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Improve Your Lymphatic System for Overall Health & Appearance


Chapters

0:0 Lymphatic System
4:11 Circulatory System, Heart; Oxygen, Nutrient & Waste Transfer
11:3 Lymphatic System, Fluid, Lymphedema, Chronic Inflammation; Brain Fog
14:52 Sponsor: LMNT & David Protein
17:28 Lymphatic Vessels, Tool: Enhance Lymphatic Drainage with Movement
26:24 Tools: Jumping (Rebounding), Treading Water, Swimming
27:41 Tool: Swelling, Lymphatic Drainage & Diaphragmatic Breathing
32:5 Swimming & Lymphatic Flow; Tai Chi
34:0 Lymphatic Massage, Cancer & Lymphedema; Jade Roller & Gua Sha
37:28 Sponsor: AGZ by AG1
38:56 Lymph Flow, Tool: Lymphatic Massage & Manual Lymphatic Drainage
45:2 Immune Function of Lymphatic System, Sore Lymph Nodes
54:24 Cancer Treatment, Lymph Nodes & Lymphedema
57:2 Limb Swelling, Minor Lymphedema & Inflammation, Lymphatic Boots
60:9 Sponsors: Eight Sleep
61:43 Glymphatic System, Brain & Sleep
65:56 Sleep & Brain Waste Recycling; Discovery of the Glymphatic System
72:24 Enhance Glymphatic Clearance, Brain Fog, Age, Tool: Side Sleeping Position
75:54 Tools: Optimize Sleep, Cardiovascular Exercise, Elevate Feet, Pillow
77:29 Puffy Face, Tool: Lymphatic & Facial Massage
81:23 Sponsor: Function
83:11 Tool: Hydration & Lymphatic Support
84:48 Tool: Cardiovascular Exercise & Lymphatic Vessels, Heart, Aging
91:6 Tool: Infrared & Red Light, Mitochondria, Lymphedema, Skin Appearance
96:8 Key Takeaways
97:21 Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow, Reviews & Feedback, Sponsors, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter

Whisper Transcript | Transcript Only Page

00:00:00.360 | Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast,
00:00:02.340 | where we discuss science and science-based tools
00:00:04.940 | for everyday life.
00:00:05.920 | I'm Andrew Huberman,
00:00:10.280 | and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology
00:00:13.420 | at Stanford School of Medicine.
00:00:15.280 | Today, we are discussing the lymphatic system.
00:00:18.120 | For many of you, the lymphatic system
00:00:20.120 | probably sounds a little bit esoteric.
00:00:22.420 | And for many of you, the lymphatic system
00:00:24.160 | may even draw up notions of people talking
00:00:27.000 | about lymphatic clearance or doing bizarre-seeming types
00:00:30.940 | of very light massage or jade rollers
00:00:34.240 | or bouncing on trampolines.
00:00:36.460 | And I must say, in researching this episode,
00:00:38.660 | I came to three general conclusions
00:00:41.300 | that I think are important to point out right now.
00:00:43.760 | First of all, your lymphatic system is absolutely essential
00:00:47.300 | to your immediate and long-term health.
00:00:48.880 | It's an incredible system that is serving you right now
00:00:51.480 | as you listen to this,
00:00:52.600 | and it's a system that you need to support.
00:00:55.020 | The second conclusion is that the lymphatic system
00:00:58.080 | is somewhat cryptic,
00:00:59.200 | and it doesn't get as much attention as say,
00:01:01.060 | the cardiovascular system or your brain and nervous system,
00:01:04.400 | or even the gut microbiome.
00:01:06.460 | And then the third conclusion is that the lymphatic system,
00:01:09.920 | and what is sometimes just generally referred to
00:01:11.780 | as lymphatics, often get kind of a bad rap.
00:01:15.160 | And the reason is that a lot of the practices
00:01:17.260 | that are out there in the wellness space
00:01:18.820 | and health space that relate to lymphatics
00:01:21.080 | can often seem a little bit goofy or odd,
00:01:23.400 | or kind of new-agey or woo.
00:01:25.300 | Things like rebounding, like bouncing on a trampoline,
00:01:28.040 | or shaking, things of that sort.
00:01:30.320 | And to some extent, they look odd,
00:01:32.780 | because typically those aren't behaviors
00:01:34.380 | that most people engage in every day.
00:01:36.260 | But once you understand the structure and function
00:01:38.240 | of the lymphatic system, which you soon will,
00:01:40.380 | you'll realize why things like rebounding,
00:01:42.760 | things like treading water,
00:01:44.280 | things like specific ways of breathing,
00:01:46.440 | actually serve the lymphatic system quite well.
00:01:49.000 | And there's a real basis
00:01:50.240 | for why those practices actually work.
00:01:52.620 | So those are three general points
00:01:54.020 | about the lymphatic system to keep in mind today
00:01:56.380 | as we move forward.
00:01:57.620 | Another thing to keep in mind is that the lymphatic system
00:02:00.320 | is directly related to your appearance.
00:02:02.460 | Later, you'll learn why if you were to stay up for one night
00:02:06.060 | and not get any sleep, or even just get a poor night's sleep,
00:02:08.820 | and you look at your face in the morning,
00:02:10.520 | you look very different after a poor night's sleep
00:02:13.020 | than you do after a great night's sleep.
00:02:14.860 | Sometimes you even look very different immediately
00:02:16.960 | upon waking after a great night's sleep,
00:02:18.600 | as opposed to a couple of hours later.
00:02:20.580 | Many people wake up with kind of bags under their eyes,
00:02:22.760 | they look kind of groggy, they look much older.
00:02:25.020 | And then a couple of hours later, they look fresh,
00:02:27.580 | and that stuff is all cleared away.
00:02:30.620 | And certainly not by doing anything cosmetic
00:02:32.980 | in terms of makeup or anything.
00:02:34.520 | That transition from bags under the eyes,
00:02:36.820 | feeling a heaviness in the face,
00:02:38.840 | the eyes tired, sort of lack of life in the face and eyes.
00:02:42.500 | And then later, just a couple of hours, looking vibrant,
00:02:45.840 | the face looking very fresh and ready for the day.
00:02:50.200 | That has everything to do
00:02:51.800 | with what's called a glymphatic clearance,
00:02:53.840 | and the lymphatic system of the face and neck.
00:02:56.520 | So today you're going to learn
00:02:57.540 | how the lymphatic system works.
00:02:59.600 | You're going to learn how to support your lymphatic system
00:03:02.240 | for your immediate and long-term health,
00:03:04.400 | as well as for appearance.
00:03:05.900 | And you're going to learn about if you were to have, say,
00:03:09.240 | an injury to the body, or God forbid,
00:03:11.980 | if you were suffering from cancer,
00:03:13.600 | how you could support your lymphatic system.
00:03:16.140 | And in talking about all of this,
00:03:17.960 | you'll be able to make sense of why it is
00:03:20.240 | that things like lymphatic massage,
00:03:22.000 | or the various tools and treatments that are out there,
00:03:24.660 | may actually work,
00:03:26.100 | and why some of them perhaps should be avoided.
00:03:28.320 | And as a final point,
00:03:30.200 | you're also going to realize by the end of today's episode,
00:03:33.060 | that the lymphatic system is one of the major reasons
00:03:36.700 | why exercise supports longevity,
00:03:38.680 | and heart health, and brain health,
00:03:40.500 | and all the other things that we've heard
00:03:42.560 | that exercise can provide.
00:03:44.160 | The point here is that your lymphatic system
00:03:46.180 | sits central to everything we care about
00:03:49.320 | in terms of immediate and long-term health.
00:03:51.300 | And as you'll soon see,
00:03:52.660 | it's also just a really cool system.
00:03:55.120 | Before we begin,
00:03:56.020 | I'd like to emphasize that this podcast
00:03:57.820 | is separate from my teaching
00:03:58.820 | and research roles at Stanford.
00:04:00.500 | It is, however, part of my desire and effort
00:04:02.440 | to bring zero cost to consumer information about science
00:04:05.040 | and science-related tools to the general public.
00:04:07.720 | In keeping with that theme,
00:04:08.780 | today's episode does include sponsors.
00:04:11.200 | Okay, let's get into the lymphatic system.
00:04:13.920 | But in order to get into the lymphatic system,
00:04:16.280 | we need to talk briefly
00:04:17.300 | about the circulatory system for blood.
00:04:20.140 | Now, everybody knows what the heart is.
00:04:22.240 | The heart is this organ that pumps blood.
00:04:24.900 | Many of you are probably familiar with the fact
00:04:26.620 | that the heart has different chambers,
00:04:28.060 | different compartments,
00:04:29.900 | but the heart also has two major jobs
00:04:32.160 | that are quite different from one another,
00:04:33.840 | and two major anatomical distinctions
00:04:37.340 | that allow those functions to occur.
00:04:39.440 | And those functions, broadly speaking,
00:04:41.280 | are to deliver oxygenated blood to all the tissues
00:04:44.780 | of your body, including your brain, your spleen.
00:04:47.220 | Every organ and tissue in the body needs oxygenated blood.
00:04:51.660 | And also to return the non-oxygenated blood back to the heart
00:04:56.660 | and back to the lungs so that it can get re-oxygenated.
00:05:01.260 | So I'm just going to briefly describe the blood circulatory system in very broad terms.
00:05:05.440 | We probably should do an entire episode about heart health and heart function,
00:05:08.200 | and we will.
00:05:09.200 | But for those of you not familiar with how the heart works,
00:05:11.480 | basically the heart is going to pump blood out through what are called arteries.
00:05:16.820 | You've all heard of arteries, which are fairly large diameter tubes.
00:05:21.420 | They have walls of those tubes that can resist a lot of pressure.
00:05:26.020 | And that's important because we need to put a lot of pressure to be able to pump blood far out into the body,
00:05:31.160 | out to your fingertips, your toes, and everything in between.
00:05:33.500 | Okay, oxygenated blood is going to travel out through those arteries.
00:05:39.000 | And then eventually as those arteries approach the tissues that they need to oxygenate.
00:05:44.020 | And by the way, the blood is delivering not just oxygen, but also glucose, blood sugar, hormones,
00:05:49.680 | different proteins, amino acids, all the stuff that your tissues need, not just oxygen.
00:05:53.860 | But then those arteries are going to transition into smaller diameter tubes that we call the arterioles.
00:06:00.060 | And then eventually as those arterioles approach the tissues,
00:06:03.540 | they need to deliver all that stuff, all those goodies within the blood,
00:06:07.640 | those arterioles are going to transition and start branching into what are called capillaries.
00:06:12.800 | Most of you have probably heard of capillaries.
00:06:14.780 | Capillaries have a very, very thin wall, just one cell thick,
00:06:20.180 | which allows things within the blood like oxygen, amino acids,
00:06:23.780 | and other things that the cells in the tissues of your body need
00:06:27.180 | to actually get out into those tissues.
00:06:29.760 | Okay, so most of us think about the blood system as pumping stuff out there,
00:06:33.960 | but we probably haven't thought about how the stuff that needs to get to our cells
00:06:37.100 | actually gets out of the blood and into those cells.
00:06:39.800 | And I just explained how, by having a very thin walled set of capillaries,
00:06:44.880 | carrying that oxygenated amino acid containing glucose containing blood,
00:06:49.940 | those nutrients and that oxygen can actually get out of the vasculature,
00:06:53.780 | out of those capillaries and into the cells that need them.
00:06:57.620 | Okay, at a future date, I'll talk about the actual mechanics of how that's done.
00:07:01.820 | But for right now, I think that's sufficient.
00:07:06.020 | Now, once that stuff arrives in the tissue, and here, when I say tissue, it could be brain tissue.
00:07:11.860 | It could be muscle tissue.
00:07:13.900 | It could be liver tissue.
00:07:16.060 | Once that stuff gets out into the cells, the cells are going to use it.
00:07:19.100 | They're going to use the oxygen.
00:07:19.980 | They're going to use the glucose.
00:07:21.180 | They're going to use the amino acids.
00:07:22.180 | They're going to use the hormones.
00:07:24.180 | And as a consequence, they are going to create some waste products.
00:07:28.380 | There's going to be carbon dioxide that's created.
00:07:31.380 | There's going to be cellular waste in the form of actual physical debris.
00:07:35.580 | They're going to be metabolites.
00:07:37.580 | There's going to be ammonia, basically a bunch of waste product is going to then get kicked
00:07:42.500 | out of those cells into what's called the extracellular space.
00:07:45.420 | Now, a couple of times today, I'll talk about what's referred to as the interstitial space.
00:07:50.460 | The interstitial space is the area around the cells of the various tissues and organs of
00:07:55.700 | your body, and fluid and these waste products gets kicked out into that interstitial space
00:08:02.260 | between the cells.
00:08:03.740 | So once it's there, it needs to be cleared out of there.
00:08:07.460 | How is it cleared out of there?
00:08:08.980 | Some of it will be taken back up into the blood supply and with it, a lot of water, a lot
00:08:14.700 | of fluid.
00:08:15.700 | I didn't mention this yet, but a lot of fluid, a lot of water gets out of the vasculature
00:08:19.900 | and into those cells and into the interstitial space around those cells while it's delivering
00:08:25.340 | all those nutrients and goodies that we talked about a minute ago.
00:08:28.380 | Now, some of the waste product and the water, so carbon dioxide and water, et cetera, will
00:08:32.840 | be taken back up by the blood supply.
00:08:35.240 | How does that happen?
00:08:36.240 | Well, there are capillaries that are referred to as venous capillaries, okay?
00:08:40.420 | So we talked about the arterial system, which delivers oxygenated blood.
00:08:44.460 | There's also another system called the venous system, which takes deoxygenated blood back
00:08:49.340 | back up to be oxygenated by the lungs.
00:08:54.300 | And it does that, of course, in concert with the heart.
00:08:57.300 | So we have the arterial system that delivers oxygenated blood.
00:09:01.380 | There are rare exceptions of arteries that deliver non-oxygenated blood to tissues such as the
00:09:05.840 | lungs, but let's just set that aside for now.
00:09:08.100 | We've got these arterial system that delivers oxygenated blood.
00:09:11.760 | And then now we have the venous systems.
00:09:13.660 | We have these little venous capillaries that are also just one cell wall thick and the water,
00:09:18.620 | the carbon dioxide, the ammonia, the waste products is going to get reabsorbed there.
00:09:22.620 | It's going to then go from small diameter tubes, the venous capillaries, up to larger diameter
00:09:30.580 | tubes, and eventually into the veins that are going to deliver that blood and the waste products
00:09:37.080 | and the carbon dioxide back to the heart and lungs to be reoxygenated and then sent back out
00:09:42.580 | to the body, okay?
00:09:44.020 | And you may have heard the word "pulmonary" before.
00:09:46.420 | If you haven't, that's okay.
00:09:47.540 | The pulmonary system is the aspect of the circulatory system that is directed towards the lungs to oxygenate the blood, okay?
00:09:55.540 | So we've got this really nice looped system where oxygenated blood can get out to the tissues of the body.
00:10:01.540 | The cells in those tissues can use the oxygen, the nutrients, et cetera, and the water and the carbon dioxide and ammonia and other waste products that come from just cells doing their business, from them doing all the things
00:10:14.500 | that they need to do as a liver cell, as a brain cell, et cetera, is then going to be passed back into the circulatory system and then back to the heart and lungs so that the waste products can be expelled.
00:10:24.500 | For instance, when you exhale, the carbon dioxide is expelled from your body.
00:10:29.500 | And when you inhale, you bring in more oxygen that then gets on hemoglobin and then back through the arterial system and so on and so forth, okay?
00:10:37.460 | So it's a beautiful system.
00:10:38.460 | And even if you only captured 5% to 10% of what I just said, you certainly will have in mind now that your circulatory system for your blood is sending out oxygenated stuff, returning non-oxygenated stuff that also has a lot of waste product in it,
00:10:51.460 | and that there's a lot of water in that whole business.
00:10:54.900 | This is all liquid and proteins and glucose, et cetera.
00:10:58.780 | But there's a lot of water in this whole thing.
00:11:01.100 | After all, your blood is liquid.
00:11:03.220 | So the important thing to understand about the lymphatic system is that the lymphatic system is there waiting at the interstitial space and at the interface between this arterial system that delivers oxygenated blood and the venous system of capillaries that collects the deoxygenated blood and all these waste products.
00:11:20.460 | And it's right there as a series of tubes ready to catch the excess fluid and the waste products and bring them back to the heart also, but to do a lot of really important things with them along the way.
00:11:35.900 | And you might say, why would you have this third system, right?
00:11:37.900 | The circulatory system for blood sounds nearly perfect.
00:11:41.340 | And the key is it's not perfect.
00:11:42.340 | Your lymphatic system is responsible for taking the fluid that remains in the extracellular space and all the gunk, all the waste products from cellular metabolism.
00:11:51.340 | Again, proteins, ammonia, carbon dioxide, and bringing that back into the circulatory system of blood, but along the way, doing a number of very important things, including checking it out to see whether or not there are any contaminants, right?
00:12:06.780 | Any infections, bacterial or viral infections that occurs in structures called the lymph nodes, which you've probably heard of, and we will return to a little bit later, but leaving aside the immune surveillance role of the lymphatic system, just the mere role of needing to clear away.
00:12:22.220 | What really is about three to four liters of excess fluid in the interstitial space is so important.
00:12:29.060 | You might say, well, how important can it really be, right?
00:12:31.980 | Three or four liters, is it really that important?
00:12:34.100 | It is absolutely crucial, why?
00:12:36.700 | Because if too much fluid and amino acids and cellular waste products build up in the tissues that are using the oxygenated blood and need all the nutrients, that is ripe for infection, right?
00:12:49.900 | Bacteria love to grow in warm environments with lots of amino acids.
00:12:54.100 | It's ripe for inflammation because of the CO2 and because of the ammonia and the waste products.
00:12:59.380 | And if that inflammation occurs, you get buildup of tissue.
00:13:03.300 | In particular, adipose tissue can really thicken, skin can thicken, and it starts becoming chronically inflamed.
00:13:09.020 | And this is something that, believe it or not, is fairly common.
00:13:11.660 | It's common in people who are obese.
00:13:13.620 | It's common in people that don't move enough.
00:13:15.420 | We'll talk about why that's so in a moment.
00:13:17.580 | The lymphatic system's just basic role for draining that fluid out of the interstitial space is something that all of us should really care about, healthy or unhealthy.
00:13:27.060 | So even if you're not obese, you need to get your lymphatic system tuned up so that it's clearing that stuff.
00:13:33.780 | It's clearing what we call lymph, which is kind of like a sticky fluid because it's got stuff other than water in there.
00:13:40.980 | It's got all those waste products and it rarely has red blood cells in it, but it often can have a few white blood cells and it can have some other stuff in it.
00:13:48.980 | And we need to clear that out.
00:13:51.580 | So it's semi-viscous.
00:13:52.780 | It's not super fluid.
00:13:53.780 | It's not, it's not a gel.
00:13:55.180 | It's kind of somewhere in between.
00:13:56.580 | And we need to clear that out.
00:13:58.460 | In fact, if we don't clear it out, our body very quickly goes into local or systemic inflammation and if we don't clear it out within the brain, we get what's called brain fog.
00:14:07.940 | You get cognitive impairment and the brain fog that occurs from lack of lymphatic clearance from brain tissue comes on very quickly, even after one poor night's sleep.
00:14:17.420 | And it is very severe.
00:14:18.940 | If any of you have ever experienced brain fog, it is awful.
00:14:22.020 | The inability to kind of hold a thought and maintain a thought and you're kind of somewhere between sleep and awake and then you're kind of stressed about that is serious.
00:14:29.380 | So the mere clearance of the stuff from the extracellular space, the water, CO2 and waste products by the lymphatic system is crucial.
00:14:37.300 | So before I talk about the immune surveillance role of the lymphatic system, I want to talk about what you can do to encourage the collection and drainage of all that extracellular fluid and the waste products with it.
00:14:48.180 | I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Element.
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00:15:26.180 | My days tend to start really fast, meaning I have to jump right into work or right into exercise.
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00:15:39.940 | I also drink Element dissolved in water during any kind of physical exercise that I'm doing, especially on hot days when I'm sweating a lot and losing water and electrolytes.
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00:17:24.500 | Okay, so let's talk about the lymphatic system, focusing on the lymphatic vessels,
00:17:28.980 | which are basically just tubes, okay?
00:17:30.980 | Tubes of different sizes, depending on where you are in the body and what you need to accomplish.
00:17:35.220 | But here's a really key point that everyone should know.
00:17:37.620 | We spend so much time and attention thinking about the lymph nodes,
00:17:40.980 | which of course are super important, right?
00:17:42.660 | Go to the doctor, you say you're not feeling well.
00:17:44.500 | They're going to feel your lymph nodes.
00:17:45.940 | I'll explain why they do that in a minute.
00:17:47.380 | They're going to feel under your jaw.
00:17:49.140 | You know, maybe you've had swollen lymph nodes where your legs meet your groin.
00:17:53.620 | You have your armpits.
00:17:55.460 | You'll occasionally feel some swelling or some kind of dull pain.
00:17:59.460 | By the way, that dull pain or swelling isn't necessarily a sign of a systemic infection.
00:18:04.660 | It could be, but it's not necessarily a sign of an infection.
00:18:08.900 | We'll talk about what the lymph nodes do, but the lymphatic vessels don't get nearly enough attention,
00:18:14.740 | in my opinion.
00:18:15.620 | Your entire body is innervated, as we say, by these lymphatic vessels, right?
00:18:21.140 | From your little pinky toe and all your toes and your feet, any tissue in your body,
00:18:25.060 | because it needs blood and oxygen and nutrients, and because the cells there create waste products,
00:18:31.140 | and because some of that fluid remains in the interstitial space, doesn't make it back into the
00:18:35.540 | vasculature, you need lymphatic vessels everywhere.
00:18:39.700 | You need them in your brain, you need them in your skin, you need them in your adipose tissue,
00:18:43.300 | you're fat, that is, you need them everywhere.
00:18:45.940 | And so if I were to give you a map of the lymphatic vessels across the body,
00:18:50.020 | it would just look like spaghetti everywhere.
00:18:52.100 | Lymph nodes are going to be those larger compartments where some of the lymphatic fluid
00:18:57.940 | and the stuff within it is sequestered for a bit, monitored for infections, and then passed along.
00:19:03.540 | We'll get back to that later.
00:19:05.220 | The lymphatic vessels have a very important property, which is that they are one-way vessels, okay?
00:19:12.180 | Fluid can only pass one direction through them.
00:19:15.540 | And that unidirectionality of the vessels is oh so important when thinking about how to encourage
00:19:21.860 | lymphatic drainage and lymphatic flow.
00:19:23.940 | And when I say lymphatic flow, what I really mean is the passage of fluid from the interstitial,
00:19:29.380 | extracellular space into these lymphatic vessels.
00:19:32.420 | Sometimes people will call them lymphatic ducts, but that's actually a technical term related to
00:19:35.940 | something else, but into these lymphatic vessels, then through these vessels and back into the
00:19:41.860 | venous blood supply where all sorts of good things happen and we'll talk about it in a bit.
00:19:45.620 | So they're one-way vessels.
00:19:47.700 | And if you think about the lymph that accumulates and then goes into the vessels in say your feet,
00:19:56.580 | if it's a one-way vessel, you know, that vessel is going to be directed towards the heart, right?
00:20:01.300 | The fluid will be able to go towards the heart, right?
00:20:03.860 | Because eventually that's where this stuff needs to go.
00:20:05.780 | It needs to dump back into the venous blood supply, get oxygenated and so forth.
00:20:10.100 | And the waste has to be disposed.
00:20:11.940 | And we have this thing called gravity, which is pulling down, right?
00:20:18.420 | It's pulling down.
00:20:18.980 | It's a force that's literally pulling down.
00:20:20.580 | And you've got these one-way vessels trying to pass the lymph, which is fluid,
00:20:23.460 | but it's kind of a slightly viscous fluid up toward the heart.
00:20:26.820 | You also have lymphatic vessels in your hands and your arms.
00:20:29.780 | And gravity is, of course, pulling down on the fluid within them as well.
00:20:34.100 | And your brain, et cetera.
00:20:35.940 | Now here's a critical feature of the lymphatic system that is different from the cardiovascular
00:20:42.100 | system, which is there's no pump.
00:20:44.900 | In the cardiovascular system, you have a pump.
00:20:47.700 | You have a heart that can generate a lot of force to move that liquid out through the arteries
00:20:52.180 | and back through the veins.
00:20:53.300 | And you've got a lot of mechanical force coming from that heart.
00:20:56.260 | The lymphatic system doesn't have that at all.
00:20:58.900 | On its own, it's a passive system, no pump.
00:21:03.220 | And it's fighting gravity all the time.
00:21:05.460 | So how does lymph move through these lymphatic vessels?
00:21:08.980 | Nature came up with a brilliant solution.
00:21:12.260 | It's actually the movement of your body that creates the movement of lymph up through these
00:21:18.660 | vessels from the lower half of your body or down from the vessels in the upper part of your body or
00:21:23.940 | in from your arms and fingers toward the center of your body to eventually be returned back to the
00:21:28.820 | venous blood supply.
00:21:29.940 | This is really important to understand the movement of your muscles, not necessarily resistance
00:21:35.940 | training, although that would contribute to it, but low level muscular contractions of the sort
00:21:40.340 | that occur when you walk, when you stand up and sit down again, when you make little micro movements,
00:21:45.940 | but certainly the movement of the large musculature of your body in particular, like your legs and your
00:21:50.900 | trunk and your arms, that's what's going to move this lymphatic fluid along because the lymphatic vessels
00:21:58.260 | can sit very superficially just underneath the skin, right?
00:22:02.420 | Very, very close to the surface.
00:22:03.780 | The lymphatic system also has these, you know, small diameter things we call lymphatic capillaries,
00:22:08.260 | but it has bigger diameter vessels within the deeper tissues, closer to the muscle and
00:22:15.540 | intimately related to what's called the fascia.
00:22:17.700 | I know some of you have heard of the fascia, some of you perhaps have not.
00:22:21.380 | If you've ever prepared a steak and you saw there's kind of a, not the fatty stuff,
00:22:26.180 | but it's like a white fibrous sheet that you can almost peel off the meat.
00:22:30.500 | Your muscles are surrounded by fascia and those deep lymphatic vessels
00:22:34.500 | are closely tied to the fascia and to the muscular system so that when you move your body,
00:22:39.940 | walking or running, could be exercise, but even just everyday activities,
00:22:44.180 | that lymphatic fluid is being carried back up toward the heart to return and join the blood supply.
00:22:50.260 | So hopefully you're getting a sense of the organizational logic of the lymphatic system.
00:22:54.500 | Nature has co-opted movement as a way to move lymphatic fluid along and encourage lymphatic drainage.
00:22:59.780 | And you want lymphatic drainage, you want that fluid pulled out of the extracellular space,
00:23:03.620 | into those vessels and then returned back to the heart.
00:23:06.100 | And as I mentioned before, a bunch of other great things happen along the way
00:23:09.140 | in terms of immune surveillance.
00:23:10.500 | So if we're going to discuss protocols, one of the most important ways to encourage lymphatic drainage,
00:23:17.780 | which is a good thing, and to encourage the general health of your lymphatic system,
00:23:22.340 | because you don't want lymph sitting stagnant in those vessels,
00:23:25.700 | especially if it has contaminants within it, is to make sure that you're moving enough each day.
00:23:31.540 | And we hear a lot these days about, you know, you need 10,000 steps a day, or maybe it's just 7,000,
00:23:36.100 | or maybe it's 3,000.
00:23:37.060 | No one can really come up with a single answer, because it depends on which system you're trying
00:23:43.220 | to create support for, the cardiovascular system, the brain system.
00:23:46.020 | But I think a good number, a good thing to shoot for is at least 7,000 steps per day.
00:23:50.020 | You know, I happen to have some steps in my home, not a lot of them, but I find that if I'm going up and
00:23:54.340 | down those stairs a lot per day, that's good and probably is a little different than if I was just
00:23:58.420 | walking on a flat surface.
00:23:59.700 | Sometimes I'll get out and get 12,000 steps in a day, or if I'm visiting a new city and I'm walking a lot,
00:24:04.020 | 20,000 steps, but I really strive to get enough steps per day.
00:24:08.420 | And you will notice that if you don't get enough steps per day, your system, your body will feel
00:24:13.940 | kind of sluggish.
00:24:15.060 | If you're sitting a lot because of travel, you know, you should really strive to get as much movement in
00:24:19.140 | the airport as you can.
00:24:20.100 | Maybe ideally you take the stairs, you don't get on the conveyors.
00:24:23.540 | If you can manage to do that, getting a lot of steps will help your body feel less sore,
00:24:28.100 | less sluggish, and not all, but a fair amount of the sluggishness that we feel when we don't move
00:24:33.060 | around a lot, when inactivity leads us to feel less energy is the slow movement and the buildup of that
00:24:38.500 | lymphatic fluid.
00:24:39.380 | And keep in mind that lymphatic fluid isn't quote unquote bad, but it contains a lot of waste products
00:24:44.100 | that you do not want sitting around in the local tissues.
00:24:47.700 | And I'll underscore that later when we talk about lymphedema that occurs under conditions where
00:24:52.420 | somebody is being treated for say cancer and their lymph nodes and their lymph vessels are
00:24:56.820 | intentionally destroyed as a way to try and eradicate the cancers that have invaded the
00:25:00.820 | lymphatic system.
00:25:01.780 | When that happens, you get a lot of swelling of tissue.
00:25:04.740 | It can be painful.
00:25:05.940 | The tissue can become necrotic, infected and inflamed, and it can lead to all sorts of local and
00:25:10.660 | systemic issues.
00:25:11.540 | And cosmetically, of course, it's not good either.
00:25:14.340 | Movement, movement, movement is the way you're going to encourage lymphatic flow.
00:25:20.100 | Walking is one way to do it.
00:25:21.300 | Yes, cardiovascular exercise is excellent for that.
00:25:24.260 | And later we'll talk a little bit about the specifics of how cardiovascular exercise
00:25:27.860 | benefits your heart.
00:25:29.060 | Little hint, it's through growth of lymphatic vessels.
00:25:32.900 | Did you know that?
00:25:33.860 | Much of the benefit of aerobic exercise for your heart is because of the way that exercise
00:25:37.940 | stimulates growth and health of lymphatic vessels, not heart cells directly.
00:25:42.980 | We'll get back to that.
00:25:43.860 | Walking is terrific.
00:25:45.780 | Cardiovascular exercise, you know, these days we are all told we need about 150 to 200
00:25:50.660 | minutes of so-called zone two cardio.
00:25:52.660 | People debate whether or not it's better to do high-intensity interval training.
00:25:56.420 | Look, I think it's all good.
00:25:58.420 | It's all excellent.
00:25:59.540 | But none of it really is a replacement for just as much movement during the day as possible.
00:26:05.060 | I work a desk job.
00:26:05.620 | I'm mainly researching podcast episodes or doing research.
00:26:08.980 | Back in the days when I was doing experiments in my lab, I was getting up and standing up and moving
00:26:12.100 | around a lot.
00:26:12.980 | I've noticed that with each passing year, I'm 50 now, with each passing year, I tend to move
00:26:17.860 | a lot less just spontaneously and as a requirement of my life.
00:26:20.820 | So I do more exercise.
00:26:22.100 | But if you move a lot during your day, that's great.
00:26:24.340 | Vacuuming, cleaning.
00:26:25.460 | This is a great thing for your lymphatic system.
00:26:27.540 | Okay?
00:26:28.740 | This is also an appropriate time to talk about some of the quote-unquote kind of goofy practices that
00:26:33.060 | you'll see out there.
00:26:34.020 | I'm not calling them goofy, but they can look a little odd where people, you know, are talking about like
00:26:37.700 | shaking their body or they're talking about jumping up and down or rebounding, jumping on a small
00:26:42.100 | trampoline.
00:26:42.660 | I confess, I own a small trampoline that I jump on in the morning.
00:26:45.380 | I just think it's fun.
00:26:46.420 | And it turns out to be really good for your lymphatic system as is treading water.
00:26:50.660 | Excellent for your lymphatic system.
00:26:52.420 | Swimming, excellent for your lymphatic system.
00:26:54.580 | There are great studies showing that.
00:26:57.220 | And you might say, how is it that jumping up and down is moving lymphatic fluid up toward my heart
00:27:04.100 | because I'm jumping down.
00:27:04.900 | Wouldn't this be like stamping the fluid down toward gravity?
00:27:08.020 | When I was a kid, we used to go to 7-Eleven and we'd get Slurpees and we wanted to get as much
00:27:12.020 | more Slurpee in there as we couldn't.
00:27:13.060 | So we used to just like bend the cups there and we used to get yelled at, no, no Slurpee stamping.
00:27:17.300 | And we were like, we would do it anyway.
00:27:18.820 | I don't drink Slurpees anymore, but so no Slurpee stamping, but we were pushing
00:27:24.900 | that ice and fluid down so we could get more in there.
00:27:27.380 | Why would rebounding, jumping on a small trampoline or, you know, even shaking or jumping at all,
00:27:33.940 | why would it bring the fluid up?
00:27:35.300 | Wouldn't it stamp it down?
00:27:36.740 | Ah, those lymphatic vessels are one-way vessels.
00:27:39.860 | So as you shake the fluid, right?
00:27:42.420 | It's going up, up, up, up, up.
00:27:44.100 | There's another way to really encourage a lot of lymphatic flow and this will serve people
00:27:49.460 | cosmetically and just generally in terms of feeling of more energetic.
00:27:54.580 | And it's kind of a lightness in your lower limbs.
00:27:56.500 | If you've ever felt a lot of heaviness in your lower limbs, there could be a variety of reasons
00:28:00.340 | for that.
00:28:00.980 | It could be related to something in your vascular system.
00:28:02.900 | It could be because you trained your legs too hard.
00:28:04.900 | Almost always, some of that is due to not moving around enough and the buildup of
00:28:11.140 | lymphatic fluid in the interstitial space or within the lymphatic vessels themselves.
00:28:17.300 | One of the best documented ways to improve lymphatic flow, to improve the rate and the extent of the
00:28:23.300 | lymphatic drainage is actually through breathing.
00:28:26.580 | When I first heard this, I thought, oh boy, now we're getting into breath work.
00:28:29.300 | My lab has studied breath work, aka respiration physiology.
00:28:32.820 | And it's known to be powerful, but the domain of breath work oftentimes has naming of breath work
00:28:37.860 | practices and stuff that can start seeming a little counterculture new age biohacking, which is not my
00:28:42.340 | flavor.
00:28:42.740 | But get this, along the network of lymphatic vessels, some of those vessels are somewhat larger.
00:28:50.260 | And there's a particularly large compartment that sits within your abdomen called the cisterna kylia.
00:28:56.580 | Okay.
00:28:56.900 | Fancy name, but cisterna kylia is an outpouching or a swelling of the vessels that contains a lot of lymph.
00:29:05.060 | And we haven't quite gotten to how lymphatic fluid gets back into the venous supply and joins up for
00:29:12.580 | the blood, et cetera.
00:29:13.620 | But the cisterna kylia is kind of like the sink or the drain for a lot of the lymphatic fluid that's
00:29:24.580 | made it back to your body, but has not yet made it back to the blood supply.
00:29:28.660 | It hasn't cleared the lymphatic system yet.
00:29:31.460 | So it turns out one of the best ways to encourage the movement of lymph fluid that's already been
00:29:36.180 | checked out for infections, et cetera, and that's been taken out of the interstitial space to go back
00:29:40.740 | into your blood supply, which is what you want, is through what's called diaphragmatic breathing.
00:29:46.420 | And the reason for this is that when you do diaphragmatic breathing, I'll explain how to do
00:29:50.260 | that in a moment.
00:29:50.740 | It's very simple.
00:29:52.100 | The reason diaphragmatic breathing is so useful for encouraging lymph drainage and lymph flow is
00:29:58.420 | because when you do diaphragmatic breathing, which is having your belly extend as you inhale.
00:30:04.180 | So you have this thing called the diaphragm, which is a muscle inside your body.
00:30:06.660 | And when you inhale, the diaphragm moves down.
00:30:09.060 | Of course, the lungs inflate and ideally your belly moves out a little bit, right?
00:30:12.660 | We generally tell people that it's not so good to breathe by lifting your chest and using your ribs,
00:30:17.300 | although you can use the muscles between your ribs, the intercostals and your ribs to breathe,
00:30:20.980 | but you don't want to be breathing like this.
00:30:22.340 | Ideally, diaphragmatic breathing is what you do most of the time,
00:30:28.180 | unless you need to breathe much harder and you're inhaling and your belly's moving out, okay?
00:30:34.020 | When you inhale and your belly's moving out, you are certain that you're doing diaphragmatic breathing.
00:30:39.460 | Diaphragmatic breathing creates a pressure differential between this cisterna kylia, right?
00:30:44.740 | This reservoir of lymph and your blood supply, which has a different pressure within it.
00:30:49.140 | And so if you do a few rounds of diaphragmatic breathing, and when I say rounds, I just mean a few
00:30:53.620 | breaths. So inhale deeply and have your belly move out and then exhale.
00:30:58.580 | You're greatly encouraging the passage of lymph from the lymph vessels back into the blood supply, okay?
00:31:07.300 | Doing this just two or three times when you wake up in the morning,
00:31:11.300 | doing this two or three times in the afternoon or in the evening,
00:31:13.940 | or really any time that you remember will really encourage lymphatic drainage.
00:31:17.940 | It will really encourage the movement of that lymph fluid.
00:31:20.900 | And this is especially important to do if you're stuck on a plane or behind a desk,
00:31:24.180 | or you haven't had the opportunity to move quite as much as you would like.
00:31:27.380 | Because again, the other way to move lymph fluid along is through low level muscular contractions.
00:31:32.820 | But if you're trapped behind a desk or an airplane seat, you can't do that.
00:31:36.260 | So make it a point to do a few diaphragmatic breaths per day,
00:31:39.620 | and you will greatly encourage the movement and drainage of lymphatic fluid.
00:31:43.620 | And it actually can make a cosmetic difference.
00:31:46.580 | It can actually make a real difference in terms of less swelling of your lower body tissues.
00:31:51.060 | Because as you clear the cisterna kylia, you allow the lymph coming up from your legs
00:31:55.700 | and from other locations to also move up, right?
00:31:58.740 | Because you're just creating room for it to move into those now empty tubes.
00:32:03.220 | So while things like rebounding and turns out treading water in a pool or swimming in a pool is
00:32:09.700 | an excellent way to create lymphatic drainage.
00:32:11.940 | I mean, it's one of the best ways just because of the way that the physics of the water interacts
00:32:16.500 | with those superficial vessels of the skin.
00:32:19.220 | You know, as you swim, there's kind of a shearing along of the skin.
00:32:23.620 | You might not notice it unless you use a slow motion camera, but there's kind of a rippling
00:32:26.980 | of the skin.
00:32:28.260 | And those lymphatic vessels that sit just below the skin, those really tiny little capillaries,
00:32:32.980 | they're getting kind of squeezed along by the movement, that shearing of the skin along the top.
00:32:37.460 | So swimming is great.
00:32:39.540 | It's sometimes hard to get access to a pool.
00:32:41.860 | A really fun way to do this as well is you can kind of go down to the bottom of the pool and then
00:32:45.940 | blast off the bottom, grab a gulp of air, go back down and blast it up and grab a gulp of air.
00:32:50.740 | For those of you that have ever seen Laird Hamilton and the great surfer,
00:32:56.500 | Laird Hamilton and Gabby Reese, who's also great, his wife, they've developed tools and protocols for
00:33:01.460 | this called XPT.
00:33:02.580 | I don't have any formal affiliation with XPT, but they've developed a whole set of workouts related
00:33:06.500 | to this for general health reasons, for athletic performance, and it will also improve lymphatic
00:33:12.260 | drainage and lymphatic passage up from the bottom of the body.
00:33:16.420 | And you can think about the physics of bouncing off the bottom of the pool, like doing a squat and then
00:33:20.100 | grabbing a gulp of air and going back down and up.
00:33:22.500 | That's almost perfect for what we're trying to accomplish when we talk about the movement
00:33:26.820 | of lymphatic fluid up and back toward the heart.
00:33:30.260 | But most people don't have access to a pool.
00:33:32.740 | So low-level muscular contraction from walking, diaphragmatic breathing.
00:33:36.980 | If you want to get a rebound or a little trampoline, they're kind of fun.
00:33:40.020 | I think they're fun anyway.
00:33:41.220 | Hard to travel with.
00:33:43.780 | If you ever see people doing Tai Chi type movements in the park in the morning, oftentimes
00:33:48.740 | they'll also include some shaking and things like that.
00:33:50.500 | It might look a little goofy, but there's a clear, clear structural functional basis for
00:33:56.580 | why that would actually work.
00:33:58.180 | And along those lines, if you ever were to look up lymphatic massage, either lymphatic massage or
00:34:04.340 | sometimes called manual lymphatic relief.
00:34:06.500 | It comes by different names.
00:34:07.540 | Keep in mind, there are a lot of quality peer-reviewed studies exploring this,
00:34:13.460 | mostly in the context of treating lymphedema, the clearance of lymphatic buildup
00:34:17.540 | under conditions of cancer.
00:34:19.860 | Lots and lots of peer-reviewed studies.
00:34:21.940 | I've linked to some of those in the show note captions, which show over and over again,
00:34:24.580 | and over again, this can be a very useful practice.
00:34:27.620 | There are also drugs that are being developed for clearing out of lymph fluid, so-called lymphedema.
00:34:33.700 | Actually, a lab at Stanford School of Medicine is working hard.
00:34:37.540 | They've identified some of the molecular players that can help move lymph fluid out under conditions
00:34:41.940 | of lymphedema.
00:34:42.980 | I'll provide a link to an interesting discussion about that if you're curious about it,
00:34:46.580 | if you know someone who's undergoing cancer treatment and suffering from lymphedema.
00:34:51.140 | But lymphatic massage is a very common medical practice.
00:34:55.540 | A couple of things about lymphatic massage that you should know.
00:34:58.820 | I've had a lymphatic massage before and I was struck by how light the touch is.
00:35:04.660 | This is not a deep tissue massage.
00:35:06.740 | Lymphatic massage is intentionally rather light and sometimes will transition from kind of a pushing
00:35:14.580 | along of the skin.
00:35:15.860 | For those of you that do this professionally, forgive my lack of specificity here.
00:35:19.940 | I'm going to make the point in a moment that the people who are skilled at doing this really need
00:35:24.020 | to be the ones doing this.
00:35:25.140 | You could do it too for yourself.
00:35:26.340 | Like if you wanted to do self-lymphatic massage, there are ways to do this.
00:35:29.460 | There's instructions online.
00:35:30.980 | And it generally goes from, you know, people rubbing their skin fairly gently.
00:35:36.020 | People are always encouraged to do this more gently than they think they have to.
00:35:39.220 | To then usually there's some slapping or tapping which seems kind of odd to those of us that aren't
00:35:43.700 | familiar with this.
00:35:44.740 | But it all makes perfect sense given that those lymphatic capillaries are so small diameter.
00:35:49.540 | You don't want to be pushing hard on the surface of the skin because those lymphatic capillaries will
00:35:55.220 | collapse or in some cases rupture.
00:35:57.460 | And so deep tissue massage is kind of the opposite of what we're talking about when we talk about
00:36:01.380 | lymphatic massage, which is also why when people talk about, you know, gua sha or a jade roller,
00:36:06.500 | it seems kind of woo.
00:36:08.020 | But the whole point is that you're applying gentle pressure.
00:36:10.820 | And I think it's really important to point out that there's a lot of discrepancy out there in terms
00:36:16.740 | of the direction and places to start and finish when doing lymphatic massage.
00:36:22.740 | And we'll talk about that in a little bit.
00:36:24.180 | This is actually crucial because you really don't want to be squeezing or pushing on the
00:36:29.700 | lymphatic nodes, especially because they often contain infections that are being battled there,
00:36:35.220 | right?
00:36:35.460 | So massaging your lymph nodes directly should be left to professionals.
00:36:40.260 | And in many cases, those professionals told me it's not generally a good idea, right?
00:36:46.180 | Because within those lymph nodes is where you've got the battle between infections and bacteria
00:36:50.660 | and things that just need to be cleared by your immune system.
00:36:53.460 | We're talking about massaging the lymphatic vessels.
00:36:56.260 | So we've talked about a couple of practices for improving lymphatic drainage.
00:36:59.460 | We've talked about some of the practices that might seem odd when you first encounter them,
00:37:04.020 | but they make perfect sense when you understand the structure function of the lymphatic system.
00:37:08.980 | I want to talk a little bit more about how the lymphatic system is organized so that you can
00:37:13.220 | leverage any practices, including the ones I talked about and some that I'm going to talk about
00:37:16.580 | more in a few minutes in order to get drainage of lymphatic buildup in the areas of your body
00:37:23.300 | and/or face that you want and need.
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00:38:54.900 | Okay, so now you have a picture of your lymphatic system, right?
00:38:57.780 | It's a bunch of vessels, tubes that are collecting this fluid and all the waste products within them
00:39:02.820 | headed back toward the heart to get that stuff back in with the venous blood supply
00:39:08.100 | so it can be re-oxygenated.
00:39:09.540 | There are a couple of really important features
00:39:12.740 | to how it gets back to the blood that if you understand, you'll be able to facilitate your
00:39:17.460 | own lymphatic health and as a consequence, general health.
00:39:20.500 | If you've ever seen anything about the lymphatic system or lymphatic drainage or massage or anything
00:39:27.860 | related to lymphatics, as they're called, this region, in fact, I've been pointing to this region
00:39:32.820 | throughout today's episode.
00:39:33.780 | For those of you just listening, I'm pointing to my clavicle region, to my upper chest and where
00:39:38.340 | the neck meets the chest in particular.
00:39:40.180 | This area is extremely important because it's the area where lymph fluid is returned to join up with
00:39:48.660 | the blood supply.
00:39:49.620 | Remember, that fluid started off in the blood supply, got out into the interstitial space.
00:39:54.580 | It could have, but didn't, rejoin the blood supply out in the tissues.
00:39:59.380 | The lymphatic vessels grabbed it, maybe way down in your feet, maybe in your liver, maybe in your
00:40:04.260 | spleen, maybe in your brain, and now it's got to get back in with the blood.
00:40:08.500 | How does that happen?
00:40:09.620 | Well, you have two ducts, okay?
00:40:12.020 | Two tubes.
00:40:12.660 | Biology, we've got so many names for tubes.
00:40:15.620 | You have two ducts.
00:40:18.260 | You have the right lymphatic duct, which is on the right, and you have the left lymphatic duct,
00:40:24.100 | which is the thoracic lymphatic duct on the left, okay?
00:40:27.860 | Here's the deal.
00:40:29.700 | If you were to draw a line right down the middle of your face or so and out towards your shoulder
00:40:38.740 | and below it on the right, maybe a little bit of torso and your right arm,
00:40:42.420 | that right side of your face, your right arm, your right shoulder, kind of upper part of your torso
00:40:50.900 | on the right-hand side, that's all going to drain to the right side, that right thoracic duct.
00:40:56.740 | And that right thoracic duct is going to take all the lymph fluid and it's going to dump it back
00:41:02.340 | into the venous blood supply.
00:41:03.540 | It's literally going to join up with there.
00:41:05.140 | There's not so little, actually, vascular tube delivering that deoxygenated blood back to the
00:41:11.540 | heart and the lymph is going to dump into there, okay?
00:41:14.340 | The rest of your body, both your left and right feet, left and right legs, the torso,
00:41:22.100 | that's everything I didn't describe for the right thoracic duct, left arm, shoulder, all of that,
00:41:27.620 | that's all going to drain to the left thoracic duct.
00:41:30.900 | It's actually just called the thoracic duct and it's going to join up with the venous supply there.
00:41:35.380 | The veins that the lymphatic system feed into before all of that gets back to the heart
00:41:39.940 | are called the subclavian veins, okay?
00:41:41.860 | You have one on your right and you have one on your left.
00:41:44.740 | And as the name suggests, they sort of sit below, sub, your clavicles, okay?
00:41:50.980 | So you have your clavicles, which are, you know, your collarbone, sometimes people call them.
00:41:55.060 | And below those are these vessels that feed back to the heart with deoxygenated blood
00:41:59.380 | and a bunch of other stuff that needs dealing with by your cardiovascular system.
00:42:03.780 | The lymphatic drainage into these subclavian veins is a major drainage site.
00:42:09.220 | So these are big tubes dropping lymphatic fluid into big tubes.
00:42:13.060 | So this is the end point of the lymphatic system.
00:42:15.140 | Remember, it's a one-way system up from your legs, out and in from your arms,
00:42:19.220 | up through the cisterna kylite and then dumping all that lymphatic fluid back into your blood supply.
00:42:24.580 | This is why in most practices that encourage lymphatic flow or what's often talked about
00:42:29.780 | lymphatic massage, whether or not it's for lymphedema or whether or not it's for cosmetic purposes,
00:42:33.940 | very often you hear about people encouraging some light rubbing first followed by some gentle tapping
00:42:41.620 | and maybe even eventually some harder slapping of the region around the clavicles.
00:42:46.660 | Very important that you start with light touch and move up towards a more forceful touch,
00:42:51.140 | although never particularly forceful because you don't want to collapse those lymphatic vessels.
00:42:55.380 | They're very small.
00:42:56.420 | You don't want to crush them.
00:42:57.380 | You don't want to pinch them because then the lymphatic fluid won't move through them.
00:43:00.660 | So there's kind of this progression from lighter touch and kind of gentle rubbing or shearing of
00:43:04.980 | the skin, very, very light to maybe some light tapping to encourage movement of the fluid
00:43:09.140 | along and then maybe some slightly more vigorous.
00:43:11.540 | It's not really slapping, but kind of like a padding of the skin.
00:43:14.180 | That's it, a padding of the skin.
00:43:16.100 | Almost always that's somewhere in the lymphatic massage protocol, whether the protocol is for
00:43:22.420 | lymphedema under conditions of cancer treatment or it's for purely cosmetic purposes.
00:43:28.260 | Almost always there's an encouragement of movement of lymphatic fluid from that cisterna
00:43:33.860 | kyla as well, because again, that's a major reservoir just below where the lymphatic system
00:43:39.940 | is going to drain back into the blood supply.
00:43:42.100 | People debate where to start these lymphatic massages.
00:43:46.180 | This is a whole field.
00:43:47.220 | And frankly, I found differing opinions on this.
00:43:49.940 | Some people say, well, you have to start, you know, at the distal limbs, meaning out towards
00:43:54.340 | the hands and fingers, move things in.
00:43:55.620 | Other people say, well, no, you actually want to push down to the legs, then up through the legs.
00:44:00.420 | There's a lot of debate here.
00:44:02.500 | I think if you look at the mechanics of the lymphatic system, a couple of things become clear.
00:44:07.060 | You don't want to use firm pressure.
00:44:10.820 | This is not deep tissue massage.
00:44:12.340 | At some point in the protocol, you're going to want to include some encouragement of drainage from the
00:44:17.780 | clavicle reasons for all the reasons to be discussed and from the cisterna kylae.
00:44:21.700 | And then in terms of the lower legs and the legs and the arms, the out to in progression makes
00:44:29.060 | perfect sense.
00:44:29.940 | How you order those differs depending on the practitioner.
00:44:33.620 | And indeed, even in different research papers, they use different approaches.
00:44:37.300 | I'm not so sure that it matters.
00:44:39.700 | What does seem to be very important is that you're not impinging or pushing hard on the lymph nodes because
00:44:44.100 | you want lymph fluid in the lymph nodes for a certain period of time so that your immune system
00:44:51.700 | can surveil that lymph fluid and decide whether or not there are indeed any bacterial or viral
00:44:56.980 | infections or other contaminants that need to be dealt with by the immune system.
00:45:00.420 | Let's take a couple of minutes and talk about the immune functions of the lymphatic system.
00:45:05.300 | Now, for most people, when they think about the lymphatic system, they think about the immune system.
00:45:09.700 | And that's because most anyone who's ever had a cold or some other virus has had the experience of
00:45:14.740 | having their lymph nodes feel kind of swollen and maybe even a little bit painful.
00:45:18.900 | Typically that occurs in the throat or the area right below the jaw.
00:45:22.740 | If you go to the doctor, you say you're not feeling well.
00:45:26.020 | One of the first things they're going to do is they're going to kind of palpate gently and
00:45:31.460 | touch gently behind your ears, along your jawline, along your throat.
00:45:36.260 | They're going to do this.
00:45:37.220 | They might ask you if you have any swollen lymph nodes in your armpits or in your groin.
00:45:41.620 | You may even be able to sense that swelling yourself.
00:45:44.500 | And what that swelling reflects is the accumulation of lymph fluid in so-called lymph nodes.
00:45:50.580 | Lymph nodes are these outpouchings or swellings along the lymph vessels where lymph fluid and the
00:45:57.220 | stuff within lymph fluid is sequestered.
00:45:59.460 | So it's kept there for a while as opposed to just passing along through those one-way tubes.
00:46:03.220 | And it is surveilled by the immune system.
00:46:06.420 | Why and how is it surveilled by the immune system?
00:46:08.580 | Well, first of all, remember, when your cells are active, your liver cells, your brain cells,
00:46:13.700 | your muscle cells, by doing the things they do, they use nutrients and energy, glucose, they use oxygen,
00:46:21.220 | they use amino acids, they rely on hormones and all that stuff, and they generate waste.
00:46:26.740 | They generate waste products in the form of little bits of cellar debris.
00:46:30.180 | They generate ammonia.
00:46:32.260 | There's carbon dioxide.
00:46:34.740 | We listed off some of these earlier.
00:46:36.500 | But keep in mind that those cells are fed by the blood supply.
00:46:39.940 | And stuff gets into the blood supply by way of what you breathe, okay?
00:46:43.540 | So you can inhale a virus, for instance.
00:46:46.100 | Bacteria that could be in food.
00:46:49.300 | Bacteria from things that you touch that somehow gets beneath the skin and into your blood supply
00:46:53.940 | through a scratch or a cut, maybe a bite.
00:46:56.420 | These sorts of things, or maybe you cut yourself with a knife that had some bacteria,
00:47:00.820 | gets into your blood supply.
00:47:02.500 | And so you have foreign bodies, contaminants within your blood supply.
00:47:08.100 | Some of that is going to get out into the interstitial space.
00:47:11.620 | Some of that will be taken up by the lymphatic system.
00:47:15.220 | You also have things, again, waste products that are being generated by the cells of your body.
00:47:20.420 | And the lymph nodes are the place where all that stuff can be surveilled by the immune system.
00:47:24.900 | What do I mean surveilled by the immune system?
00:47:27.220 | Well, within the lymph node, you have immune cells.
00:47:31.140 | You have things like T cells and B cells, so named because the T cells mature in the thymus,
00:47:37.060 | which is a structure that is very prominent when you're young, as a baby and as a kid.
00:47:41.700 | And then over time, you actually lose your thymic tissue as you become an adult.
00:47:46.180 | And by the time you reach kind of 40s and 50s and 60s, 70s, you may not even have any thymic tissue
00:47:51.700 | whatsoever.
00:47:52.420 | You have T cells, you have B cells, which come from the bone marrow.
00:47:56.660 | These are different types of lymphocytes, different types of white blood cells.
00:47:59.620 | Again, these are all different categories.
00:48:01.460 | So I'm talking about lymphocytes, white blood cells, T cells and B cells, different subcategories
00:48:05.700 | that go into the lymph nodes and then check out and see whether or not there are bacteria and viruses
00:48:13.060 | and other kinds of foreign invaders that might need to be dealt with by the immune system.
00:48:17.380 | In addition to that, you have cells that go out into your body, things like macrophages,
00:48:23.220 | things like dendritic cells, okay, the names don't matter so much, that are looking for foreign invaders.
00:48:28.260 | Again, it could be viruses, bacteria, funguses.
00:48:30.660 | It could be even just the physical bodies that somehow made it into your system one way or the other.
00:48:35.060 | And they will literally present things to the T cells and B cells and other immune cells within
00:48:42.020 | the lymph nodes so that the T cells and B cells can generate through a process.
00:48:46.980 | It takes some time to generate antibodies to fight those things off, okay?
00:48:51.140 | I've talked about the immune system in previous episodes.
00:48:53.380 | You have an innate immune system, which is a kind of generic response to all forms of foreign invaders
00:48:58.980 | that causes some local inflammation, some swelling, sometimes some symptomology in response to a virus
00:49:04.420 | that's just very generic, like feeling stuffy, lethargic, you know, a little bit of a headache or a
00:49:11.220 | stomach ache, this kind of thing.
00:49:12.420 | And then you have your adaptive immune system, which recognizes the specific surface
00:49:18.740 | of foreign invaders and generates antibodies to essentially bind that specific surface and its
00:49:24.180 | properties and neutralize that foreign invader.
00:49:26.980 | So innate immune system and adaptive immune system within your lymph nodes, you basically have a
00:49:32.340 | confluence of a lot of different immune cell types, evaluating what's coming through in the lymph fluid,
00:49:37.620 | which reflects of course, what's in the blood.
00:49:40.420 | Because remember, the blood supply is giving oxygen and nutrients and other things to your cells.
00:49:46.260 | A lot of the fluid that's put out into the interstitial space, remember about 16 or 17 of the 20 liters per
00:49:52.100 | day will be drawn back up into the blood supply, but then some significant portion that three to four
00:49:57.060 | liters of fluid that ends up in the lymphatic system is going to reflect what's in the global circulation
00:50:03.220 | system.
00:50:03.860 | And these lymph nodes are a place where what's in the lymphatic system can be evaluated to determine
00:50:09.380 | whether or not you've got something in your body that you shouldn't or that you would like to eradicate.
00:50:13.380 | So the lymphatic system, which we've mostly been talking about up until this point as a drainage system,
00:50:17.620 | has a second purpose, right?
00:50:20.580 | It's a multitasker.
00:50:21.620 | It also serves an immune system role to evaluate what's in the lymph and therefore in the blood and
00:50:25.860 | therefore in the entire body.
00:50:28.020 | Now, while we have lymph nodes in our jaw, behind our ears, in the back of our head and occipital area,
00:50:33.300 | lower back part of our head, we also have them behind our knees, our groin, inner elbow region.
00:50:39.220 | We have collections of lymph nodes distributed essentially across the entire body, okay?
00:50:43.540 | You're not going to see them continuously across the body, but every area needs to be surveilled,
00:50:49.140 | right?
00:50:49.540 | And so you have these checkpoints everywhere along the lymph system where viruses, bacteria,
00:50:56.340 | other foreign invaders can be evaluated and combated by your immune system.
00:51:00.020 | Now, does that mean that if you have, for instance, sore lymph nodes in your left armpit,
00:51:06.740 | that you necessarily have something wrong with your left arm?
00:51:10.100 | No, not necessarily because of the way the lymphatic drainage occurs.
00:51:13.300 | However, many people who have a sore lymph node in their armpit will, you know, they'll kind of rub
00:51:18.260 | it and that makes perfect sense.
00:51:19.300 | The way the pain system works, we have a natural reflex to rub, to provide, you know, sort of broadly
00:51:24.100 | distributed medium pressure to an area that's in pain.
00:51:29.060 | It actually deactivates some of the pain response within that area.
00:51:33.460 | So like the rubbing of a wound, like we don't just rub our boo-boos because we learned to do that when
00:51:37.700 | we were kids.
00:51:38.260 | It actually shuts down some of the nerves that transmit pain.
00:51:40.980 | So that's why we have that reflex, but you want to make sure that you don't squeeze your lymph
00:51:44.900 | nodes or put too much pressure on them.
00:51:46.820 | Because again, your immune system is fighting things within those lymph nodes or is evaluating
00:51:52.260 | whether or not something needs to be destroyed by your immune system within those lymph nodes.
00:51:56.100 | Now, some soreness can exist in the lymph nodes simply as a matter of swelling of the lymph nodes.
00:52:01.300 | And that doesn't necessarily reflect infection.
00:52:03.780 | Okay.
00:52:04.100 | It can, but it doesn't necessarily reflect infection.
00:52:07.380 | If it's of course, coupled with symptoms, you know, stuffy nose, lethargy, things of that sort,
00:52:12.500 | chances are you're battling something.
00:52:14.260 | And if you do notice that your lymph nodes are particularly swollen and you haven't done,
00:52:18.420 | for instance, like a really hard workout recently, or not slept as much as usual recently,
00:52:23.700 | then you may be at the threshold of potentially getting sick and you want to take some measures
00:52:28.340 | to get some extra rest, extra hydration, probably don't want to exercise too hard those days.
00:52:32.900 | We've talked about this in previous episodes.
00:52:34.660 | You're feeling a little rundown, not sick, exercise can probably help you.
00:52:38.500 | You're a little sleep deprived one night, exercise definitely can help you.
00:52:42.100 | Two nights sleep deprivation, and you certainly don't want to be exercising with a ton of intensity
00:52:46.420 | because you will get sick.
00:52:47.620 | So those sore lymph nodes are a flag that your system is combating something.
00:52:53.220 | They're a flag that your immune cells are being recruited to that area.
00:52:57.380 | The lymph is staying in those areas longer because your immune system is trying to fight
00:53:01.620 | something back.
00:53:02.180 | So you should pay attention to that, but you don't want to be squeezing those lymph nodes.
00:53:06.100 | And as a general theme, I should have mentioned this earlier.
00:53:09.060 | If you've ever had deep tissue massage, right?
00:53:12.500 | You may notice afterwards, even if you weren't lying face down in that halo-like thing where your
00:53:16.980 | face is there, constricting your breathing a little bit, those things aren't that bad.
00:53:20.340 | They're actually kind of pleasant, lie on your stomach, get a massage.
00:53:23.620 | But if you've ever had a deep tissue massage, you may notice afterwards that your face is kind of
00:53:29.220 | puffy and you feel a little bit inflamed.
00:53:31.700 | And they'll often say, oh, you know, make sure to drink a lot of water.
00:53:34.020 | Turns out that deep tissue massage can encourage enough movement along those deeper lymphatic vessels
00:53:40.500 | and can push things through the lymph nodes earlier than it would have been pushed through and in some
00:53:47.540 | sense generate an inflammation response, not a major one, but a minor one.
00:53:51.860 | And usually this resolves within a couple of hours if you're up and walking around a bit, again,
00:53:55.940 | gently pushing through the lymphatic flow as it's supposed to be pushed through.
00:53:59.780 | The point here is that your lymph nodes are a site for combating infection.
00:54:04.020 | You don't want to push things through them any faster than it normally would occur, but you also
00:54:11.460 | don't want accumulation of lymph to occur in the nodes too long.
00:54:15.060 | And the way you ensure that it doesn't happen for too long is to keep the general lymphatic
00:54:19.540 | circulation going.
00:54:20.420 | And we've talked about ways to do that earlier.
00:54:22.420 | Earlier in our discussion about lymphedema, which is the swelling of typically the lower limbs
00:54:28.420 | that can occur, for instance, in people who are being treated for breast cancer or for other cancers,
00:54:33.140 | where the lymph nodes are intentionally destroyed by chemo or radiation therapy.
00:54:38.740 | And that's because cancer cells can actually get into the lymph nodes and they can proliferate there.
00:54:44.340 | We often hear that, you know, the cancer has spread to the lymph nodes.
00:54:47.860 | And that's one of the reasons why often the lymph nodes are removed prior to the spreading or early
00:54:52.260 | in the spreading of a cancer to try and prevent the broader migration or so-called metastasis of
00:54:56.980 | that cancer to other tissues.
00:54:58.260 | The lymphatic system is targeted in this way, because if you think about it, the lymphatic system
00:55:04.020 | is in a position to distribute all sorts of things, including bad things like cancer cells
00:55:08.580 | that could proliferate further in other tissues.
00:55:11.380 | So that's why lymph nodes and vessels are often intentionally destroyed as part of cancer treatment.
00:55:15.700 | And as a consequence, there's less drainage leading to so-called lymphedema.
00:55:19.460 | Now, lymphedema can occur for other reasons, and it has various stages.
00:55:22.900 | You know, it's actually been mapped out.
00:55:24.100 | I'll provide a link to this, but, you know, there's stage one, two, three and four.
00:55:27.700 | And to briefly summarize, you know, stage one is asymptomatic.
00:55:31.860 | So the lymphatic system has some abnormal flow, but no real fluid buildup in a tissue that you
00:55:38.100 | necessarily see might be just slight swelling.
00:55:40.740 | In stage two, you see swelling due to accumulation of the lymph fluid.
00:55:44.500 | And that may subside if you elevate that limb.
00:55:48.740 | So if you're getting some swelling of the ankles, for instance, you put your legs up and it disappears
00:55:52.340 | after, you know, putting your legs up for, you know, 20 or 30 minutes, then it's so-called stage two
00:55:57.860 | lymphedema.
00:55:59.300 | Stage three and four are where you get a more permanent swelling.
00:56:02.180 | So an accumulation of fluid and waste products in that interstitial space, that extracellular space.
00:56:08.100 | And that's when things start to become problematic because that buildup of fluid and waste products
00:56:12.980 | leads to a local immune response, which then causes thickening of the tissue above it, which then makes
00:56:18.100 | it even harder to clear out waste products.
00:56:20.660 | And the whole thing starts to cascade.
00:56:22.820 | And this is a particular problem, again, for people being treated for cancers where the lymphatic
00:56:27.300 | vessels or the lymph nodes are intentionally destroyed.
00:56:30.580 | And that's why these people often need a fair amount of lymphatic manual drainage or massage,
00:56:35.620 | it's sometimes called, in order to encourage the movement of the lymph fluid out.
00:56:39.380 | And as I mentioned earlier, there are drugs being developed to try and treat lymphedema
00:56:44.020 | through non-manual massage techniques, but that's still very much in development.
00:56:49.140 | But there's great hope for that because as you can imagine, not everyone has access to proper
00:56:54.020 | lymphatic massage for lymphedema, but it's a very important aspect of cancer treatment and
00:56:58.820 | management of cancer treatment.
00:57:00.740 | Lymphedema is something that we should all be mindful of, even minor lymphedema.
00:57:04.740 | And this means even if you're not dealing with cancer treatment, you should be cognizant of whether or
00:57:09.220 | not you're getting some limb swelling due to lymphedema.
00:57:11.540 | A little bit, fine.
00:57:12.340 | You put your feet up, you know, we'll talk about ways to clear it from your brain in a few minutes.
00:57:15.780 | But, you know, lymphedema in that buildup causes a number of problems.
00:57:20.420 | First of all, the waste products in the interstitial fluid that's accumulating there because you're not
00:57:24.340 | getting enough limb drainage can cause local inflammation, which can give way to more global
00:57:29.620 | inflammation.
00:57:30.260 | It also so happens that you get a thickening of the tissue in that area in response to that
00:57:35.700 | inflammation.
00:57:36.260 | And that thickening of the tissue causes a kind of hypoxia or a low oxygen availability for the
00:57:43.140 | cells in that area.
00:57:44.020 | So that now you've got more cells that get less oxygen that they need and the whole thing starts
00:57:48.820 | to cascade.
00:57:49.940 | So while I'm not trying to alarm anybody, you do want to do things to encourage that clearance
00:57:56.100 | of fluid and waste products from the interstitial space into the lymphatic system.
00:58:00.260 | And we talked about some of the things you can do for that earlier.
00:58:03.460 | There are other tools, by the way, that are more sophisticated.
00:58:05.780 | Like for instance, they have compression boots.
00:58:07.700 | If you've ever been on a plane or you've been running a lot or basically using the tissues
00:58:13.220 | of your lower body or upper body a lot, if you've ever run a 10K or a half marathon or
00:58:19.060 | a marathon, the heaviness of your legs, the soreness of your legs the next day, I highly recommend
00:58:24.020 | you get into a pool and tread some water, do some light swimming.
00:58:26.740 | Again, not an intense workout, but compression boots can be very helpful because they basically
00:58:31.860 | fill up with air and compress your lower limbs and then pulse your lower limbs to move that
00:58:36.260 | lymphatic fluid up toward the drainage system back into your venous blood supply.
00:58:41.620 | These lymphatic boots can be very, very useful.
00:58:44.420 | There's some cost to them, but if you have access to them, those can be great.
00:58:48.340 | If not, just try and walk around a lot, put your legs up, do anything you can to get that
00:58:52.580 | lymphatic flow going.
00:58:53.940 | You do not want too much buildup of fluid and waste products in the interstitial space
00:58:59.460 | to occur for too long.
00:59:00.660 | And if you've been using a tissue a lot, there's going to be a lot of buildup of cellular waste
00:59:05.540 | products, which brings us to the glymphatic system, which is basically just the lymphatic system for
00:59:12.100 | the brain.
00:59:12.740 | In fact, as beautiful as the system is and as delighted I am and everybody else is that in 2012,
00:59:19.380 | it was finally verified that the brain also has a lymphatic system.
00:59:22.980 | I don't like the branding.
00:59:24.900 | I don't like the naming.
00:59:25.860 | Yes, glia are involved, but by calling it the glymphatic system, people think that it's entirely
00:59:31.860 | different.
00:59:32.580 | And in fact, it's just somewhat different from the rest of the lymphatic system.
00:59:36.980 | And I think this so-called glymphatic system, which is the lymphatic drainage system of the brain,
00:59:42.180 | is so important to all of us.
00:59:44.740 | If you understand a little bit about how it's designed, its architecture, there are some very
00:59:49.460 | straightforward protocols that we'll discuss in a moment that will allow you to experience
00:59:53.380 | less brain fog, less swelling of your face in the morning, less bags underneath your eyes,
00:59:58.740 | and in general, improved wakefulness and cognition.
01:00:02.420 | And that just cascades into everything we know about how to support health.
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01:01:41.780 | Okay.
01:01:42.420 | The glymphatic system, which is the proper name for the lymphatic system of the brain.
01:01:45.940 | I was sort of joking earlier.
01:01:47.300 | I just want to make the point that our brain does have a lymphatic system.
01:01:52.100 | Up until 2012, no scientist, no physician believed that there was a lymphatic system for the brain,
01:01:59.140 | that lymphatic clearance or flow or any of that occurred in the brain.
01:02:02.020 | It was assumed that it was not because it had not been discovered.
01:02:05.860 | Except there was one scientist who had discovered it earlier and was told that she was wrong about it.
01:02:12.020 | We'll return to that a little bit later.
01:02:13.380 | But the point is that in 2012, a neuroscientist by the name of Michael Niedergaard, who studies glia,
01:02:19.780 | a form of support cell that also plays an active role in brain function and plasticity, etc.,
01:02:26.020 | she discovered that the brain has a system for clearing out waste that, by all accounts,
01:02:32.660 | looks a lot like the lymphatic clearance system in the rest of the body,
01:02:35.780 | and that it involves these cells we call glia.
01:02:38.500 | I'll just briefly describe this system because it's incredible.
01:02:42.740 | It's beautiful in its organization.
01:02:45.460 | And if you understand that organization just a little bit,
01:02:48.340 | you'll be in a position to resolve some things that chances are you and many other people you know
01:02:54.020 | suffer from, things like brain fog, things like puffiness of the face and under the eyes when
01:02:59.540 | you wake up in the morning, things like changes in your cosmetic appearance that occur throughout the
01:03:06.660 | day and when you don't sleep as well as you might have wished you had slept the night before.
01:03:11.300 | In fact, let's just do a little mental experiment for a moment.
01:03:14.500 | Have you ever had a poor night's sleep and compared the way that you look after a poor night's sleep
01:03:20.500 | versus after a great night's sleep? Just next time that happens, take a picture of yourself,
01:03:25.060 | right? You don't have to show it to anybody. Just take a picture of yourself
01:03:27.700 | after a great night's sleep and take a picture ideally in the same location under the same lighting,
01:03:33.300 | but even if it's under different lighting of yourself after a poor night's sleep where you either
01:03:38.900 | didn't sleep at all or you got maybe two hours less than usual sleep and you will see that you look
01:03:44.580 | very different. Your eyes will be sagging. You have those bags under your eyes. The eyebrows generally
01:03:50.900 | drop. There's a kind of a change in the tone of the eyes. You'll notice that's very typical and any creases
01:03:59.300 | or wrinkles that you have will become more apparent. You know, like if you think about it, that's wild.
01:04:05.540 | You sleep two hours less or three hours less than usual where you get one poor night's sleep and you
01:04:10.820 | look very, very different. And equally impressive is if you then get a great night's sleep the next
01:04:15.860 | night, you're going to bounce back and you look yourself again, as we say. And your mind also parallels
01:04:22.500 | these changes, right? If you get three hours less than your usual allocation of sleep, your brain just
01:04:28.900 | does not work as well. We know that. And you don't feel as well. You're more reactive. You're more likely
01:04:32.820 | to have kind of attention deficit-like symptoms, right? You might not have full-blown adhd, but you'll
01:04:39.460 | you tend to be a bit more moody. You're certainly more susceptible to infections, but at the level of the
01:04:44.420 | brain, your brain is not the same as when you get a great night's sleep. Get a great night's sleep and you're
01:04:48.580 | just right back where you normally are. And if you don't sleep well for a few nights or many nights,
01:04:54.980 | you'll notice that your appearance will very rapidly change. I'm not trying to scare people,
01:04:58.580 | right? We have lots of episodes on how to get great sleep. We have zero cost toolkit on how to get great
01:05:03.060 | sleep. All that's available at hubermanlab.com. Just put sleep, sleep toolkit, perfect your sleep,
01:05:07.140 | all that. And you'll find all those tools in whatever format you want. But what is it about sleep that is so
01:05:13.620 | markedly changing our appearance and the way that our brain works? And the answer is,
01:05:18.260 | the clearance of waste products from your brain, which occurs through essentially what is the
01:05:23.460 | lymphatic system of your brain during sleep, doesn't get the opportunity to do that when you don't get
01:05:28.660 | enough sleep. It is that straightforward. So let me explain this brain lymphatic system and how you can
01:05:34.820 | get it to operate at its best. And I'm not just going to tell you to do that by getting enough sleep.
01:05:39.540 | You certainly should try to do that, but there are some things that you can do to encourage better
01:05:43.780 | lymphatic clearance within the brain while you sleep and maybe even get by with a little less
01:05:48.900 | sleep than you think you need, but making that sleep better suited for lymphatic clearance within the
01:05:54.100 | brain. Okay. So it wasn't even two decades ago that this system was discovered of clearing out of
01:06:00.820 | waste products from the brain. And what Dr. Nedegaard so beautifully hypothesized was there has to be a
01:06:07.220 | system for this, right? There has to be a system. Why? Because your brain cells are some of the most
01:06:12.900 | metabolically active cells in your entire body, right? You know, your brain is just a small portion
01:06:18.020 | of your total body weight and volume, but it has a super high metabolism. The cells that need things,
01:06:22.340 | they need oxygen, they need glucose. Even if you're on a keto diet, they need nutrients and they're
01:06:27.300 | kicking out waste products like crazy. And that stuff has to get cleared from the brain. Now you have a
01:06:31.700 | fluid within your brain called cerebral spinal fluid that moves within the so-called ventricles of the
01:06:36.500 | brain. So the space is within the brain and really your whole brain is bathed in cerebral spinal fluid.
01:06:42.820 | Your brain is floating in this stuff and it essentially has access to all the cells in your brain.
01:06:47.540 | So as your cells make waste, it's picked up by the cerebral spinal fluid. Now the cerebral spinal fluid
01:06:55.620 | is circulated, right? You create the cerebral spinal fluid. It's actually manufactured in a very interesting
01:07:01.460 | tissue and kind of collection of tissues broadly referred to as the choroid plexus. But you know,
01:07:07.300 | there's stuff like meninges. If you go to medical school or you become a neuroscientist, you learn
01:07:10.820 | all about the details of these things. But for today's discussion, I understand that the cerebral
01:07:14.100 | spinal fluid is made. It bathes your brain and it can collect the waste products from the brain.
01:07:19.220 | Beautiful observations by Dr. Niedergaard and others found that in animal models, and now we know this is
01:07:25.780 | also true in humans. When you go to sleep at night, the vasculature that goes into your brain,
01:07:31.300 | because of course your brain does get artery inflow, okay? You have to give blood supply,
01:07:36.340 | oxygenated blood to the brain, and actually comes up from the bottom of the brain. There's a structure
01:07:40.020 | down there called the circle of Willis. So your brain is actually resting on kind of a little trampoline
01:07:44.180 | of vasculature down at the bottom. If you ever flip over a brain and the vasculature is intact,
01:07:50.180 | there's a little circle down there called the circle of Willis. And those arteries,
01:07:53.460 | remember they're thick, they generate a lot of pressure. So your brain is kind of bouncing on
01:07:57.060 | those like a little, you know, kind of rebounding itself, seriously. And then the vasculature climbs
01:08:03.300 | up along the top of the brain and it makes basically a right angle and then dive into the brain. And then
01:08:08.420 | it branches out to basically make sure that all the cells and areas of the brain get blood supply for
01:08:14.020 | oxygen and nutrients and so forth. Now that's the case during the daytime and it's also the case at night.
01:08:20.580 | However, during sleep, what happens is the areas around the vasculature that goes into the brain
01:08:26.420 | literally spreads out. They call it the perivascular space. Literally it's as if every bit of vasculature
01:08:33.060 | has a little area around it where there aren't neurons. And that space gets 60% larger in sleep.
01:08:41.540 | It literally clears away so that there's big tubes or big areas along the blood vessels where
01:08:47.780 | cerebrospinal fluid, this fluid that's bathing the brain can then run up to the surface of the brain
01:08:53.780 | and out to the areas of the brain away from the cells and then literally get cleared out of the brain and
01:09:01.620 | into the venous blood supply. Okay. That's a very general description of how this works, but I want
01:09:05.780 | to put a slightly more detailed picture into your mind because this is amazing, right? You have these
01:09:10.660 | cells, these glial cells called astrocytes. There are a bunch of different glial cells, but astrocytes
01:09:14.580 | are one of them. And the astrocytes have what a little called end feet. And the end feet can touch the
01:09:20.340 | synapses, the connection points between neurons, and they can also touch the vasculature. And at night, when you go to
01:09:26.020 | sleep, what these astrocytes do is they literally push out and create more perivascular space.
01:09:32.500 | Peri just means near, near the vasculature. They create more perivascular space and they express
01:09:37.380 | a protein, a channel, which is really cool, called aquaporin-4. Someone won the Nobel Prize for
01:09:41.380 | discovering aquaporin-4. And aquaporin-4 is under circadian regulation, so it tends to be more active
01:09:48.820 | at night. And when you go to sleep, you basically create these spaces around the vasculature so that all
01:09:53.940 | the waste that's built up in the cerebral spinal fluid can flow out along the vasculature and get
01:09:59.700 | cleared from the brain. Now, there's a whole process by which it goes out and then from the brain and
01:10:04.580 | then it travels in different ducts and different pathways. It even can travel along your cranial
01:10:08.740 | nerves out of your brainstem and out, but it eventually all joins up in the blood supply,
01:10:14.180 | just like the rest of the lymphatic flow. So this is incredible. While you sleep, you clear out the
01:10:20.020 | garbage from your brain. Although I don't really like calling it garbage because it's the
01:10:23.620 | natural byproduct of healthy cellular function. But I find it so interesting that people didn't
01:10:29.300 | think that there was a lymphatic system in the brain, or at least they couldn't find it.
01:10:32.420 | But Dr. Nedegaard found it. And I'll just briefly tell you, she wasn't the first one to find it.
01:10:37.460 | The first person to find it, this is just kind of brief science anecdote here, but it's pretty
01:10:43.380 | important to hear. The first person to find it was a woman by the name of Patricia Grady. She was at the
01:10:48.900 | University of Maryland and she was doing some experiments and she discovered that the brain
01:10:54.900 | has something kind of like a lymphatic system. Okay. She was doing some injections of this dye,
01:11:00.020 | which gets circulated and she knows some of this dye was making it, you know, along the perivascular
01:11:04.740 | areas and now into the surface of the brain and so on. Basically the same observation that was made in
01:11:08.900 | 2012, but much earlier. And she talked to her colleagues about it and she talked about it at
01:11:13.940 | meetings and other groups in particular, I won't mention names, two very large, famous scientific
01:11:21.220 | groups tried to replicate her work, but in a different experimental model. And they tried to image the
01:11:26.580 | movement of dye out of the brain at night and they did not observe it. But the reason they didn't
01:11:31.780 | observe it was not because they were bad scientists, but they made a mistake they weren't aware of,
01:11:36.820 | which is they created a little hole in the skull in order to image the movement of the dye in the brain.
01:11:42.980 | And they didn't close that hole in the skull with a lens or something else to keep the pressure in.
01:11:49.060 | So all the pressure was gone. So the lymph couldn't move along at all. They didn't observe it and they
01:11:53.460 | concluded it wasn't there and everyone believed them, not her because you know, they were the more
01:11:58.420 | famous larger groups. She moved off to a different field. Fortunately, she ended up at the national
01:12:04.180 | institutes of health, funded a lot of great work, including the later work that Dr. Niedergaard
01:12:08.100 | used to discover that there is in fact a lymphatic system in the brain. So give credit where credit's due.
01:12:15.620 | And also remember just because somebody observed something and somebody else doesn't does not mean
01:12:20.340 | that it doesn't exist. Going back to the lymphatic system, how can you encourage better clearance of
01:12:26.660 | waste product from your brain at night, which is something you absolutely want to do if you want
01:12:31.940 | to have less brain fog and wake up from sleep, perhaps even less sleep than you think you need,
01:12:37.060 | feeling fresh and cognitively focused, et cetera. Well, it turns out there've been a number of studies
01:12:41.780 | looking at sleeping position. Every animal or at least every mammal puts its head down to sleep.
01:12:48.260 | Okay. My bulldog Costello, because he had a big thick skull, he used to put his chin down and he'd
01:12:52.900 | sleep basically with his chin along the floor. I saw a picture of giraffes. I don't know if they all sleep
01:12:57.140 | like this. Well, I should put their head down and sleep perhaps because lying on their side is tough.
01:13:01.700 | Some animals sleep on their side. Some animals sleep on their back. Humans, of course, can sleep in any of those
01:13:05.860 | different configurations, but all mammals make some attempt to put their head down in sleep.
01:13:12.180 | Okay. So what sleeping position is best for humans to encourage glymphatic drainage? And it turns out
01:13:17.700 | the answer is to sleep on your side. Okay. There haven't been a ton of systematic studies of this,
01:13:22.820 | but if you were to compare sleeping on your back, sleeping on your stomach or sleeping on your side,
01:13:26.900 | as it relates to the efficiency of glymphatic drainage, you would say that sleeping on your side is best.
01:13:33.140 | So much so that there are even people, we're not in sleep studies that are putting on what equates to like
01:13:39.300 | a fanny pack and putting the fanny in the fanny position. I know everyone carries the fanny pack up front,
01:13:44.180 | so it's not really a fanny pack. I don't know. Use your imagination what it should be called.
01:13:47.940 | But in any case, there are studies where people are taking the fanny pack, putting it behind them so that
01:13:53.620 | they can't roll onto their back, at least not easily in sleep at night, forcing them to sleep on their
01:13:58.180 | side, either right or left side does not seem to matter. So if you want to experiment with this, you
01:14:04.900 | can. I'm a back sleeper, sometimes a side sleeper, what they call, I think it's like crawling soldier
01:14:09.620 | stance where I find myself, you know, if I wake up with one arm bent and one extended, kind of like
01:14:13.860 | reaching out for the wall or something like that, one knee bent. But I actually have been making some
01:14:18.660 | effort to sleep on my side as a reflection of what I learned in the preparation for this episode and the
01:14:23.380 | papers that I read about glymphatic clearance. And I'm going to make more of an effort to do that
01:14:27.780 | because I personally would like to get by with a little less sleep. I love getting eight hours.
01:14:34.020 | I generally get somewhere between six and seven. I feel pretty good, but I've noticed with each
01:14:39.540 | successive year that I wake up a little bit foggier from that six or seven hours of sleep than I did
01:14:44.820 | previously. And I haven't changed anything else dramatically. What is changing? My age. What changes
01:14:50.900 | with age, the amount of inflammatory molecules that you release in the brain
01:14:55.300 | as a consequence of its normal levels of activity. And this has a detrimental feedback loop, right?
01:15:00.740 | Same level of mental attention, same level of mental demand, more inflammatory response because of more
01:15:07.380 | waste product created. More clearance of that waste product therefore is a good thing for brain health,
01:15:12.820 | so much so that there are really nice studies showing that a, if you impair glymphatic clearance by
01:15:18.740 | disrupting sleep or use some other method to impair glymphatic clearance, like disrupt the aquaporin 4 channel,
01:15:24.500 | that you get more buildup of things like amyloid plaques, things associated with dementia, like diseases,
01:15:30.900 | like Alzheimer's, but also more buildup of inflammatory molecules like interleukins and TNF alpha generally,
01:15:37.220 | which make the brain more susceptible to micro strokes and at a very low level are probably what's
01:15:43.300 | relating to this thing that we call brain fog. So I really would encourage everyone to try and
01:15:48.740 | emphasize side sleeping if you can, if you are sleeping your normal ration, or even if you're not getting
01:15:55.220 | your normal ration of sleep to really try and optimize your sleep environment a bit in order to improve
01:16:00.580 | glymphatic clearance. A couple of things that we know reduce glymphatic clearance are alcohol intake in the day and
01:16:05.620 | night before, which reduces REM sleep, which reduces glymphatic clearance. We know that exercise actually
01:16:11.220 | can have a beneficial effect on glymphatic clearance provided it's not too late in the day, not too much
01:16:15.540 | caffeine or anything with that exercise to impair your sleep, but cardiovascular exercise in particular
01:16:20.580 | can improve glymphatic clearance later that night. We know that keeping your sleep environment cool,
01:16:26.660 | which optimizes sleep, all the things that promote sleep will promote glymphatic clearance, but there
01:16:30.900 | are a couple of things in particular sleeping on your side, as well as perhaps elevating your feet a bit,
01:16:35.300 | maybe five to 10 degrees, just putting a pillow underneath your feet to get a little bit of
01:16:38.900 | elevation of the feet for more lymphatic clearance in the legs. And some people have even hypothesized
01:16:43.860 | that sleeping on your side with a pillow that isn't super flat, so your head at least isn't tilted down.
01:16:48.820 | Remember the lymphatic system fights gravity all the time. So you don't want your head falling back
01:16:53.540 | at the very least. And maybe instead of sleeping flat or having your head falling back, you have your head
01:16:59.060 | slightly tilted up. Usually a pillow will accomplish that. So all of these things are very simple to implement.
01:17:04.420 | They're essentially zero cost to implement, but all the studies of disrupting sleep and looking at
01:17:09.460 | glymphatic clearance and waste products and the downstream effects on cognition and brain longevity
01:17:13.940 | all point in the same direction. You need the waste cleared out of your brain at night, which means
01:17:17.620 | getting great sleep. And you also need the lymphatic system to be positioned, literally, pun intended,
01:17:23.380 | for you to get the maximal amount of glymphatic clearance while you sleep. And as it relates to the cosmetic
01:17:28.900 | effects that I think most people want, I don't think anyone wants to wake up with puffy eyes and puffy
01:17:33.540 | face. Sleeping with your head a little bit elevated will also assist there. Okay. I talked to two
01:17:39.220 | dermatologists who confirm that, that a lot of the puffiness that people are concerned about with their
01:17:43.700 | eyes in the morning, and they feel like they need to, you know, ice underneath their eyes.
01:17:47.940 | Some people even sell these patches that go on the eyes. It's kind of interesting, those patches,
01:17:51.780 | by the way. The dermatologist I spoke to said the reason those patches probably work is they just
01:17:56.100 | provide some gentle pressure to encourage the lymph out of that area. It may be as simple as that,
01:18:01.700 | something you probably could accomplish with your fingers just as easily, but it makes sense why those
01:18:05.300 | stickers would probably help. A lot of them are lined with other things these days, you know, peptides
01:18:09.220 | and collagen and things to make them more attractive as a commercial product, but you don't necessarily
01:18:12.900 | need those. And there is this business of lymphatic massage and fascial massage for the face.
01:18:19.540 | And there, I have to say, there are some very, very striking examples of before and afters of
01:18:25.540 | people who do just a little bit of pressure-based and, you know, very specific, meaning in the proper
01:18:33.060 | order and in the proper locations for the neck. We already talked about why the neck and clavicle
01:18:37.940 | region is so important under the jaw, the face for the lymphatic system and for the fascia,
01:18:44.020 | which as we talked about earlier, is intimately related to those lymphatic vessels. And especially
01:18:48.980 | in the face of the lymphatic vessels, that is the lymphatic capillaries that innervate the eyelids,
01:18:53.940 | around the eyes, those are going to be tiny, tiny, tiny, and very easy to impinge, to pinch shut.
01:18:59.460 | So the degree of pressure that one requires at different locations in the face and the proper
01:19:04.260 | order to do all that is indeed very important. And the before and afters of people's kind of,
01:19:09.060 | let's just call it what it is, youthfulness and kind of levels of alertness appearance,
01:19:15.380 | the height of the natural kind of resting place for the eyebrows, the, you know, as opposed to sunken
01:19:19.700 | eyes and sunken eyebrows, you know, open eyes, and even what appears to be like the cheekbones,
01:19:24.340 | those can undergo very dramatic shifts with proper fascial and lymphatic massage.
01:19:30.420 | And those approaches are out there. So one person who's considered one of the best experts in this
01:19:35.380 | area and who has tutorials about this, how you can use fascial and lymph drainage and massage for the
01:19:41.460 | face in order to make it look more useful is somebody, by the way, I have no financial relationship to,
01:19:47.300 | is Anastasia beauty fascia. It's an account on Instagram. I believe there are also accounts
01:19:52.420 | on other social media channels, put a link to it in the show note captions, the before and afters that
01:19:57.940 | she shows there of the people who apply these methods, which are non-surgical, non-drug, non-Botox methods.
01:20:05.380 | She makes it very clear. That's the case are absolutely striking. I mean, you see some before
01:20:10.180 | and afters after two weeks, 30 days, 60 days that are like absolutely striking, really, you know,
01:20:17.700 | how could that possibly be? Well, when you learn how the lymphatic system works, when you understand
01:20:22.740 | about how lymph can pool, how fluid can accumulate in the interstitial space, if it's not getting clear
01:20:28.660 | by the lymphatic system. And when you understand the both superficial vessels and deeper vessels of
01:20:34.500 | the lymphatic system are related to light touch at the surface in the proper directions and the drainage
01:20:41.460 | out of the head and neck, as well as accessing the deeper lymphatic vessels that are associated with the
01:20:46.660 | fascia, it all makes perfect sense. There's absolutely no reason why those sorts of results couldn't be
01:20:53.220 | accomplished, but the order of operations for something like that is very important. It's not the case that one
01:20:58.500 | can just rub under the eyes and, you know, rub a bit on the forehead or hold up the eyebrows.
01:21:02.420 | If it were, of course, everyone would be doing it. So it's nice that there are people such as
01:21:06.820 | Anastasia Beauty Fascia who are providing the methods for people to do that. So if you're interested in
01:21:11.460 | those methods, again, I have no financial relationship to them whatsoever, but makes sense why they could,
01:21:18.980 | should, and indeed appear to work. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors,
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01:23:12.100 | puffiness of the face, but swelling. And we talk about water retention, edema, and we generally don't
01:23:19.060 | want that, right? Most people don't want water retention. You can clear a lot of water retention
01:23:24.020 | simply by hydrating well. You know, you're going to urinate more. You're going to balance the amount of
01:23:28.180 | fluid and salt appropriately. I've done an entire episode about this. You talk about kidney function,
01:23:32.340 | aldosterone, et cetera. But the point is this, a lot of fluid accumulation occurs in the interstitial space
01:23:39.380 | because the lymphatic flow is not sufficient. The rate of the lymphatic flow is not sufficient,
01:23:44.180 | I should say. Hydration will definitely support lymphatic flow and drainage, okay? This is one of
01:23:51.300 | the major reasons why you need to make sure you're drinking enough water. It's very important to maintain
01:23:54.740 | proper blood volume and your lymphatic flow will be improved. How much is enough water? We've talked about
01:24:00.740 | in previous episodes. If you're exercising or sweating a lot, you can use the Galpin equation.
01:24:05.220 | I'll put that in the show note captions if you really want to get technical.
01:24:08.180 | For most people, the best thing to do is the following. When you wake up, drink 16 to 32 ounces
01:24:12.900 | of water. In addition to whatever other fluids you happen to be drinking, yerba monte, if you're me,
01:24:17.860 | coffee, perhaps if you're you, or both for me on some days, if I really need to get caffeinated,
01:24:22.740 | but also drink enough water. And then just make sure that every hour or two, you drink eight to 16
01:24:29.060 | ounces of water. It might seem like a lot. Yes, you might take a few extra trips to the restroom,
01:24:33.140 | but by doing that, you can ensure that your blood volume, your sodium balance, as well as your
01:24:37.700 | lymphatic system are operating about as well as they could be, as long as you're doing all the other
01:24:41.940 | things that we talked about to encourage your lymphatic system to be flowing along.
01:24:45.540 | So by now you're probably realizing that a lot of the things that you and other people are already
01:24:50.980 | doing are probably helping you in part through the lymphatic system. Okay. I think we all know that we
01:24:57.620 | should hydrate well. I just gave you another reason why you should hydrate well because of its effects on
01:25:02.180 | the lymphatic system. Most everybody knows that we should be doing cardiovascular exercise and resistance
01:25:07.940 | exercise every week. Okay. For some people will be a bit more of one versus the other.
01:25:12.420 | Some people are doing an equal amount of both. You do resistance training to strengthen your muscles,
01:25:17.380 | your bones, your tendons, to offset loss of power, speed, and muscle that occurs as you age.
01:25:22.500 | Also for the aesthetic reasons, for many people, cardiovascular exercise also for aesthetic reasons,
01:25:28.500 | but also of course, to improve the functioning of your cardiovascular system, your heart,
01:25:33.140 | strength, right? Most people believe that you do cardio to improve your heart function. You increase
01:25:37.700 | stroke volume of your heart, for instance, how much blood you can beat out to your body
01:25:40.900 | by strengthening and in some cases, even enlarging your heart a bit.
01:25:44.820 | What most people probably don't realize is that many of the positive effects of exercise, in particular,
01:25:50.980 | cardiovascular exercise, occur because cardiovascular exercise promotes what's called lymphoneogenesis,
01:25:57.060 | the growth of new lymphatic vessels that innervate the heart,
01:26:01.620 | remove waste products from the cells of the heart. Remember, your heart cells are active all the time,
01:26:05.780 | generating tons of waste, also consuming tons of oxygen and nutrients, and that needs to be cleared
01:26:12.980 | out. And as we age, our heart gets less efficient at clearing out that waste. Cardiovascular exercise
01:26:19.540 | increases literally the number of lymphatic vessels that allow the drainage of those toxins away from the
01:26:25.060 | heart, which greatly supports the cells of the heart, but also because this whole thing is a loop,
01:26:30.180 | if you remember the lymphatic system feeds back to the venous blood supply,
01:26:34.020 | then that blood gets oxygenated and it goes back to the heart. The heart of course is supplied
01:26:38.900 | its own blood system, right? The heart also needs oxygen and blood supply. That's why we have so-called
01:26:43.540 | coronary arteries, right? The arteries that serve the heart itself.
01:26:46.340 | So by increasing the amount of lymphatic vessels, you can increase the amount of lymphatic drainage from the
01:26:50.900 | heart and the whole system functions much better. In fact, there are several papers and I'll link to
01:26:55.620 | these in the show note captions. I'll just read you the titles of these. They make obvious what
01:27:00.340 | the conclusions are. One is lymphoneogenesis contributes to exercise-induced physiological
01:27:07.380 | cardiac growth. The actual growth of the heart is enabled by the development of these new lymph
01:27:12.500 | vessels to the heart that are induced by exercise. So that's really cool. And in addition, I hate to break
01:27:18.260 | it to you, but for all of us, your heart gets less healthy as you age, even if you stay very healthy
01:27:22.900 | as you age. In part, that's due to inflammation from the buildup of waste products within the heart.
01:27:27.300 | There are other reasons for this too, but is now been demonstrated in here. I'm quoting the title of
01:27:31.380 | this paper. Again, I'll put a link to it in the show note captions. Exercise-induced cardiac
01:27:35.700 | lymphatic remodeling mitigates inflammation in the aging heart. So this isn't the addition of new
01:27:41.220 | lymphatic vessels. This is remodeling the branching and extension of existing lymphatic vessels into
01:27:46.900 | areas that they weren't before so they can pull waste from the cells in those areas. So the exact
01:27:51.620 | opposite of lymphedema where there's not enough drainage and there's buildup of waste products
01:27:57.380 | and fluid, and you end up with a bunch of issues there of local inflammation that makes that tissue
01:28:02.020 | sick and then eventually can spread to other tissues. It's quite serious. This is the exact opposite of
01:28:06.660 | that you're getting more entry of the lymphatic vessels. You're getting new lymphatic vessels
01:28:13.540 | from cardiovascular exercise. And as a consequence, more clearance of waste product from the heart and
01:28:18.500 | the heart can function better. So much so that at least the conclusion of this paper was that it
01:28:23.780 | significantly contributes to the offset of inflammation of the aging heart. So again, this isn't
01:28:30.100 | pushing you to necessarily do something you're not doing already. If you're doing your cardio, keep up your
01:28:34.580 | cardio. You should also be resistance training. We all should. But if you're not doing cardiovascular
01:28:39.380 | exercise and you're just lifting, I know a number of people that do that. They think, "Well, my heart
01:28:42.820 | rate gets up and I can hop on the bike every once in a while and I don't get too fatigued. My VO2 max is
01:28:48.100 | decent and this sort of thing." Yeah, well, resistance training has its own set of benefits and it probably
01:28:54.100 | can positively impact the lymphatic system as well, but there's just now oh so much data supporting the
01:28:59.860 | fact that regular cardiovascular exercise can really improve heart function by improving
01:29:04.260 | lymphoneogenesis and the growth and extension of existing lymphatic vessels into areas of the heart
01:29:10.020 | that they weren't before or that they were slowly receding from. So I really encourage you to keep
01:29:14.740 | up that cardiovascular exercise if you're already doing it and if you're not, to start. And if keeping your
01:29:20.420 | heart healthy is not incentive enough, turns out that here I quote again, "Aerobic exercise improves
01:29:27.620 | clearance of amyloid beta by the lymphatic system." And this isn't a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease,
01:29:34.020 | but this is just one example of many, many examples whereby, as I've talked about before,
01:29:40.660 | exercise improves sleep, sleep improves glymphatic clearance, which clears away toxins in the brain,
01:29:47.620 | which can offset age-related dementia and a bunch of other negative effects like brain fog.
01:29:51.780 | But in addition to that, exercise has direct effects in increasing the amount of glymphatic clearance
01:29:57.780 | that's occurring in those perivascular spaces of the brain while you sleep. So more and more evidence
01:30:02.420 | that we should, yes, get enough sleep, but we should also exercise not just because it improves our sleep,
01:30:07.380 | but because it can improve glymphatic clearance from the brain. And this is probably the major reason,
01:30:12.500 | in my opinion, why cardiovascular exercise done regularly improves brain function. I know
01:30:17.620 | people love to talk about BDNF, brain-derived nootrophic factor. I've worked on brain-derived
01:30:21.700 | nootrophic factor. I know a lot about brain growth factors. I think it's super interesting. And indeed,
01:30:25.540 | I think that high-intensity interval training, anything where you experience a burn, a lactate
01:30:30.100 | accumulation in the muscles, yes, can stimulate more BDNF. And I think there's oh so much evidence that
01:30:35.060 | that's great. But I think when you look at the literature carefully, most of the positive effects
01:30:40.180 | of regular cardiovascular exercise on brain function, working memory, declarative memory,
01:30:46.820 | focus ability, and a number of other things occur because you're getting excellent glymphatic clearance
01:30:54.740 | during sleep. And you're getting just more clearance of waste products, even in wakefulness.
01:30:59.460 | So here we are again, exercise, exercise, exercise, sleep, sleep, sleep. And to really hit on this
01:31:06.340 | theme of things that you may already be doing, and if you're not, you probably should, I want to just
01:31:10.980 | briefly mention one or two other things. First of all, this wouldn't be a Huberman Lab podcast episode if
01:31:15.540 | we didn't talk about light. And no, I'm not going to tell you to get morning sunlight in your eyes to set
01:31:20.820 | your circadian rhythm and boost your morning cortisol, because I've said that many times before and you
01:31:25.140 | should already be doing that. And if you're not, you should do it. However, there is a place for light,
01:31:31.060 | in particular long wavelength light in supporting lymphatic health. So perhaps you know, perhaps you
01:31:37.220 | don't. Light has many different wavelengths. Short wavelengths tend to be things like UV, blue light,
01:31:42.020 | green light. Longer wavelength light is red light, near infrared, and infrared light. You can't see infrared
01:31:47.780 | light. Pit vipers can, you can't. However, long wavelength light and short wavelength light and
01:31:53.380 | everything in between does come from the sun. When the sun is low in the sky, such as near sunrise
01:31:59.940 | and around sunset, you see more of the long wavelength light in the form of oranges, reds, pinks, and so
01:32:05.700 | forth. And anytime the sun is out, you can feel the warmth of the sun, especially when there's not too
01:32:11.060 | much overcast clouds in the way. And that warmth from the sun, that's infrared light.
01:32:17.700 | Okay. The light you can't see, but feels warm. That's infrared light. The red light, of course,
01:32:22.660 | is red light. Near infrared is somewhere in between. It turns out that the long wavelengths of light that
01:32:27.300 | come from the sun or that come from so-called red light devices, which most commonly are not just red light,
01:32:32.340 | but they're red light, near infrared and infrared. What we refer to as somewhere between about 620 and maybe a
01:32:39.140 | thousand nanometers, so that's long wavelengths. By comparison, short wavelengths would be down
01:32:44.100 | to the 300s and 400s and 500s. But the long wavelength light of, say, 620 nanometers all the way out to,
01:32:51.460 | usually it's about 850 nanometers that comes from a red light device, near infrared light device,
01:32:56.340 | infrared light device. That can penetrate deep into the skin. So it has effects on the skin. It has
01:33:02.820 | effects deep to the skin. And there are a lot of different ways that it can affect our health.
01:33:07.780 | But one of the main ways is that it improves the mitochondrial function of cells. Now there's a lot of
01:33:13.460 | data out there now showing that red light exposure from a red light device, and even from the sun,
01:33:18.820 | can improve wound healing in the skin, reduce symptoms of acne, and can reduce inflammation.
01:33:24.820 | There are now also data showing that long wavelength light exposure can reduce lymphedema in conditions
01:33:31.220 | like people who are being treated for breast cancer, or can simply reduce inflammation for people that are
01:33:37.060 | not suffering from cancer or full-blown lymphedema, but have some puffiness of the face or some other
01:33:42.820 | tissue that's experiencing swelling. Long wavelength light can help. And that much of that effect
01:33:48.420 | is by way of improvements of blood flow to that area, as well as improvements in mitochondrial function.
01:33:54.260 | And that's because the long wavelength light can actually have impact on the skin itself and deep to
01:33:58.740 | the skin. And I've talked about the mechanism before, but to make a long story short, the long wavelength
01:34:05.060 | light, those photons can actually impact the electrons on mitochondria and for lack of a better way to put it,
01:34:12.260 | charge the mitochondria, which leads to more ATP, more cellular energy and so forth.
01:34:18.020 | What's interesting is that there are now more and more data showing that long wavelength light
01:34:22.500 | exposure to the skin can reduce inflammation, improve skin appearance, reduce acne, et cetera,
01:34:28.340 | in part by improving the function of the lymphatic system. And it does that apparently through the same
01:34:33.620 | mechanism that it does to improve skin cells and the circulatory system for blood, meaning the capillaries
01:34:39.860 | and blood vessels and so forth. So when we hear that red light devices, near infrared light devices and infrared
01:34:46.580 | saunas and getting some low solar angle sunlight on our skin, either near sunrise and perhaps also in the
01:34:52.180 | evening at sunset or in the late afternoon is beneficial for our skin. It appears that that quote unquote
01:34:59.140 | benefit for the skin is direct to the skin cells, also to the vascular cells that are delivering blood,
01:35:04.180 | and also to the lymphatic vessels that are removing waste from the general area.
01:35:08.660 | So the point is that long wavelength light exposure, either from a device or from low solar angle,
01:35:13.860 | sunlight can reduce inflammation in your skin and can improve appearance. And in part that effect is
01:35:19.140 | occurring through the lymphatic system. And in terms of protocols, the typical kind of, you know, 10 to 30
01:35:24.340 | minutes of morning sunlight viewing, as well as getting some long wavelength light on your skin at a
01:35:28.420 | time where the UV index isn't too high. So maybe in the late afternoon or evening can be very beneficial.
01:35:33.860 | If you're trying to decide whether or not to get long wavelength light exposure for sake of appearance
01:35:38.100 | and lymphatic clearance from a device or from the sun, just keep in mind that the sun always includes
01:35:44.100 | some UV in it, right? UV exposure is going to be highest in the middle of the day, less when the sun is
01:35:49.940 | low in the sky near sunrise and near sunset. A long wavelength light device that delivers red light near
01:35:55.460 | infrared and infrared light, of course has no UV in it. So you're just purely getting the benefits of the
01:36:00.900 | long wavelength light for your lymphatic system and the other systems that are local to the skin.
01:36:05.540 | Okay. So we've taken quite the tour through the lymphatic system. And I'm guessing for most of you,
01:36:09.700 | this is the first time that you've explored or heard about the lymphatic system in depth.
01:36:13.300 | And I just want to underscore again, what an incredible system it is. It's intimately related to
01:36:19.220 | every organ and tissue in our entire body. And it's crucial for the removal of waste from those tissues.
01:36:25.460 | And it's crucial for immune surveillance. So if nothing else, I hope that you can now
01:36:30.500 | thoroughly appreciate this incredible system that is the lymphatic system.
01:36:34.260 | It's not just a passive system. And yet, as you recall, it does not have a pump. So you need to do
01:36:39.060 | things to help move that lymphatic fluid along to support all its critical roles. In researching this
01:36:44.420 | episode, I personally was just blown away by how many important roles the lymphatic system plays.
01:36:49.860 | And I was surprised that I hadn't heard about a lot of these important roles before. And I think in
01:36:54.820 | large part, that's because it's only recently in the last decade and a half or so that we've really
01:36:59.620 | come to appreciate just how critical the lymphatic system is, for instance, in the brain and the
01:37:04.580 | relationship between brain and body dynamics and the circulatory system that make it central to
01:37:09.620 | everything. So I'm amazed by it. I hope you're amazed by it. And I hope you will indeed take action
01:37:14.980 | to support your lymphatic system because it's super important. If you're learning from and or
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01:37:53.060 | comments. For those of you that haven't heard, I have a new book coming out. It's my very first book.
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01:38:20.900 | The book is now available by presale at protocolsbook.com. There you can find links to various vendors.
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01:39:21.700 | the menu tab in the top right corner, scroll down to newsletter, and enter your email. And I should
01:39:26.180 | emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody. Thank you for tuning in for today's discussion
01:39:31.140 | about the lymphatic system and all the incredible ways that it supports your health and the things
01:39:35.380 | that you can do to support your lymphatic system. And last, but certainly not least,
01:39:40.020 | thank you for your interest in science.