Let's just take a step back and talk about what it is.
Uric acid is a metabolite. It is the product of the breakdown of purines. So, purines are
certain types of DNA and RNA building blocks. And as DNA and RNA are broken down, and in
particular these types of building blocks of DNA and RNA referred to as purines are
broken down, one of the downstream byproducts of this is uric acid. Uric acid is also a
metabolite of fructose. So again, people who have heard us talk about fructose on the podcast
before, very specifically with Rick Johnson, who I think has been on twice, if not at least
once, we talk at length and in great detail about the biochemical pathway that leads from
the metabolism of fructose to uric acid. Some people might even
remember, I do write about it in Outlive, where I talk about a particular mutation in a gene for an
enzyme that is quite unique to our species and some very adjacent species that actually allows
us to have higher levels of uric acid than many of our related
species ancestors.
And I won't go into all the reasons why, but it might have to do with a survival advantage
that was afforded to us specifically during a period of extreme cold in what is now Europe.
So all of that to say uric acid, pretty interesting molecule.
Most of our understanding of it, of course, is associated with pathology and most of that
pathology centers around gout.
When uric acid crystallizes, it can do so in joints.
Because it is quite inflammatory when it crystallizes, this inflammatory condition within the joints
is what is clinically known as gout.
If you've ever had this, people listening will know
it is incredibly painful.
For reasons that are not entirely clear to me,
and maybe they're clear to some,
the great toe, the big toe, seems to be one of the joints
where this occurs disproportionately.
And when patients get this, you can ride it out,
but more commonly you actually have to put them
on pretty potent anti-inflammatory drugs. The other place where this shows up is in kidney stones. So while it's
not the most common form of kidney stones, it's probably number two or number three.
And so high levels of uric acid are also going to predispose to urate-based kidney stones.
Finally, I would say, and we're going to go into this in more detail, hyperuricemia, high
levels of uric acid contribute to high blood pressure.
This has been demonstrated experimentally and it has been demonstrated through Mendelian
randomization.
We're going to talk a lot about Mendelian randomization today.
The reason for it is MR is a really valuable tool for establishing causality when you are studying a biomarker or
a phenotype for which there is great genetic variation. Mendelian randomization has helped
us make sense, although I don't think we needed to make much more sense of the causality of LDL in
atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.
All the clinical literature on LDL makes it pretty clear that lowering LDL lowers cardiovascular
disease.
But you could ask the question, well, do we know that lowering LDL is the cause of the
reduction in risk or is it that giving medications that lower LDL lowers something else like
inflammation, and that's the driver.
But when you do Mendelian randomization and you look at the genetic distribution of LDL
cholesterol, you see that in fact there is causality.
And similarly, when you do that type of analysis with uric acid, you see that as uric acid
levels go up, so too does blood pressure.
As uric acid levels go down, so too does blood pressure. As uric acid levels go down,
so too does blood pressure. All of this, of course, is confounded by the fact that things
that are bad for you tend to raise uric acid. And that association is a little difficult
to tease out causality. So for example, we know that patients with fatty liver disease and patients with type
two diabetes usually have very high uric acid levels.
And it's unclear exactly what the direction of causality is there.
So probably a longer answer than you wanted, Nick, but given the nature of what we're talking
about, it's probably worth giving a bit more of an expansive response. If someone's looking at their uric acid levels, what are some factors that can increase their
level of uric acid?
Well, I think of this as what are the modifiable things and what are the non-modifiable things.
Let's just start with the non-modifiable.
Sex is the biggest difference.
On average, men have a uric acid level that is about 0.5 to 1
milligram per deciliter higher than women at a given age. Now that's based on the literature.
If you asked me personally, like based on my experience and said, Peter, tell me what you
think, I would have said it's easily one to two milligrams per deciliter higher, just based on
what I see in patients. So in other words, the gap seems even larger to me
than what is reported in the literature.
But nevertheless, there's clearly a sex difference there.
And the most obvious hypothesis
is that it centers around estrogen
and some of the downstream effects of estrogen.
It's also clear, by the way,
that not only do women tend to have lower levels
of uric acid, they also seem to be more susceptible to higher levels or to a given level of uric acid.
In other words, they seem to be more likely to run into the trouble of a high uric acid
than a man is at a given level.
The other thing I alluded to this also above is genetics.
The heritability of uric acid seems to be about 40%. In other words, nearly half of the value of your uric acid is determined genetically.
That means independent of just sex, let's just say across men or across women.
Again, that genetic variability, that heritability of uric acid is actually what allows us to
determine the causality of uric acid in so many of these
things that we care about.
If there was no genetic variation to uric acid, it would be very difficult to do Mendelian
randomization.
The next thing that's not modifiable that plays a significant role in uric acid is age.
As we increase in age, we tend to increase in uric acid, although this effect is more
pronounced in women than men.
It starts around the age of menopause, which again factors into the hypothesis I alluded
to earlier, which is that estrogen probably plays a significant role in uric acid regulation
given that women are lower and then tend to have a big uptick when
they get through menopause. Actually, there's a pretty cool figure that might be worth showing
for folks if they want to see the relationship between uric acid in men, women, and then what
happens around menopause. So, Nick, if you can just pull that up. This is a figure that really
speaks for itself here. Obviously, the blue line represents men and the red line
represents women. You can see that the blue line, well, first of all, it's always higher
than the red line and the rate of increase is modest and steady. Conversely, the red
line stays largely flat until the mid 40s and then really increases at a rate that exceeds even the rate at which
the males increase.
And this continues throughout life.
But to note, even at the age of 80, which is where these data stop, women are still
considerably lower than men.
And so you kind of laid out those are the things that people really don't have control
over. What do we know
about factors that can cause uric acid to raise that people may have control over?
A lot of discussion on this topic points towards nutrition because epidemiologic data tell us that
average serum uric acid levels have been increasing pretty substantially over the past century. So in
addition to all of the
things that we've talked about, the sex differences, the age progression, if you just look at the
population level of uric acid, it is going up. Therefore, the obvious question is, is it going
up for the same reasons that certain other things are going up such as obesity and metabolic syndrome. And if so, what is it about those things
that's increasing uric acid?
Well, given that fructose is one of the things
that drives uric acid production, at least transiently,
the question is, does chronic consumption
of high amounts of fructose, presumably in liquid form more than
solid form, play a role in this? Does it play a role directly or does it play a role indirectly?
What does that mean? Well, directly would mean does fructose consumption, which is known to
and unequivocally increase uric acid levels transiently, does enough fructose consumption
lead to chronic elevation of uric acid? That I think is an unknown
question. An alternative explanation is that high levels of fructose consumption are driving more
eating. We talked a lot about that with Rick Johnson. What is it about fructose consumption
and intracellular energy levels that lead to more consumption of food and therefore obesity.
And is that the driver through energy balance?
So there have been bi-directional Mendelian randomization
studies that have been done.
And they have suggested that higher levels of adiposity
can cause hyperuricemia.
So in other words, that would explain that obesity
and energy imbalance is a driver of elevated uric acid and not
the other way around.
By the way, that's done by looking at genes that are known to increase fat mass such as
the FTO gene, MC4R gene, and other genes that are clearly associated causally with obesity.
There are certain medications that can do this, so diuretics, which are very common
in the treatment of high blood pressure, and even low dose aspirin can do this.
We talked about obviously the dietary effects of fructose, but we shouldn't negate the dietary
consumption of foods that are very high in purines.
Foods that are very high in DNA, meat, and believe it or not beer, is quite high in DNA.
Why?
Because beer contains a lot of yeast and
the yeast obviously has genetic material in it. So high amounts of alcohol, though again,
I think disproportionately beer over other types of alcohol, high amounts of very dense foods. By
foods, I mean foods that are dense in DNA. So sardines, things of that nature, red meat.
These are things that are going to also increase the production of uric acid.
Now I'll tell you about another funny example, Nick, of something that I learned many years
ago when I was in ketosis, which is that being in ketosis, either nutritionally or through
starvation will increase uric acid levels and can do so quite dramatically.
The reason for that is the
primary ketone that is produced during either of those states, nutritional ketosis or starvation
ketosis, i.e. fasting, is something called beta hydroxybutyrate. Beta hydroxybutyrate
competes with uric acid in the kidney for the same transporter that is going to excrete either uric acid or BHB.
So when BHB is out competing uric acid,
vis-a-vis impairing this tubular secretion in the kidney,
the uric acid is going to go up.
And so the first time I learned that was when I was deep in nutritional ketosis
and I actually got gout.
And this was probably 12 years ago because I didn't fit the phenotype
of gout. At the time I was just really lean, really healthy, smoking and joking in my ketosis.
It took me like two weeks to figure out why my toe hurt so much that I couldn't do a flip turn
in the pool and put any weight on that foot as I pushed off. I mean, that's how bad it was.
Of course, I would go on to learn exactly what happened.
And then in subsequent years, as I would fast, I would always make sure I was taking allopurinol
or something.
But I did confirm that during some significant fasts, my uric acid would rise from say five
to nine or 10 as my ketone levels approached four and five millimole. So those are some of the things
that are modifiable and obviously play a role. One other thing that's by the way kind of interesting
is anaerobic exercise. Heavy, heavy bouts of anaerobic exercise can also increase uric acid
transiently. It might be that this goes away over time, but we're not entirely
clear why. The hypothesis is that heavy bouts of anaerobic exercise cause depletion of muscle ATP
and that the energy needs of the muscle obviously can't be met exclusively by glycolysis.
We basically experience the buildup of ATP degradation byproducts in the muscle, and in particular,
one of those is IMP, which is converted into uric acid.
I think what's interesting is that there seems to be an adaptation to that, and I'm also
not convinced that there's anything pathologic about that.
That's just more of an interesting aside, not like, oh, don't do intense anaerobic activity.
You mentioned earlier a few times the relationship between uric acid and blood pressure.
And we know about blood pressure's role
in cardiovascular disease.
What do we know about uric acid
as it potentially relates to the risk
of cardiovascular disease?
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