back to indexHow to Build Endurance | Huberman Lab Essentials

Chapters
0:0 Huberman Lab Essentials; Build Endurance
0:50 Energy Sources, ATP, Oxygen
4:14 Neurons & Willpower, Glucose & Electrolytes
9:19 Heart, Lungs; Physiology & Performance Limiting Factors
10:35 Muscular Endurance, Protocol, Concentric Movements, Mitochondria
17:14 Long-Duration Endurance, Efficiency, Mitochondria, Capillaries
21:7 High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT), Anaerobic Endurance, Protocol
27:47 High-Intensity Aerobic Endurance, Adaptations
30:6 Brain & Body Adaptations, Heart
33:57 Hydration, Tool: Galpin Equation
35:38 Supplements, Stimulants, Magnesium Malate
36:27 Recap & Key Takeaways
00:00:04.060 |
for the most potent and actionable science-based tools 00:00:07.260 |
for mental health, physical health, and performance. 00:00:12.720 |
and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology 00:00:40.620 |
is our ability to engage in continuous bouts of exercise 00:00:44.700 |
or continuous movement or continuous effort of any kind. 00:00:53.640 |
exercise where you're getting your heart rate up 00:01:21.440 |
ATP is required for anything that requires energy, 00:01:25.220 |
for anything that you do that requires effort. 00:01:35.940 |
And then the ones that are used first for short bouts of intense activity 00:01:41.980 |
If you've only heard about creatine as a supplement, 00:01:43.900 |
well, phosphocreatine actually exists on our muscles. 00:01:47.980 |
You can load your muscles with more creatine. 00:01:50.060 |
Phosphocreatine is great for short, intense bouts of effort. 00:01:55.140 |
Then you start to tap into things like glucose, 00:02:03.360 |
you start to tap into other fuel sources like glycogen. 00:02:09.060 |
Even if you have very, very low body fat percentage, 00:02:32.640 |
your body has the capacity to use creatine, glucose, glycogen, lipids, 00:03:04.500 |
It comes in through your mouth and your nose, 00:03:18.240 |
But when you blow a lot of oxygen onto a fire, 00:03:33.840 |
So today we are going to ask the critical questions. 00:03:40.220 |
What allows us to continue effort for long periods of time? 00:03:50.240 |
We have this thing called the central governor, 00:03:52.340 |
which decides whether or not we should or could continue 00:04:18.820 |
Now, I don't want to completely write off things 00:04:33.260 |
Let's talk about neurons and how they work, okay? 00:04:40.720 |
why quitting is a mental thing, not a physical thing. 00:04:46.480 |
Well, an experiment was done a couple of years ago 00:05:12.200 |
And anytime we are engaged in effort of any kind, 00:05:26.840 |
it's called the locus coeruleus, if you like, 00:05:34.300 |
and then it acts as kind of an alertness signal 00:05:38.700 |
have adrenaline epinephrine released in our body, 00:05:42.920 |
So think about epinephrine as a readiness signal. 00:05:47.780 |
this readiness signal is being churned into our brain. 00:06:07.400 |
Now that doesn't mean that the body's not involved, 00:06:09.540 |
but it means that neurons are critically important. 00:06:11.700 |
So we have two categories of neurons that are important. 00:06:26.900 |
that connect to our muscles and control our muscles. 00:06:44.180 |
That whole discussion about how much is mental, 00:06:59.880 |
what do nerves need in order to continue to fire? 00:07:03.360 |
What do you need in order to get neurons to say, 00:07:20.480 |
Neurons have what's called a sodium potassium pump, 00:07:25.020 |
They generate electricity in order to get nerves, 00:07:31.760 |
You need sufficient sodium salt because the action potential, 00:07:37.320 |
the actual firing of neurons is driven by sodium entering the cell, 00:07:47.140 |
And then there's a kind of resetting of those levels by something called the sodium potassium pump and the sodium potassium pump and sodium and action potentials. 00:07:54.640 |
Even if you don't know anything about that is ATP dependent. 00:07:59.960 |
So you need energy in order to get neurons to fire and it is pH dependent. 00:08:06.440 |
It depends on the conditions or the environment within the brain being of a certain pH or acidity. 00:08:12.620 |
pH is about how acid or how basic the environment is. 00:08:19.360 |
And it turns out they need magnesium and you need glucose and carbohydrates in order to power those neurons unless you are running on ketones. 00:08:28.700 |
Muscle is going to engage and generate energy first by using this phosphocreatine system. 00:08:35.520 |
High bouts of effort, really intense effort, short-lived seconds to minutes, but probably more like seconds. 00:08:41.680 |
It's going to be this phosphocreatine, literally a fuel source in the muscle that you're going to burn, just like you would logs on a fire. 00:08:47.920 |
And glycogen, which is stored carbohydrate in the muscle. 00:08:51.540 |
They're converting that into ATP in order to generate that energy. 00:08:54.940 |
And then there's stuff in our blood that's available as an energy source. 00:09:00.780 |
So literally blood sugar that's floating around. 00:09:02.740 |
So let's say you have fasted for three days, your blood glucose is going to be very low. 00:09:06.700 |
So that's not going to be a great fuel source, but you will start to liberate fats from your adipose tissue, from your fat. 00:09:13.480 |
Fatty acids will start to mobilize into the bloodstream and you can burn those for energy. 00:09:18.700 |
Now, there are some other factors that are important. 00:09:22.700 |
And those are the heart, which is going to move blood. 00:09:25.920 |
So the more that the heart can move blood and oxygen, well, the more fuel that's going to be available for you to engage in muscular effort and thinking effort. 00:09:38.300 |
And as I've mentioned oxygen a few times, it should be obvious then that the lungs are very important. 00:09:43.700 |
You need to bring oxygen in and distribute it to all these tissues because oxygen is critical for the conversion of carbohydrates and the conversion of fats. 00:09:53.260 |
So when we ask the question, what's limiting for performance, what is going to allow us to endure, to engage in effort and endure long bouts of effort or even moderately long bouts of effort? 00:10:07.100 |
We need to ask which of those things, nerve, muscle, blood, heart, and lungs is limiting. 00:10:12.540 |
Or put differently, we ask, what should we be doing with our neurons? 00:10:22.720 |
That's going to allow us to build endurance for mental and physical work and to be able to go longer, further with more intensity. 00:10:34.960 |
So let's talk about the four kinds of endurance and how to achieve those. 00:10:42.740 |
Muscular endurance is the ability for our muscles to perform work over time. 00:10:51.500 |
And our failure to continue to be able to perform that work is going to be due to muscular fatigue, not to cardiovascular fatigue. 00:11:03.240 |
So not because we're breathing too hard or we can't get enough blood to the muscles or because we quit mentally, but because the muscles themselves give out. 00:11:14.900 |
One good example of this would be if you had to pick up a stone in the yard and that stone is not extremely heavy for you. 00:11:24.180 |
And you needed to do that anywhere from 50 to 100 times. 00:11:28.640 |
And you were picking it up and putting it down and picking it up and putting it down and picking up and putting it down. 00:11:36.600 |
Muscular endurance is going to be something that you can perform for anywhere from 12 to 25 or even up to 100 repetitions. 00:11:50.340 |
It's actually no coincidence that a lot of military bootcamp style training is not done with weights. 00:11:56.960 |
It's done with things like pushups, pull-ups, sit-ups, and running. 00:11:59.920 |
Because what they're really building is muscular endurance, the ability to perform work repeatedly over time for a given set of muscles and neurons. 00:12:08.740 |
So a really good muscular endurance training protocol, according to the scientific literature, would be three to five sets of anywhere from 12 to 100 repetitions. 00:12:21.980 |
Now, 12 to 25 repetitions is going to be more reasonable for most people. 00:12:29.820 |
And the rest periods are going to be anywhere from 30 to 180 seconds of rest. 00:12:35.620 |
So anywhere from half a minute to three minutes of rest. 00:12:38.240 |
The one critical feature of building muscular endurance is that it has no major eccentric loading component. 00:12:46.600 |
I haven't talked much about eccentric and concentric loading, 00:12:50.540 |
but concentric loading is when you are shortening the muscle typically or lifting a weight and eccentric movements are when you are lengthening a muscle typically or lowering a weight. 00:13:02.400 |
So if you do a pull-up and you get your chin over the bar or a chin-up, that's the concentric portion of the effort. 00:13:09.380 |
And then as you lower yourself, that's the eccentric portion. 00:13:11.920 |
Eccentric portion of resistance training of any kind, whether or not it's for endurance or for strength, is one of the major causes of soreness. 00:13:21.000 |
Some people will be more susceptible to this than others, but it does create more damage in muscle fibers. 00:13:29.120 |
Muscular endurance and building muscular endurance should not include any movements that include major eccentric loads. 00:13:37.380 |
So if you're going to do push-ups, it doesn't mean that you want to drop, you know, smash your chest into the floor. 00:13:43.100 |
And by the way, your chest should touch the ground on every push-up. 00:13:48.000 |
It's about pushing down till your chest touch the floor and straightening out. 00:13:52.580 |
And a pull-up is where you pull your chin above the bar. 00:13:55.620 |
Neither of those should include a slow eccentric or lowering component. 00:14:00.320 |
If you are using those to train muscular endurance, the three to five sets of 12 to 25, 00:14:06.220 |
and maybe even up to 100 repetitions with 30 to 180 seconds of rest in between. 00:14:11.880 |
But if you want to build muscular endurance, you want to make your muscles able to do more work for longer, 00:14:18.980 |
it's going to be this three to five sets of 12 to 100 reps, 30 to 180 seconds of mainly concentric movement. 00:14:27.940 |
Okay, not a slow lowering phase or a heavy lowering phase. 00:14:33.600 |
So that might be kettlebell swings and things of that sort. 00:14:36.900 |
Isometrics, as I mentioned, things like plank and wall sits will work. 00:14:40.880 |
Now, what's interesting about this is that it doesn't seem at all like what people normally think of as endurance. 00:14:47.440 |
And yet it's been shown in nice quality peer-reviewed studies that muscular endurance can improve our ability to engage in long bouts of what we call long duration, low intensity endurance work. 00:15:01.420 |
So this can support long runs, it can support long swims, and it can build also, it can build postural strength and endurance simultaneously. 00:15:12.560 |
So now let's talk about the science briefly of why this works. 00:15:16.680 |
Well, that takes us back to this issue of fuel utilization and what fails. 00:15:22.560 |
So if we were to say, okay, let's say you do a plank and you're planking for, you know, maybe you're able to plank for a minute or two minutes or three minutes. 00:15:33.660 |
You're not going to fail because the heart gives out. 00:15:36.240 |
You're not going to fail because you can't get enough oxygen because you can breathe while you're doing that. 00:15:41.620 |
You're going to fail because of local muscular failure, which means that as you do, if you choose to do this protocol of three to five sets, et cetera, et cetera, to build muscular endurance, mainly what you are going to be building is you're going to be building the ability of your mitochondria to use oxygen to generate energy locally. 00:16:03.300 |
And that it's something called mitochondrial respiration, respiration because of the involvement of oxygen. 00:16:09.600 |
And it's also going to be increasing the extent to which the neurons control the muscles and provide a stimulus for the muscles to contract. 00:16:22.300 |
But this is independent of power and strength. 00:16:25.300 |
So even though the low sets, like three to five sets, and the fact that you're doing repetitions and you're going to failure, even though it seems to resemble power and strength and hypertrophy type training, it is distinctly different. 00:16:39.160 |
It's not going to generate strength, hypertrophy, and power. 00:16:42.160 |
It's going to mainly create this ability to endure, to continually contract muscles or repeatedly contract muscles. 00:16:50.400 |
If you're using isometric holds repeatedly, excuse me, if you're using repetition type exercise where there's a contraction and an extension of the muscle, essentially concentric and an eccentric portion. 00:17:04.440 |
But remember that you want the eccentric portion to be light and relatively fast, not so fast that you injure yourself, but certainly not deliberately slowed down. 00:17:14.080 |
So now let's talk about the other extreme of endurance, which is long duration endurance. 00:17:19.800 |
This is the type that people typically think about when they think about endurance. 00:17:24.020 |
You're talking about a long run, a long swim, a long bike ride. 00:17:30.500 |
Well, anywhere from 12 minutes to several hours, or maybe even an entire day, maybe eight or nine hours of hiking or running or biking. 00:17:40.200 |
Some people are actually doing those kinds of really long events, marathons, for instance. 00:17:44.400 |
You're getting into regular repeated effort, and your ability to continue that effort is going to be dependent mainly on the efficiency of the movement, on your ability to strike a balance between the movement itself, the generation of the muscular movements that are required, and fuel utilization across the different sources of nerve, muscle, blood, heart, and lungs. 00:18:12.200 |
So let's ask the question, why would you fail on a long run? 00:18:16.080 |
Well, your mind is going to use more or less energy, depending on how much willpower, how much of a fight you have to get into with yourself in order to generate the effort. 00:18:28.600 |
I really want to underscore this willpower, in part, is the ability to devote resources to things, and part of that is making decisions to just either do it or not do it. 00:18:41.380 |
I think there's a right time and a place to train, but I also think that it is not good. 00:18:47.320 |
In other words, it utilizes excessive resources to churn over decisions excessively, and you probably burn as much cognitive energy deciding about whether or not to do a given training or not, as you do in the actual training. 00:19:03.040 |
When you go out for a run that's 30 minutes, you are building the capacity to repeat that performance the next time while being more efficient, actually burning less fuel. 00:19:15.720 |
And that might seem a little bit counterintuitive, but every time you do that run, what you're doing is you're building up mitochondrial density. 00:19:24.160 |
It's not so much about mitochondrial oxidation and respiration. 00:19:31.540 |
You're actually increasing the amount of ATP that you can create for a given bout of effort. 00:19:40.140 |
You're burning less fuel overall, doing the same thing. 00:19:44.180 |
That's really what these long, slow distance or long bouts of effort are really all about. 00:19:53.200 |
Well, it does something very important, which is that it builds the capillary beds within muscles. 00:20:00.080 |
So these are tiny little avenues, like little tiny streams and estuaries between the bigger arteries and veins. 00:20:08.500 |
You can create new little streams within your muscles. 00:20:12.540 |
And the type of long-duration effort that I was talking about before, 12 minutes or more of steady effort is very useful for doing that and is very useful for increasing the mitochondria, the energy-producing elements of the cells, the actual muscle cells. 00:20:29.700 |
And the reason is when blood arrives to muscles, it has oxygen, the muscles are going to use some 00:20:38.660 |
of that oxygen and then some of the deoxygenated blood is going to be sent back to the heart and 00:20:44.160 |
Now, the more capillaries that you build into those muscles, the more oxygen available to those 00:20:52.340 |
So this long-duration work, unlike muscular endurance like planks and everything that we were 00:20:57.620 |
talking about before, is really about building the capillary systems and the mitochondria, the 00:21:03.600 |
energy utilization systems within the muscles themselves. 00:21:07.140 |
And then there are two kinds in between that in recent years have gotten a lot of attention 00:21:13.520 |
and excitement, sometimes called high-intensity interval training. 00:21:18.020 |
One is anaerobic, so-called anaerobic endurance, so no oxygen, and the other is aerobic endurance, 00:21:25.300 |
both of which qualify as HIIT, high-intensity interval training. 00:21:29.880 |
So let's talk about anaerobic endurance first. 00:21:32.460 |
Anaerobic endurance from a protocol perspective is going to be three to 12 sets, okay? 00:21:41.560 |
And these are going to be performed at whatever speed allows you to complete the work in good, 00:21:52.060 |
As the work continues, your repetitions may slow down or it may speed up. 00:22:07.000 |
High-intensity anaerobic endurance is going to be somewhere between three and 12 sets, 00:22:12.280 |
and it's going to have a ratio of work to rest of anywhere from three to one to one to five, okay? 00:22:22.120 |
So what would a three to one ratio set look like? 00:22:26.540 |
Well, it's going to be 30 seconds of hard pedaling on the bike, for instance, or running, 00:22:37.100 |
It could be any number of things, or air squats, or, you know, or weighted squats, if you will, 00:22:49.040 |
So three to one is just a good example would be 30 seconds on, 10 seconds off. 00:22:54.720 |
The opposite extreme on that ratio would be one to five. 00:23:01.080 |
So you do the work for 20 seconds, then you rest 100 seconds. 00:23:04.640 |
So let's just take a look at the three to one ratio. 00:23:07.880 |
So in the three to one ratio, if you're going to do 30 seconds of hard pedaling on a bike, 00:23:13.840 |
followed by 10 seconds, so maybe one of these, what they call assault bikes, 00:23:16.820 |
and then you stop for 10 seconds and then repeat, chances are you will be able to do 00:23:21.620 |
one, two, three, four, maybe even as many as 12 sets, if you're really in good condition, 00:23:29.000 |
that you'll be able to do all those because pedaling on the bike doesn't require a ton of skill. 00:23:33.720 |
And if you do it incorrectly, if your elbow flares out a little bit or something, 00:23:38.480 |
it's very unlikely that you'll get injured unless it's really extreme. 00:23:42.240 |
But the same movement done, for instance, with kettlebells, so 30 seconds on, 10 seconds off. 00:23:52.600 |
But let's say you're getting to the fifth and sixth set and you're going 30 seconds on, 10 seconds off. 00:23:56.400 |
Chances are the quality of your repetitions will degrade significantly 00:24:00.460 |
and you increase the probability that you're going to get injured. 00:24:03.200 |
If quality of form is important, so maybe this is using weights, maybe you're doing squats. 00:24:10.080 |
So you're going to do 20 seconds on and 100 seconds of rest. 00:24:12.520 |
What you'll find is that the longer rest, even though it's 20 seconds of intense 00:24:16.460 |
effort, followed by a longer rest of about 100 seconds will allow you to perform more quality 00:24:24.440 |
So it might be three sets of 20 seconds of hard effort, followed by 100 seconds rest. 00:24:30.200 |
Then you repeat 20 seconds of hard effort, 100 seconds rest, 20 seconds of effort, 100 seconds rest. 00:24:37.540 |
In doing that, you will build up what we call anaerobic endurance. 00:24:41.480 |
Anaerobic endurance is going to be taking your system into greater than 100% of your VO2 max. 00:24:50.040 |
It's going to be taking your heart rate up very high and it's going to maximize your oxygen 00:24:58.800 |
That is going to have effects that are going to lead to fatigue at some point in the workout 00:25:08.680 |
So let's ask what adaptation it's triggering. 00:25:11.540 |
Well, it's triggering both mitochondrial respiration, the ability of your mitochondria to generate more 00:25:19.540 |
energy by using more oxygen because you're bringing so much, you're maxing out. 00:25:23.920 |
Literally you're getting above your VO2 max, you're hitting that threshold of how much oxygen you can use in your system. 00:25:29.580 |
One of the adaptations will be that your mitochondria will shift such that they can use more oxygen and you're going to also increase the capillary beds, 00:25:41.360 |
but not as much as you're going to be able to increase the amount of neuron engagement of muscle. 00:25:48.820 |
So normally when we start to hit fatigue, when we're exhausted, when we're breathing really hard, because the systems of the body are linked and we, there's a mental component to this as well. 00:25:58.300 |
A kind of motivational component after that third or fourth or sixth set of, you know, 20 seconds on a hundred seconds off, or if you're at the other extreme 30 seconds on a 10 seconds off, there's going to be a component of you want to 00:26:11.160 |
stop and by pushing through and repeating another set safely, of course, what you're doing is you're training the neurons to be able to access more energy, literally convert that into ATP and for the muscles, therefore, to access more energy and ATP. 00:26:27.640 |
And the adaptation is in the mitochondria's ability to use oxygen. 00:26:31.820 |
And this has tremendous carryover effects for other types of exercise. 00:26:37.340 |
This can be beneficial in competitive sports or team sports, where there's a sprinting component, where the field opens up and you need to dribble the ball down the field, for instance, and shoot on goal, or where you're playing tennis and it's a long rally. 00:26:49.120 |
And then all of a sudden somebody really starts, you know, putting you back on your heels and you have to really make the maximum amount of effort to run to the net and to get the ball across that things of that sort. 00:27:00.600 |
Okay, there are a variety of places where there's carryover from this type of training, but it does support endurance. 00:27:08.580 |
It's about these muscles ability to generate a lot of force in the short term, but repeatedly. 00:27:18.980 |
Even though it feels like maximum effort, it is not the same as building power and speed into muscles. 00:27:26.420 |
So the key elements, again, are that you're bringing your breathing and your oxygen utilization way up above your max. 00:27:35.580 |
It's not quite hitting failure, but you're really pushing the system to the point where you are not ready to do another set. 00:27:44.780 |
You're not necessarily psychologically ready. 00:27:46.580 |
I want to make sure I touch on the fourth protocol, which is high-intensity aerobic conditioning. 00:27:51.920 |
So HIIT has these two forms, anaerobic and aerobic. 00:27:57.940 |
High-intensity aerobic conditioning also involves about three to 12 sets. 00:28:03.320 |
A one-to-one ratio is powerful for building, on average, most of the energy systems involving, remember, we had these nerve, muscle, blood, heart, and lungs. 00:28:17.020 |
A one-to-one ratio might be you run a mile, and however long that takes, you might run, first mile is, let's say, seven minutes, then you rest for seven minutes. 00:28:26.160 |
Then you run a mile again, and it might take eight minutes, and you rest for eight minutes. 00:28:30.100 |
And you continue that for a total of four miles of work, four miles of running work, I should say. 00:28:36.640 |
Many people find that using this type of training allows them to do things like go run half marathons and marathons, even though prior to the race date, they've never actually run a half marathon or marathon. 00:28:52.380 |
It's like, how could it be that running a mile on and then resting for running a mile and then resting for an equivalent amount of time, running a mile, resting for an equivalent amount of time for seven miles allows you to run continuously for 13 miles or for 26 miles. 00:29:07.380 |
It improves ATP and mitochondrial function in muscle. 00:29:12.200 |
It allows the blood to deliver more oxygen to the muscle and to your brain, and it allows your heart to deliver more oxygen overall, and it builds a tremendous lung capacity. 00:29:25.440 |
So what would this look like, and when should you do this? 00:29:27.960 |
Well, it's really a question for these workouts of asking how much work can one do in eight to 12 minutes, right? 00:29:38.180 |
How much work can you do for eight to 12 minutes, then rest and then repeat? 00:29:43.140 |
Well, this is the sort of thing, it's pretty intense. 00:29:45.460 |
And so you would probably only want to do this two, maybe three times a week if you're not doing many other things. 00:29:52.120 |
So we have four kinds of endurance, muscular endurance, we have long duration endurance, we have high intensity interval training of two kinds, anaerobic and aerobic. 00:30:00.220 |
And this last type, the aerobic one works best, it seems, if you kind of do this one-to-one ratio. 00:30:06.040 |
So how would you use these and what are they actually doing? 00:30:08.500 |
Let's talk about the heart and the lungs and oxygen, because that's something that we can all benefit from understanding. 00:30:15.900 |
The brain and the heart are probably the two most important systems that you need to take care of in your life. 00:30:21.440 |
Attaining or enhancing a brain function and cardiovascular function, it's absolutely clear are key for health and longevity in the short and long term. 00:30:29.860 |
And the sorts of training I talked about today has been shown again and again and again to be very useful for enhancing the strength of the mind. 00:30:38.120 |
Yes, I'll talk about that, as well as the health of the brain and the body. 00:30:42.860 |
So let's talk about the sorts of adaptations that are happening in your brain and body that are so beneficial in these different forms of training. 00:30:49.420 |
If you are breathing hard and your heart is beating hard. 00:30:53.380 |
So this would be certainly in the high-intensity anaerobic and aerobic conditioning, because you're getting up near your VO2 max in high-intensity aerobic conditioning, and you're exceeding your VO2 max in high-intensity anaerobic conditioning. 00:31:08.720 |
What's going to happen is as of course your heart beats faster, your blood is going to be circulating faster in principle. 00:31:17.280 |
Oxygen utilization in muscle is going to go up and over time, not long, very quickly, what will happen when those capillary beds start to expand. 00:31:28.040 |
In addition, because of the amount of blood that's being returned to the heart when you engage in these really intense bouts of effort repeatedly, the amount of blood being returned to the heart actually causes an eccentric loading of one of the muscular walls of the heart. 00:31:47.700 |
So your heart is muscle, it's cardiac muscle. 00:31:50.500 |
We have skeletal muscle attached to our bones, then we have cardiac muscle, which is our heart. 00:31:55.180 |
When more blood is being returned to the heart because of the additional work that your muscles and nerves are doing, it actually has the effect of creating an eccentric loading, a kind of pushing of the wall, the left wall. 00:32:12.520 |
I realize I'm not using the strict anatomy here, but I don't want to get into all the structural features of the heart. 00:32:19.140 |
But the left ventricle essentially getting slammed back and then having to push back in a kind of eccentric loading of the cardiac muscle and the muscle thickens as more blood is returned to the heart. 00:32:34.100 |
There's an adaptation where the heart muscle actually gets stronger and therefore can pump more blood per stroke per beat. 00:32:42.140 |
And as it does that, it delivers, because blood contains glucose and oxygen and other things, it delivers more fuel to your muscles, which allows you to do yet more work per unit time. 00:32:55.940 |
If you do this high intensity type training where your heart is beating very hard, so maybe the one-to-one ratio mile run repeats that I described a minute ago, pretty soon, the stroke volume of your heart will really increase. 00:33:08.560 |
And as a consequence, you can deliver more fuel to your muscles and to your brain, your cognitive functioning will improve. 00:33:16.560 |
This has been shown again and again, because there's an increase in vasculature, literally capillary beds within the brain, the hippocampus areas that support memory, but also areas of the brain that support respiration, that support focus, that support effort. 00:33:30.560 |
Now, weight training does have some positive effects on brain function also. 00:33:37.560 |
However, it's very clear, and you should now understand intuitively why the kind of standard strength and hypertrophy type workouts are not going to activate the blood oxygenation and the stroke volume increases for the heart that the sorts of training I'm talking about today will. 00:33:53.560 |
It just doesn't have the same positive effects. 00:33:57.560 |
The other thing that's really important to think about in terms of endurance type work is hydration. 00:34:02.560 |
And I think hydration is important for all forms of physical work and exercise, not just endurance. 00:34:07.560 |
Typically, we're going to lose anywhere from one to five pounds of water per hour of exercise. 00:34:17.560 |
It's going to vary on intensity, probably more like five pounds if it's hot day and you're exercising very intensely. 00:34:24.560 |
So if you think about your weight in pounds, once you lose about one to 4% of your body weight in water, you're going to experience about a 20 to 30% reduction in work capacity in your ability to generate effort of any kind, strength, endurance, et cetera. 00:34:46.560 |
You are also going to experience a significant drop in your ability to think and perform mental operations. 00:34:53.560 |
Potassium, sodium, and magnesium are really key. 00:34:56.560 |
You can die from drinking too much water in particular because it forces you, if you drink too much water, you'll excrete too many electrolytes and your brain will shut off. 00:35:05.560 |
You'll actually, your heart will stop functioning properly. 00:35:07.560 |
So you don't want to over consume water to the extreme either. 00:35:10.560 |
A simple formula, what I call the Galpin equation, which is your body weight in pounds divided by the number 30. 00:35:19.560 |
And that is how many ounces you should drink for every 15 minutes of exercise. 00:35:23.560 |
Now, if you are sweating a lot, you may need more. 00:35:26.560 |
If you're already very well hydrated, you may need less, but that's a good rule of thumb to begin and to start to understand the relationship between hydration and performance. 00:35:40.560 |
In the previous episodes, I talked about the phosphocreatine system and supplementing with creatine. 00:35:44.560 |
We talked about beta alanine for kind of moderate duration work. 00:35:48.560 |
You know, really the only things that have been shown to really improve endurance work across the four varieties of endurance work I described today. 00:36:03.560 |
So things like caffeine will definitely improve endurance work and power output. 00:36:07.560 |
Certain forms of magnesium, in particular magnesium malate, M-A-L-A-T-E, have been shown to be useful for removing or reducing the amount of delayed onset muscle soreness. 00:36:19.560 |
That form of magnesium is distinctly different than the sorts of magnesium that are good for getting us into sleep. 00:36:24.560 |
things like magnesium threonate and biglycinate. 00:36:27.560 |
In general, we focused mainly today on behavioral tools. 00:36:31.560 |
And I hope I was able to illustrate for you that endurance isn't just one thing. 00:36:35.560 |
It's not just the ability to go for long bouts of exercise of different kinds. 00:36:40.560 |
That there's also this mental component because of the way that neurons work. 00:36:44.560 |
And also that there are these different forms of endurance, of muscular endurance, that where you're going to fail because of the muscles and muscle energy utilization and the nerves that innervate those muscles locally, not because of a failure to bring in oxygen or blood. 00:36:58.560 |
Whereas long duration effort, it's going to be more about, you know, being below your VO2 max and your ability to be efficient for long bouts of more than 12 minutes of exercise. 00:37:07.560 |
One set, as they say, of 12 minutes to maybe several hours. 00:37:11.560 |
High intensity training will tap into yet other fuel sources and mechanisms as we learned today. 00:37:17.560 |
And last but not least, thank you for your interest in science.