The Peter Attia Drive - Qualy #9 - The importance of exercise for brain health
Episode Date: August 20, 2019Today's episode of The Qualys is from podcast #02 – Rhonda Patrick, Ph.D.: the performance and longevity paradox of IGF-1, ketogenic diets and genetics, the health benefits of sauna, NAD+, and more.... The Qualys is a subscriber-exclusive podcast, released Tuesday through Friday, and published exclusively on our private, subscriber-only podcast feed. Qualys is short-hand for “qualifying round,” which are typically the fastest laps driven in a race car—done before the race to determine starting position on the grid for race day. The Qualys are short (i.e., “fast”), typically less than ten minutes, and highlight the best questions, topics, and tactics discussed on The Drive. Occasionally, we will also release an episode on the main podcast feed for non-subscribers, which is what you are listening to now. Learn more: https://peterattiamd.com/podcast/qualys/ Subscribe to receive access to all episodes of The Qualys (and other exclusive subscriber-only content): https://peterattiamd.com/subscribe/ Connect with Peter on Facebook.com/PeterAttiaMD | Twitter.com/PeterAttiaMD | Instagram.com/PeterAttiaMD
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Welcome to the Qualies, a subscriber exclusive podcast.
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subscribe. So without further delay I hope you enjoy today's quality.
So without further delay, I hope you enjoy today's quality. That's another change in my belief system, I think, today versus, I don't know, five or six
years ago.
I think five or six years ago, I didn't think exercise was that important to longevity,
which actually sounds ridiculous for anyone who knows me because I was probably exercising
four hours a day, but not because I believed it would make me live longer.
It was just sort of soothing my addictions. But I think today I feel I am much more convinced by a lot of the data you've
described, certainly the central stuff. When we published this paper earlier this year
with Richard Isaacson that you and I were talking about it before we started recording,
we wanted to get a sense of like, if you took a completely unbiased approach and look
at the literature, what was the single most compelling thing you could do to generate or preserve brain health?
And we came away thinking that it was actually exercise. And I remember when the analysts were
kind of going through this and showing me all the data, I was like, come on guys, there's no way
exercise could be the most important thing for brain health. And again, I'm saying this is a guy
who loves exercise more than anybody, but it just struck me as there for brain health. And again, I'm saying this is a guy who loves exercise more than anybody,
but it just struck me as there's no way.
And again, I think part of it was I was just thinking about it through the vascular lens.
And obviously, you know, I think better than I do,
that when you start to think about brain health, you have to think about it through a vascular lens,
a metabolic lens, growth factor lens.
I mean, there were overlapping, but distinct pathways
that are going to influence brain health.
And so, I was kind of humbled by that.
And now, I guess in many ways, I'm a little more adamant
about it with my patients.
Not that I wasn't, you know, adamant before,
but this is like, boy, if you're not active every day,
we got to change that.
I actually, the main reason I exercise is for my brain.
It's certainly just not only for preventing neurogenetic disease and atrophy and all that,
but just because it affects my executive function and affects my anxiety levels,
it affects my ability to make decisions.
I absolutely, if I have something that's bothering me or giving me anxiety or I have to make a really
important decision going for a long run really helps me.
And there's been studies showing that it helps with executive function, long-term planning,
like aerobic exercise, specifically, you know, and the high intensity interval training,
all that stuff.
They all do different things.
Well, that's the thing we couldn't tease this out of the literature, which again, probably
is just a limitation of shitty human clinical trials,
but that's the second order question, right,
which is if you're gonna take the Tim Ferriss approach,
which is what's the minimum effective dose?
Cause there are some people like maybe you or I,
who I think just generally like exercise,
and also get these other benefits, these endorphin benefits,
but there are some people who are like, look,
what do I need to do?
I'm gonna treat exercise like medicine.
And I think in that setting, I'm still not clear.
So if you were that person, would I say, Rhonda,
as long as you are lifting weights, one hour, three times a week,
like if you can only give me three hours,
would that be how I'd want you to spend it?
Or would I rather you be doing an aerobic aerobic type thing?
Like, I mean, that's, to me, those are where these biomarkers start to become very important
because we're not going to generate hard outcome studies with that level of control.
Once you, you know, try to control that many variables and be that strict about it, you're
going to very much lose a hard outcome prospectively.
But if we knew what to measure, right, and that's, you know, would we be measuring an integral
of IGF, for example?
So how much it rises, how much it falls, and then what that looks like over time.
But I guess that's the funny thing, right?
Like the more we learn, the less we know.
Yeah, absolutely.
I think that we definitely don't know the answer to that question.
But I think there's a lot of data out there showing, for example, strength training, you know,
there's benefits on the brain that's been shown, published.
This benefits on preventing muscle atrophy. There's benefits on the brain that's been shown published. This benefits on preventing muscle atrophy.
There's benefits on preventing cancer.
Incident, that's all been shown for strength training,
for aerobic, and this high intensity interval training
also seems to be making its way as well.
There was a study that I found, VO2 max,
this is the ability of your body to transport oxygen
during exercise, which also is a indicator
of when you're not exercising.
And obviously transporting an oxygen to the brain, for example, is extremely important.
VO2 max declines with age, like 1% per year.
I forgot starting at what age, but, you know, so 10% per decade.
So that's almost parallel as the muscle mass decline?
It does, it does parallel, exactly.
And there was a study showing that 24 sessions of high intensity interval training where it
was like a 45 minute session, five minute warmup, five minute cool down, and then, you know,
in between the max intervals, which were like pretty long, like a minute, there was, you
know, the 70% of max water.
Anyway, so 24 of those increased VO2 max by 12%.
So you're literally taking an entire decade of decline
and like reversing it with the 24%.
So that's actually a point.
When I was more active as a sort of competitive,
encycling, we would get our VO2 max tested
about twice a year.
Ryan Flarity, who we were talking about before,
the podcast, who's one of my close friends
and you've got to know him as well,
I learned from Ryan that actually VO2 max
is not the most important indicator
as a runner or cyclist. It's VVO2max or PVO2max that matters. In other words,
for a runner, VVO2max is much more predictive of performance, which is the velocity
you carry at VO2max. And for a cyclist, it's PVO2max, which is the power output at VO2max.
That said, every time you go to test, you want it to test well. So, you know, over time,
I learned how to game the system. You know, I want to make sure my VO2 max is in the 70s, which,
again, to put that in perspective, like, that's not at the level of professional athlete or something,
like the guys that are winning the Tour de France are in the high 80s or low 90s in terms of milligrams per
mill per kilogram. But nevertheless, just altering my training for three weeks before
a VO2 max test and dropping my weight. So if I shed two kilograms and did those types of
intervals, I actually had it down to a science where there was a workout I would do. You know
in Carmel Valley, you've got the 56 that goes out and it's got a bike path next to it.
There's a section of that bike path that is 1.6 miles long,
and it goes up at about 4%.
And just doing repeat intervals of that,
which takes about four minutes all out
to go one direction,
and then about six minutes to cruise back.
Four of those, that was it,
twice a week for like three weeks,
and your VO2 max exploded.
Now of course the question is,
is that like, you know, cramming for the test,
getting the result but not necessary?
Like do you have to keep doing that
to get the decade-long benefit?
I don't know the answer, but I agree that like
if you can maintain muscle mass
and you can maintain peak aerobic performance,
it doesn't even matter at that point if you're living longer.
You're clearly living better. If you don't budge anything on maximum lifespan,
you've dramatically improved median lifespan.
Right. For most people, that's what matters.
It is. For me, it is. What's the maximum lifespan that a human's lived 120?
124 or something like that?
Is it 124?
121 or 124 maybe?
I feel like that, yeah.
Living beyond that, I mean, that's,
I think the goal is really to, at least for me,
I think that's a lot more achievable
is increasing my median health span, my health span, you know,
so basically preventing,
staving off cardiovascular disease, cancer,
Alzheimer's disease, those sorts of things,
so that I'm living healthier.
And also, you know, a little bit longer, but obviously not 125 or six years.
Yeah. I hope you enjoyed today's quality. Now sit tight for that legal disclaimer.
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