The Peter Attia Drive - #328 - AMA #66: Optimizing nutrition for health and longevity: myth of a “best” diet, complexities of nutrition science, and practical steps for building a sustainable diet
Episode Date: December 9, 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 deep into ...one of the most frequently discussed and often misunderstood topics: nutrition. From weight loss and maintenance to the intricate relationship between nutrition and exercise and body composition, Peter addresses the complexities of nutrition research and explores the perennial question of whether there is a "best diet." He provides practical insights on how to choose the right diet for your unique needs, discusses the role of protein and processed foods, and outlines the key questions to help you optimize your approach to eating. 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 #66 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: The key nutrition-related topics to be discussed [1:30]; Why Peter is not fond of discussing nutrition: limitations of nutrition research, the pitfalls of extreme certainty in dietary discussions, and the body's adaptability to varied diets [3:30]; Key health metrics to monitor to evaluate the effects of nutrition [9:30]; The relationship between nutrition and exercise as they relate to weight loss, maintenance, and gain [12:30]; How increased muscle mass from resistance training impacts calorie burn, body composition, glucose metabolism, and overall health benefits [19:45]; Comparing the impact of fitness and nutrition on lifespan and healthspan: data showing fitness to be a more significant predictor of mortality than nutrition [23:30]; The myth of a “best diet,” factors that determine the effectiveness of a diet, and data suggesting benefits of the Mediterranean diet [39:00]; How long to trial a new diet, the importance of measurable goals, and the appropriate timescales for observing meaningful changes [48:30]; The inherent challenges in nutrition research: variability in dietary exposures, limitations in study design, the body’s adaptive nature which dampen the effects, and more [51:15]; Nutritional approaches for chronic diseases like cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes [58:45]; Emerging studies on dietary interventions for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) [1:02:45]; Practical considerations for individuals to identify the best diet for them: protein intake, energy balance, macronutrient adjustments, and micronutrient levels [1:06:00]; Understanding processed vs. ultra-processed foods [1:09:15]; The effects of ultra-processed foods on health [1:12:30]; Questions that someone should ask themselves if they’re looking to fine-tune their diet [1:18:15]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
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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 AMA episode 66. I'm once again joined by my co-host, Nick Stenson. In today's
episode, we cover a topic that is generally one of the most talked about topics and also
one that comes with a lot of confusion, and that is nutrition. Given this, we wanted to
do a special episode to answer any and all questions that routinely come in on this topic.
So in this conversation, we speak about nutrition and weight loss and weight maintenance and
how nutrition compares to exercise, the complexities of nutrition research, what if any is the
so-called best diet, and how to think about choosing the right diet for oneself.
We talk about protein, we talk about processed foods, and much more.
We discuss what questions you as an individual can ask yourself to try to identify the best
diet for you.
If you're a subscriber and want to watch the full video of this podcast, you can find
it on the show notes page.
If you are 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 66.
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Hey!
Peter, welcome to another AMA.
How you doing?
Doing very well.
Thank you for having me back.
I haven't talked to you yet today.
So what kind of mood would you say you're in today?
Oh, well, given the subject matter,
surprisingly good mood and you know,
I've taken a couple of beta blockers before,
so I'm riding the cool wave, man.
That's good.
I was curious if we were going to get diplomatic Peter or spicy Peter
on this episode.
I don't know actually.
To be determined.
Yes. TBD.
Perfect.
So for today, we are covering a topic
that as you hinted at is not one of your favorite,
but we probably get asked the most amount of questions on
in some form or another.
It's a massive topic, it's nutrition.
And we've done a ton of podcasts on this,
ton of newsletters on this.
And so we're not gonna be able to cover everything as it relates to nutrition.
But what we did is we pulled the most common questions themes that we get asked,
and we pulled them together for this episode.
So we are going to talk about nutrition, its relationship in weight loss and weight management,
how you think about it compared to exercise,
the complexities of nutrition research, which is why often when we send emails tearing apart
studies, they are typically on nutrition.
What you think of as quote unquote the best diet, if we can even answer that, how that's
different from a healthy person to someone who's trying to manage chronic disease, how
people can think
about choosing the best diet for themselves. Obviously, we can't do nutrition without protein,
which is one thing you do genuinely like to talk about. And we'll also hit some other
hot button issues such as processed food. So with all that said, anything you want to
add before we get rolling?
No, let's jump into it.
Perfect.
Starting off, nutrition.
Why do you hate talking about it?
Well, look, it wasn't always this way.
There was a day when I really enjoyed talking about nutrition and writing about nutrition.
In fact, you could argue I cut my teeth on that.
That was my very first foray into doing anything publicly back in 2011 was blogging,
and it was blogging mostly about nutrition. But I would say there are a handful of reasons that
my interest in continuing to obsessively talk about it has diminished. You've alluded to some
already. The problem with nutrition research is that it doesn't really lend itself to having rigorous discussions on the
topic. I read a really interesting and timely article the other day on LinkedIn and it was
titled something to the effect of food can't be medicine until we can research it like medicine.
In fact, we should link to that article in the show notes. I mean, it was so spot on. It's like everyone loves to probably misquote Hippocrates with the,
let food be thy medicine line. And yeah, it makes sense in a way.
They're molecules. You put the molecules in, they clearly have an effect on your
body. The problem is there's no relationship whatsoever between food and medicine.
The nature of which we can do
controlled studies with medicine is completely different. The homogeneity of medicine, if we're
going to study a medication, you're getting the same molecule every time and that's the one molecule
that you're studying. There are a few exceptions to that. If you're taking, for example, desiccated
thyroid hormone where you have a hodgepodge of pig thyroid
gland mixed up, you're getting some T3, some T4, some T2, et cetera.
But for the most part, when you take a drug, you're taking a single molecule.
That's obviously not the case with food.
So all of that notwithstanding, the real issue I have, because that's just, I think, a function
of food, what rubs me the wrong way is that the ratio of certainty with which people
speak about this subject matter to the quality of data. So take that as a ratio. So on the top,
you have certainty. On the bottom, you have quality of data. That is really, really high.
That's a really big number, meaning there's people have tons of certainty despite a paucity of data
or quality of data. You don't have a paucity of data. certainty despite a paucity of data or quality
of data. You don't have a paucity of data. You have a paucity of quality data. There's nothing
that compares to this. There is no discipline of science or engineering for which our magnitude
of certainty is so high relative to such poor quality data. And then I think the final point
I would make of many, but I don't want to spend the whole time on this, is that the zealous extremes and the cultish religious buffoonery that
goes on in this space is just very off putting to me.
Whether we're talking about one end of the spectrum of carnivore to vegan, when people
speak about their diet as the one true diet, I find it very off putting,
which is not to say that a person who's vegan is off putting.
I mean, I've met many people who say, look, this is kind of the thing that works for me
or this is my belief system.
I just can't bring myself to eat animals.
I'm not saying there's anything wrong with that.
What I'm talking about is sort of the really cultish people who will tell you with absolute
certainty that if you are eating anything other than this diet and this
diet can be any diet, you're going to go to hell basically. There's a warm place in
Hades that's waiting for you. And of course they're not saying that, but the point is
they're speaking with such conviction about something for which such conviction is impossible.
What do you think caused you to make a switch on nutrition? So you cut your teeth on this
subject. When we met 12 or so years ago,
you were deep in this subject. Was it a slow progression or do you think it was
like more of a quick switch?
No, I think it was pretty gradual.
There's not a moment I'll point to that says when that happened or when I read
that one study or meta analysis or article, I had a change. I think it was in part
maybe as my clinical experience grew and I saw more and more patients and realized more and more
the complexity of nutrition and the heterogeneity of people's response to different nutrition.
In other words, how 10 people could respond in six
different ways to given nutritional inputs that you start to realize. Well, a couple
things are true. One is that the body is remarkably adept at dampening the effects of nutrition.
So it's like, if you think of an engineering system, there are some systems where when
you put a signal in to the box, the box amplifies the signal.
So you put something in that's a two out of 10 and it amplifies it to like an eight out
of 10.
And sometimes you want that.
Sometimes you need a signal amplifier, but then you have the opposite is true where you
put something in and it dampens the signal.
So you put something in that's like a blinking eight out of 10 and the thing gets attenuated.
It gets dampened. It comes out at a two out of 10 and the thing gets attenuated. It gets dampened.
It comes out at a two out of 10.
In many ways, the body is that way with nutrition.
A lot of the things that people pontificate about on the margins end up being really not
that important.
I've talked about this a bunch and maybe we'll even speak about it a little later today.
Once you get beyond total energy consumption, our total energy content of the food, total calories, protein content, and the essentials within minerals and nutrients, most of the
rest doesn't matter that much.
The body's pretty resilient.
You have to hit certain minimums on fat to avoid severe malnutrition and problems that
occur there.
Carbohydrate tolerance is staggeringly variable. You
can get away without eating any carbs and still function and you can get away
with eating a ton of carbs and still function. So that's actually kind of
amazing is our variability on that one particular macronutrient. But beyond
those big principles, there's very little that can be said with high
certainty and one might even ask the question, how much really, really matters?
We're now talking about fourth and fifth order terms on a polynomial here.
Those don't tend to really sway the outcome because the first, second, and third order
terms are really clearly set.
Larence Hagan So I think the next follow-up question would
be what measures of health, if any, that relate to nutrition can an individual
monitor on their own to kind of understand where they're at health-wise?
Well, I think there are many.
Obviously, nutrition plays a huge role in anthropometric data.
So using a DEXA scan, which will tell you how much lean mass you have, how much body fat you have, and if the scan is calibrated correctly, at least give you a good estimate
of how much visceral fat you have, that's a great readout of nutrition.
You could go even detailed in that and actually do scans of the liver specifically to look
for liver fat.
Also, a fantastic readout of nutrition, quite specifically. You could look at biomarkers
that pertain to metabolic health and specifically to glucose regulation or glucose homeostasis.
If you look at either impaired or enhanced glucose disposal and other markers of metabolic
health, this is everything that would range from how your CGM performs, your hemoglobin A1C, things like uric acid, things like liver function tests,
your oral glucose tolerance tests. All of those things are going to be very important readout
states of nutrition. Now, of course, those markers are also readout states of other things.
They reflect your sleep and exercise quite a bit as well, but there's no doubt that those
are reflections of your nutritional status.
In some cases, we would say otherwise unexplained
inflammation could probably be driven by nutrition.
We certainly see that outside of very extreme examples,
for example, celiac disease is a pretty extreme
and specific case, but even absent something
like celiac disease, there's clearly an intolerance
to wheat on the part of many people.
And it only shows up in a biochemical assay that surveys for inflammation, such as a C-reactive
protein or a slight change in the white blood cell count or things of that nature. And we know this
because when we do empirical elimination, selective elimination and reintroduction of these things,
we'll see those inflammatory markers move. So there's no question that food plays a role in that as well.
And then obviously we can measure certain deficiencies and or excesses in the blood
most commonly, but also in the urine or even in the hair.
So in other words, you could give you an example, right?
You could see a person who is B12 deficient.
That's a very common finding in people who don't eat meat.
And similarly, you can see an excess of mercury, which would be considered quite toxic if it gets to a
high enough level for someone who, for example, is eating a lot of seafood and especially
seafood that is coming from really large fish who are high enough on the food chain that
they're eating a lot of other fish and accumulating mercury themselves. So I would say probably
those would be the big four categories of things where nutrition is easy to read out in testing.
One of the questions we see come through a lot is kind of the relationship or
the difference between nutrition and exercise as it relates to weight loss,
weight maintenance, or gaining weight.
What do we know about kind of those two things,
nutrition and exercise as it relates to weight?
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