back to indexHow to Lose Fat & Gain Muscle With Nutrition | Alan Aragon

Chapters
0:0 Alan Aragon
2:17 Dietary Protein & Protein Synthesis Limits?, Tool: Post-Resistance Training & Protein Intake (30-50g)
9:16 Training Fasted, Post-Exercise Anabolic Window, Tool: Total Daily Protein
15:53 Daily Protein Intake, Timing & Exercise, Muscle Strength/Size
23:0 Sponsors: Carbon & Wealthfront
26:46 Does Fasted Training Increase Body Fat Loss?, Cardio, Individual Flexibility
36:53 Dietary Protein & Body Composition
38:58 Animal vs Plant Proteins (Whey, Soy, Pea, Quorn), Muscle Size & Strength
51:24 Sponsors: AG1 & David
54:14 Body Re-Composition, Gain Muscle While Losing Fat?, Tool: Protein Intake & Exercise
62:55 Fiber; Starchy Carbohydrates & Fat Loss, Ketogenic Diet
70:36 Inflammation, Fat & Macronutrients, Hyper-Palatability; Fish Oil Supplementation
76:52 Added Dietary Sugars, Sugar Cravings, Tool: Protein Intake
84:3 Artificial Sweeteners (Aspartame, Sucralose, Saccharine, Stevia), Diet Soda, Weight Loss
90:16 Sponsor: Function
92:4 Caffeine, Exercise & Fat Loss
94:53 Alcohol, Red Wine, Sleep, Lifestyle; Quitting Drinking & Stress Resilience
104:43 Seed Oils vs Animal Fats, Canola Oil, Olive Oil, Oil Production, Tool: Improve Diet Quality
115:50 Butter & Cardiovascular Risk, Saturated Fat, Mediterranean Keto Diet, Testosterone
120:43 Menstrual Cycle, Tool: Diet Breaks; Menopause Transition & Body Composition
127:4 Collagen Supplementation, Skin Appearance
132:44 Supplements: Multivitamins, Vitamin D3, Fish Oil, Creatine, Vitamin C
140:3 Resistance & Cardio Training, Tool: Cluster Sets & Super Sets
151:35 Zero-Cost Support, YouTube, Spotify & Apple Follow & Reviews, Sponsors, YouTube Feedback, Protocols Book, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter
00:00:00.400 |
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools 00:00:09.200 |
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford 00:00:18.040 |
Alan Aragon is one of the most influential and respected figures in the fields of fitness 00:00:23.520 |
The reason for that is because of his strict reliance on evidence-based information and 00:00:27.960 |
because he's co-authored some of the most highly cited and respected studies and reviews 00:00:34.080 |
His expertise covers nutrition and training for women and for men, and for anyone who's 00:00:38.480 |
seeking better health, fat loss, muscle and strength gain, or all of the above. 00:00:43.440 |
And in today's episode, we cover all of that and much more. 00:00:46.840 |
Alan clarifies the myths and the facts around things like seed oils, whether or not it's 00:00:51.240 |
better to do your workouts fasted for sake of fat burning, low calorie and artificial sweeteners, 00:00:59.480 |
Alan also explains how to determine your actual protein needs. 00:01:03.120 |
Despite all the discussion nowadays about protein, there's still a lot of confusion about this, 00:01:08.480 |
He covers the real science on meal timing, protein and carbohydrate intake relative to 00:01:12.480 |
your training, how women's hormone cycles impact their training and nutrition needs, and 00:01:17.120 |
eating and training for body composition changes for anyone. 00:01:20.680 |
There is just so much advice and information online, but also in the peer reviewed literature 00:01:24.720 |
on nutrition and fitness nowadays, which makes it very challenging for anyone seeking to understand 00:01:29.560 |
and implement what really matters toward their fitness and body composition goals. 00:01:34.400 |
If ever there was a voice of practical reason who is grounded in the peer reviewed data, but 00:01:38.680 |
who is also willing to acknowledge individual differences and preferences when it comes to fitness and 00:01:45.560 |
And today he shares that information with us, and he also makes it clear and actionable as 00:01:51.680 |
By the end of today's episode, you will be armed with the latest and best knowledge on nutrition 00:01:58.560 |
Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research 00:02:03.560 |
It is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about 00:02:07.600 |
science and science related tools to the general public. 00:02:10.680 |
In keeping with that theme, today's episode does include sponsors. 00:02:19.600 |
Andrew, it is awesome to be here, like literally awesome. 00:02:28.800 |
Yeah, well, I've learned a ton from you through our online correspondence and we've met once 00:02:34.640 |
Let's get down to some important, um, topics that are very actionable because this is what 00:02:41.520 |
It clarifies so much of the confusion that exists out there. 00:02:46.480 |
Uh, I think this is really one of the signatures of your work is that it clarifies. 00:02:51.280 |
Let's start off with something that many people have heard, which is that we can only assimilate 00:03:01.840 |
And the simple question is what constitutes a meal? 00:03:05.680 |
Like if I eat 30 grams of protein in an hour later, I eat 30 grams of protein. 00:03:13.760 |
And can I assimilate more than 30 grams of protein under certain circumstances? 00:03:18.240 |
So what's the deal with this protein assimilation thing? 00:03:22.800 |
Okay, well, you elucidated one of the issues right in the question. 00:03:27.200 |
It's like, are we talking about isolated, quickly digesting protein? 00:03:32.080 |
Or are we talking about a slower digesting protein? 00:03:34.960 |
Or are we talking about any one of those within the context of a mixed macronutrient meal with 00:03:41.200 |
All of those conditions alter the behavior of what happens physiologically. 00:03:47.360 |
And so the origin of the whole, you know, 25 grams of protein max is all you can use 00:03:55.120 |
is the confusion of the two separate concepts. 00:03:59.520 |
So there is digestion and utilization at the kind of entire body level where protein has 00:04:07.360 |
various metabolic fates for various systems and just various homeostatic needs of the body. 00:04:14.400 |
And then there is the specific phenomenon of the muscle anabolic response or muscle protein synthesis. 00:04:22.320 |
So we have to separate, okay, digestion and absorption in general or muscle protein synthesis. 00:04:30.000 |
So the 25-30 gram cutoff, it's usually listed like some people say 20, that refers specifically to 00:04:38.960 |
muscle protein synthesis where there seems to be a plateau at 25-ish, 30-ish grams. 00:04:45.680 |
And we thought this all the way until, gosh, from the late 90s, early 2000s, all the way up 00:04:56.560 |
So 2016, when McNaughton and colleagues compared 20 grams of protein versus 40 grams of protein, 00:05:04.000 |
but instead of doing what previous researchers did with the training bouts being very low volume, 00:05:10.160 |
like eight to 12 sets, you know, a couple, a couple of different leg exercises, you know, 00:05:15.280 |
leg extensions, leg presses, eight to 12 sets total. 00:05:19.360 |
And then you assess the muscle protein synthetic response to the protein dose. 00:05:23.920 |
What McNaughton and colleagues did, they hit the subjects with a 24-ish set regimen full body. 00:05:30.800 |
So it was a little bit more ecologically valid in the sense that they tried to 00:05:38.560 |
mirror what goes on in the real world with training regimens with people who are trying 00:05:42.400 |
to build muscle and really elicit this anabolic response. 00:05:45.840 |
So when they ran this experiment and they compared 20 versus 40 grams of protein, 00:05:51.520 |
the 40 grams of protein actually had a greater muscle protein synthesis response than the 20 grams. 00:05:57.920 |
And it took us all the way to 2016 to figure that out. 00:06:01.520 |
And then a series of studies just kind of progressed from there and 00:06:07.040 |
proceeded to kind of debunk this idea that muscle protein synthesis plateaus at 20, 25 grams. 00:06:15.200 |
But now, and there's some interesting recent studies on that as well. 00:06:23.040 |
That's exactly the study I was going to bring up. 00:06:25.760 |
That's by Joran Tromelin and colleagues where they compared a 00:06:30.560 |
25 gram dose with 100 gram dose post-exercise, they used a slow digesting protein. 00:06:36.720 |
They used milk protein, which is 80% casein, which is a slow digesting 20% whey, which is fast. 00:06:44.320 |
And there was significantly greater muscle protein synthesis with the 100 gram dose compared to the 25 gram dose. 00:06:52.720 |
But my big issue with that study is they really, really needed to include an intermediate dose 00:06:59.200 |
to see whether there would have been a plateau in MPS with something like, let's say, 40 or 50 grams. 00:07:04.320 |
And that's because there's a lot of other research seeing that plateau somewhere between 30 and 50 grams. 00:07:12.240 |
So I wish Joran at all included an intermediate dose with that. 00:07:18.240 |
Let me just pause you for a second and ask a couple questions. 00:07:21.120 |
If you can give an across-the-board recommendation of how much protein people should consume post-resistance training, 00:07:29.920 |
let's just leave cardiovascular training separately for the moment, post-resistance training, 00:07:41.440 |
And how long after training should one consume that protein if the goal is muscle protein synthesis? 00:07:49.040 |
To maximize muscle protein synthesis, regardless of whether it's post-exercise, 00:07:54.000 |
and MPS will be larger with the protein dosing post-exercise than at resting or fasting. 00:08:01.040 |
To maximize MPS, we really haven't seen doses beyond 50-ish grams, 30 or so to 50. 00:08:09.840 |
My colleague Brad Schoenfeld and I, we scoured the literature and we wrote this paper on 00:08:18.000 |
what is the maximal anabolic dose of protein per meal for the goal of muscle building. 00:08:24.720 |
And we boiled it down to somewhere between 0.4 to roughly 0.6 grams per kilogram of body weight. 00:08:34.000 |
And so in freedom units, we're talking 0.2 to 0.25 grams per pound. 00:08:43.600 |
And that is what appears to max out muscle protein synthesis. 00:08:52.720 |
So like about a quarter of your body weight in pounds, if you're looking at grams of protein, 00:09:02.160 |
Okay, sorry, because I think many people, including myself, are going to say, okay, 00:09:09.680 |
So, I mean, I wake up in the morning and I try to work out before I eat because I like to do that. 00:09:14.480 |
Sometimes I'll have a little bit of protein, but let's assume two conditions just for simplicity. 00:09:18.720 |
Somebody did resistance training in the previous two hours or, and they're trying to evaluate 00:09:27.920 |
how much protein to eat at that meal in order to maximize muscle protein synthesis, 00:09:32.080 |
or they're eating a meal separate on a day they're not resistance training, right? 00:09:37.680 |
So, and then as just kind of a generic example of a meal that doesn't follow resistance training 00:09:43.760 |
in a window of two hours or so, how much protein should be consumed at these two different meals? 00:09:49.840 |
The answer to that is so weird, Andrew, honestly. 00:09:57.600 |
That's because, okay, so if we go all the way back to 2003, 2004, and then we walk forward 20 years. 00:10:10.560 |
So, John Ivey and Robert Portman put out this book called Nutrient Timing, and they focused on this 00:10:18.640 |
narrow post-exercise window of opportunity, they called it. 00:10:24.080 |
And the concept was you needed to consume protein and quickly digesting carbs. 00:10:32.160 |
So, a fast digesting protein, lightning fast, highly glycemic, highly insulinic carb source 00:10:38.240 |
together within 30 to 60 minutes post-exercise in order to maximize the anabolic response, 00:10:46.800 |
maximize recovery, and then maximize your muscle gain. 00:10:51.440 |
This was all based on subjects who were training after an overnight fast. 00:10:59.760 |
And so, what happens when you consume a meal pre-exercise, 00:11:06.240 |
or at any point, let's say, a regular old mixed meal, medium size, 00:11:11.200 |
the anabolic slash anti-catabolic effect of that meal is going to last anywhere from three to six hours, 00:11:20.160 |
So, when you're somebody whose goal it is, above all the other goals, 00:11:26.000 |
is to gain muscle at the quickest rate possible, you're almost never going to train fasted. 00:11:32.640 |
You're going to have a pre-exercise meal at some point, at least a couple hours pre-exercise. 00:11:37.760 |
And so, when you're training, you actually still have these substrates in circulation through the exercise 00:11:46.560 |
And oftentimes, like, if somebody has a meal like an hour pre-exercise, 00:11:50.480 |
they're still absorbing that pre-exercise meal post-exercise. 00:11:56.800 |
So, we looked at this whole post-exercise period as something that just doesn't necessarily have any external validity. 00:12:07.040 |
It doesn't have relevance to real-world training conditions where people are not training fasted. 00:12:12.880 |
And so, what we did was, we did a couple of things. 00:12:16.640 |
First, we wrote a narrative review criticizing the post-exercise anabolic window. 00:12:22.000 |
We kind of pissed off all the researchers who did the seminal work in that area. 00:12:28.880 |
And then we actually, we did a meta-analysis of the existing literature, looking at the anabolic window thing. 00:12:36.280 |
And for the listeners, a meta-analysis is a study of the studies. 00:12:41.160 |
You collect all of the studies on a given question, and then you kind of see, you look at, you know, effect sizes, 00:12:46.220 |
and you sort of see where the evidence leans, whether there's, you know, a significant or meaningful effect or not. 00:12:55.320 |
And we collected studies that compared a protein timing condition where protein was timed within an hour, either pre- or post-exercise. 00:13:05.960 |
And then the control group of the study would have to have protein, a minimum of two hours of nutrient neglect on both sides of the training bound. 00:13:15.740 |
So, we collected all the studies that compared these conditions. 00:13:20.040 |
And we had a brilliant stats guy, James Krieger, he ran the regression analysis. 00:13:26.900 |
And essentially, we found that as long as total daily protein was about 1.66, 1.7 grams per kilogram of body weight, so about 0.7 grams per pound, 00:13:39.980 |
as long as total daily protein was at that or more, then the timing relative to the training bout didn't make a difference. 00:13:49.680 |
This is important for people to hear, because what this translates to in my ears is a very simple takeaway, 00:13:56.020 |
which is that you don't need to obsess about the post-training anabolic window, especially if you're eating prior to training. 00:14:09.120 |
Now, if you eat your last bite of food at 8 p.m. and you wake up at 7 a.m. and you're training at 10 a.m., 00:14:15.460 |
then perhaps by the time you finish your leg workout or whatever resistance training workout, 00:14:20.840 |
you would want to prioritize getting some protein and other nutrients into your system. 00:14:25.460 |
What you're saying, basically, it's so logical now that I hear it, which is that you have nutrients circulating in your body and stored in your glycogen, 00:14:39.500 |
General rule of thumb, if you're burping your pre-exercise meal towards the end of your workout, 00:14:47.480 |
This is why I don't like to ingest anything prior to training, besides caffeine, electrolytes, and water. 00:14:54.300 |
The reason why there's a weird and complex answer where this is like, 00:14:58.400 |
a single resistance training bout causes this interesting cascade of things where muscle protein synthesis will peak 24 hours after the resistance training bout. 00:15:14.080 |
And it'll take as long as 48 to 72 hours to kind of come down to baseline levels to where you had not done the resistance training bout. 00:15:25.100 |
So the anabolic window is actually not hours, but days. 00:15:30.440 |
So it's more a matter of making sure you are consuming. 00:15:37.660 |
Well, the first in the order of importance is total daily protein. 00:15:44.240 |
If you get total daily protein right, then the timing of the constituent doses of the total are just a distant secondary concern. 00:15:52.940 |
Even if it's only distributed across two meals. 00:15:59.820 |
Maybe I have some caffeine and a scoop of a, you know, protein shake before, like with some whey protein, maybe a few almonds to, you know, slow digestion down or whatever. 00:16:16.920 |
I have a little bit of a chicken breast and a salad, maybe a slice of bread because I'm on the fly. 00:16:21.680 |
And then that night I get home and I'm hungry and I eat two ribeye steaks. 00:16:29.400 |
Those two ribeye steaks probably give you 75 or even 100 grams of protein and a bunch of other things too. 00:16:37.580 |
Can you use all of that for muscle protein synthesis? 00:16:42.280 |
The nuanced answer is, let me tell you about a couple studies. 00:16:48.100 |
Well, as you do that, but let me ask you a little differently. 00:16:51.800 |
Not to shut down the emphasis on studies because that's why you're here. 00:16:58.800 |
Is there anything wrong with consuming a high or very high protein meal every once in a while? 00:17:06.860 |
Especially if you're not eating much or consuming much protein throughout the day. 00:17:12.480 |
And the reason I ask this is for practical reasons. 00:17:15.400 |
Many people find it difficult to distribute their protein evenly through the day. 00:17:20.440 |
Many people also find it difficult to get enough protein in the middle of the day meals or the morning meals. 00:17:28.380 |
It can be done and I know people will say, well, you have some eggs and some protein. 00:17:32.380 |
But at least in this country, most people tend to emphasize dinner as their largest meal for better or worse. 00:17:38.900 |
And you can usually order high quality, high protein foods in a restaurant like a steak, chicken breast, fish, et cetera. 00:17:47.440 |
So a lot of people stack their protein heavily towards the end of the day. 00:17:51.500 |
Assuming caloric load is appropriate, et cetera. 00:17:54.540 |
Is there anything fundamentally wrong or bad about doing that from the perspective of body composition and health? 00:18:10.100 |
Are we looking at guys who are trying to win a national competition in bodybuilding, for example? 00:18:15.280 |
No, we're talking about men and women, teens up to 75 years old who are trying to be fit by doing a combination of resistance training and hopefully some cardiovascular training as well, trying to get their steps in. 00:18:29.220 |
We're talking about the general population, not somebody who's trying to win a physique competition or run a marathon or ultra. 00:18:45.220 |
So my colleagues and I did a study testing out this anabolic window thing. 00:18:52.100 |
This was 2014 where we tested immediate pre-exercise 25 grams of whey protein versus immediate post-exercise 25 grams of whey protein. 00:19:09.940 |
And there was no significant advantage of either condition. 00:19:16.080 |
So – and our thinking was, look, everybody's harping about this post-exercise anabolic window. 00:19:22.000 |
So it really – if there is this opportunity to consume nutrients at prime time to feed the hungry muscles, then you would want to focus on availability of nutrients in circulation and not when you actually consume the nutrients. 00:19:37.620 |
Because there's this time course for them to – for the nutrients to peak in circulation. 00:19:42.220 |
It's usually somewhere between one and two hours after you ingest the stuff. 00:19:45.800 |
So how about we consume protein immediately pre, and then it will be peaking in the blood like an hourish later, and then you'll be right in the anabolic window. 00:19:53.860 |
So we didn't see any advantage to the immediate pre-protein versus the immediate post-protein. 00:20:07.300 |
One of my colleagues, Yasin Lok, he took our pre-post model and he kind of like – he ran his own randomized control trial version of it. 00:20:19.300 |
But he wanted to kind of exploit the possibility of further protein neglect on both sides of the training bout. 00:20:26.560 |
So he compared an immediate pre and post, immediate pre and post, 25 grams of protein sandwiching the resistance training bout with a group that neglected all nutrients for three hours on both sides of the resistance training bout. 00:20:44.200 |
Total daily protein was optimized at around close to a gram per pound, two-ish grams per kilogram of body weight. 00:20:52.620 |
No significant difference, no meaningful difference in muscle size and strength gains at the end of the – I believe it was a 10 or 12-week study. 00:21:03.280 |
I mean because I have a busy schedule as do many people, and sometimes I'm a little hungry before I train and I'll want a scoop of protein powder and I'll think, oh, is it better – we'll talk about whether or not it's better to train fasted for all sorts of reasons. 00:21:20.060 |
Sometimes people don't like to eat immediately after they train. 00:21:22.820 |
Sometimes you have to shower up and head to dinner after you train or shower up and head to a meeting, and you don't have the opportunity to ingest in the quote-unquote anabolic window. 00:21:36.240 |
So what I'm hearing through all these answers, correct me if I'm wrong, is that there's tremendous flexibility as to when you consume the protein that we all need, but that the overall protein requirement seems to center somewhere around 0.7 to 1 gram per pound of body weight, somewhere in there total per day. 00:21:55.460 |
If the amount in a given meal is a bit higher than 20 or 30 grams, you're fine. 00:22:04.260 |
But the thing that also I believe needs highlighting that most people don't talk about is distinguishing between what's in circulation versus when one ingests something. 00:22:16.000 |
Like we love to think that we drink 30 grams of protein or eat the chicken breast or the piece of steak or have the eggs and suddenly those amino acids are available. 00:22:23.240 |
And it makes so much more rational sense now that you describe it that eating first makes those amino acids available for the muscles a couple hours later. 00:22:37.340 |
So I'm very grateful that you're bringing it up that way. 00:22:39.600 |
I realize we could probably drill into protein requirements ad nauseum. 00:22:46.500 |
The way I like to put it is total daily protein is the cake. 00:22:50.560 |
The specific timing of protein relative to the training bout, that is the icing on the cake, and it's a very thin layer of icing on the cake. 00:23:00.400 |
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Carbon. 00:23:03.980 |
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Let's talk about fasted training and whether or not it indeed burns more body fat. 00:26:53.740 |
And here, let's expand the conversation to include cardiovascular training. 00:27:01.880 |
Anything that gets your heart rate elevated deliberately for 12 minutes or more. 00:27:09.440 |
So let's be broad with what we're calling training. 00:27:11.840 |
Could be resistance training, circuit training, whole body, body part split, whatever. 00:27:16.680 |
And let's define the fast as not having eaten either for four hours during the middle of the day 00:27:25.180 |
or for eight hours to 12 hours, including sleep the night before, right? 00:27:33.020 |
Because people then say, wait, but I'm fasted because I don't eat lunch. 00:27:35.940 |
And then I try, okay, it gets really murky and then we could spend 26 hours here and we don't 00:27:40.740 |
So assuming that one trains fasted, does one burn more stored body fat in particular or just 00:27:53.280 |
more dietary fat if there's dietary fat circulating and available? 00:27:59.060 |
I think that when we hear the word fat, people think body fat, but there's also dietary fat. 00:28:05.140 |
So could you please discriminate between those two? 00:28:10.920 |
Picture two people eating the exact same amount of exact same diet, identical diet. 00:28:18.380 |
By the end of the day, same macronutrition, same food selection, everything is identical. 00:28:24.520 |
One person or one of the groups, let's say we're running a study. 00:28:29.780 |
One of the groups trains in a genuinely post-absorptive fasted state, eight to 10 hours-ish, eating nothing. 00:28:40.360 |
They will burn more fat during the training bout. 00:28:55.040 |
They will just, their net fat oxidation will be higher than the group that has a breakfast. 00:29:03.200 |
And the group that has the breakfast will essentially be, you know, burning their breakfast during the 00:29:10.180 |
So, yes, during the training, there is greater fat burning in the fasted group. 00:29:16.220 |
But once again, we're looking at two groups who are consuming the exact same diet. 00:29:21.520 |
So, the group who consumed their breakfast is going to consume less stuff, less food, one less meal in the 00:29:30.700 |
So, their fat oxidation is going to be higher in the later part of the day. 00:29:36.460 |
And so, it all comes out even by the end of the day. 00:29:40.760 |
So, that is the, kind of the big issue and the big principle with, with, uh, fasted training 00:29:47.300 |
having, yes, it does burn more fat during training, but you're looking at a snapshot of time within 00:29:59.000 |
This was a, a huge idea that persisted throughout the, um, late 80s and early 90s. 00:30:05.100 |
Um, late, you know, even into the 2000s when, uh, Bill Phillips came out with Body for Life and stuff. 00:30:13.560 |
And so, um, these, this kind of lore is really cool if you know scientists who are able to rope you in 00:30:22.440 |
and help you, help you, you know, investigate this stuff. 00:30:25.020 |
So, uh, once again, you know, I got to give Brad Schoenfeld a lot of credit. 00:30:34.000 |
And so, um, we took college age subjects, uh, women, and we compared fasted cardio with fed 00:30:45.500 |
cardio and the predominant lore at the time was, uh, the fat burning zone, right? 00:30:51.380 |
So we're, we're talking low, moderate intensity cardio that they carried out for, um, a little 00:30:59.820 |
less than an hour and we compared immediate, an immediate pre pre-cardio meal, which was a standardized, 00:31:07.640 |
it was like a meal replacement type of thing with, um, 00:31:11.320 |
uh, uh, uh, the same meal consumed post-cardio. 00:31:15.040 |
And then we measured body composition over, it, it, people criticized the study for being 00:31:25.540 |
It's, I've, I've, I've done a clinical trial and humans have, it's very hard to run long-term 00:31:30.660 |
studies, especially in humans, especially when it involves nutrition and training. 00:31:37.200 |
So, uh, hat tip to you for tackling it at all. 00:31:39.960 |
You're not going to catch any heat from me on the four weeks thing, but I appreciate that 00:31:43.340 |
you mentioned the duration of the study because, uh, in thoroughness, which you're characterized 00:31:47.220 |
for in thoroughness, um, people should know it. 00:31:51.500 |
So this is, uh, one of the only existing studies that looked at this question and, and controlled, 00:31:59.660 |
Uh, I actually put together all the studies by hand for each of the subjects to kind of 00:32:05.660 |
customizing it to their needs and making sure things were hypocaloric, making sure protein 00:32:10.240 |
Uh, interestingly, there was no resistance training involved with the study. 00:32:15.480 |
Uh, they, all subjects in both groups maintained their lean body mass, but both groups lost a 00:32:23.420 |
No difference in body fat reduction between groups by the end of the study, whether they did 00:32:29.100 |
their cardio fed or whether they did it fasted. 00:32:32.320 |
And that's because we equated the total nutrition between the groups. 00:32:37.460 |
And you said, again, the subjects were college age women, college age women. 00:32:43.260 |
And the reason I'm asking is that it's impressive that they all lost body fat as long as they 00:32:50.860 |
Didn't matter when they distributed those calories relative to the exercise and they maintained lean 00:32:56.860 |
Um, and if they weren't doing resistance training, um, I'm impressed that the cardiovascular training 00:33:03.900 |
was sufficient to allow them to maintain lean body mass. 00:33:10.000 |
Um, what, um, might be called zone two type of, type of cardio where you can still hold a 00:33:18.140 |
conversation, but, um, you know, it's not necessarily a waltz. 00:33:22.440 |
And so the whole idea was to be in the fat burnings that we wanted to exploit the whole fat 00:33:27.260 |
burning zone concept, uh, to keep the intensity low, moderate. 00:33:31.660 |
So we can give the fasted cardio condition a chance to show whatever magic it might have. 00:33:39.200 |
And so we didn't see that magic by the end of the trial. 00:33:43.100 |
Um, and yeah, uh, but here's the, the, the practical takeaway from that is number one, we 00:33:50.860 |
didn't see a bunch of lean mass loss in the fasted cardio group. 00:33:54.320 |
Cause there, there's this lore saying that, Hey, you better not train fasted and no matter 00:33:59.000 |
what you better, you better not do cardio fasted cause you're going to lose muscle. 00:34:02.240 |
Well, they didn't lose any, any lean body mass. 00:34:04.720 |
And, um, when you form practical takeaways from the findings, we can say that if you prefer 00:34:11.600 |
to train fasted, uh, and you just feel better doing your cardio in a fasted state, great, do 00:34:20.340 |
If you can't stand doing fasted cardio and you'd rather have a breakfast beforehand, then go ahead 00:34:27.580 |
Just know that that's not going to necessarily hinder your fat loss efforts as long as your 00:34:33.100 |
net hypocaloric by the end of the day or the end of the week. 00:34:36.680 |
And I mean that those recommendations can change with the type of cardio you do, especially higher 00:34:43.700 |
intensity stuff, or certainly competitive types of sports that involve, uh, you know, endurance 00:34:51.900 |
But that's the, the takeaway from our study that fasted versus fed cardio doesn't matter. 00:35:01.100 |
After so many years of trends coming through train fasted, don't train fasted. 00:35:06.360 |
It seems like as with protein, what I'm learning from you is that there's a lot more flexibility 00:35:12.680 |
in time than we might've once thought, but that the absolute calories of course matter. 00:35:23.080 |
And I'd like to, and that you still have to train. 00:35:29.760 |
I'm not going to cherry pick our study and say that this is the end all result that, that 00:35:36.820 |
So there's actually a, a later meta analysis a few years later by, I think it's Hagstrom 00:35:42.800 |
and Hackett who looked at fasted versus fed training and they overall found no significant 00:35:50.660 |
differences or significant advantages in terms of body comp improvement, fat loss in the fasted 00:35:58.580 |
As long as total nutrition is equated between the groups. 00:36:02.880 |
This is music to my ears and I'm sure it's going to be music to everybody's ears because 00:36:06.840 |
it just says there's flexibility, there's flexibility, there's flexibility and life is 00:36:11.380 |
So more flexibility is good though too, for like, if you're looking for magic, if you're 00:36:15.280 |
looking for that special little thing you can do that, uh, well, maybe the magic is in 00:36:19.300 |
the training consistently, um, the nutrition, including protein and the knowledge that there's 00:36:27.100 |
I have this saying in my mind lately that the things that make 90% of the difference. 00:36:32.740 |
So like sleep, exercise, nutrition, light, stress management, relationships, et cetera, 00:36:36.700 |
in our health are the things we have to do 90% of the days of our lives. 00:36:40.620 |
And that's why they're, there can continue to be so much discussion around them. 00:36:44.300 |
This is why it isn't just like, here are the basics. 00:36:47.440 |
It's because the things that we have to do every day, we often have to be reminded to do 00:36:52.580 |
Um, but along those lines, um, why is it in your opinion that protein is so critical that, 00:37:02.080 |
you know, that protein be treated as, as like the, the cornerstone of good nutrition, especially 00:37:08.300 |
if one is attempting to consume calories to maintain, or perhaps even lose a little bit 00:37:14.020 |
of body fat, maybe simultaneously maintaining or gaining muscle, but let's set aside muscle 00:37:22.700 |
Let's just say like maintain muscle, but many people want to lose a few percentages of body 00:37:28.820 |
Why is it that protein is so critical to that process? 00:37:34.200 |
Why is it that indeed calories in versus calories out reigns true law of thermodynamics, but 00:37:43.000 |
It's mainly just a couple of things to keep in mind and potentially a third little thing. 00:37:49.340 |
So the, the big thing about protein and body comp is number one, protein directly supports 00:37:56.380 |
It directly supports all the lean tissues in the body, uh, skeletal muscle. 00:38:03.340 |
Um, especially, um, skeletal muscle is our, basically our, our, our metabolic engine that 00:38:13.300 |
And so it's super critical to support skeletal muscle. 00:38:18.020 |
And protein is more satiating than carbohydrate and fat. 00:38:25.020 |
And so it's the most satiating macronutrient. 00:38:27.920 |
Um, the third little, little detail, well, it's, it's got the highest, uh, 00:38:33.220 |
cost of metabolism or cost of processing within the body. 00:38:36.980 |
So it's the most energetically or calorically expensive macronutrient to process within the 00:38:45.160 |
And so those are basically the, the three main reasons why protein is so critical to things 00:38:51.660 |
like body comp improvement, um, high quality weight loss, fat loss. 00:38:58.140 |
And what about the hierarchy of protein quality? 00:39:00.780 |
I think of protein quality in terms of quality of protein, meaning the type and ratios of amino 00:39:08.340 |
acids, the availability of those amino acids relative to the amount of calories one has to 00:39:15.580 |
Because I frankly, I've grown tired and slightly irritated at the, oh, you know, these plant-based 00:39:25.140 |
You have to consume 2000 calories of that plant or grain in order to get the equivalent amino acid 00:39:32.920 |
profile, uh, from, you know, a four ounce piece of steak, for instance. 00:39:38.620 |
And this is not an argument that animal proteins are better ethically. 00:39:42.740 |
I'm just saying at, at a quality as a function of calories ingested, I feel like animal proteins 00:39:51.580 |
are superior, but tell me, tell me what the data say. 00:39:54.720 |
Man, this is a lightning rod of a, of a topic here at this, uh, um, we have a strong audience. 00:40:03.180 |
You guys, guys buckle up, brace yourselves, please. 00:40:06.620 |
So gram for gram, as a group, animal proteins are higher quality. 00:40:13.580 |
They have a higher proportion of essential amino acids. 00:40:16.620 |
They have a higher amount and proportion of the anabolic driving, the most anabolic driving 00:40:22.120 |
amino acids, the branch chain amino acids, leucine specifically. 00:40:25.800 |
And, uh, in, in the majority of the literature, when you compare animal versus plant proteins 00:40:33.820 |
head to head, you see greater muscle protein synthesis. 00:40:36.400 |
Um, now with muscle protein synthesis being sort of the short-term indicator of what might 00:40:42.100 |
indicate a growth trajectory over time, we have to see if we can corroborate that with 00:40:48.980 |
these longitudinal trials where you drag the experiment out for weeks and months to see if 00:40:53.760 |
there's any superiority with the animal versus the plant protein for kind of where the rubber 00:40:58.860 |
meets the road, which is increasing muscle mass and or strength. 00:41:02.400 |
So there have been a lot of studies comparing animal versus plant proteins. 00:41:11.320 |
So the animal proteins do have the edge in that department. 00:41:14.160 |
And that's been reported in a couple meta-analyses now. 00:41:20.100 |
Uh, one of them compared whey and soy and didn't find a staggering difference between the two 00:41:26.960 |
So we can call soy actually a high quality protein. 00:41:31.020 |
But when you look at the individual studies there, it, whey still has an edge in terms of, 00:41:35.880 |
because meta-analyses just like take the data and cram it all together into a single conclusion. 00:41:41.300 |
And so, um, it's also important to look at the individual studies too. 00:41:48.920 |
There, there are two studies now that compared a, and this is what, what's been missing from the 00:41:57.280 |
Usually we take two groups of omnivores and we supplement them with, let's say, whey protein. 00:42:03.480 |
And then we supplement the other group with, uh, some sort of a plant protein. 00:42:09.500 |
And interesting thing about pea protein, it actually outperformed whey in one study. 00:42:14.520 |
So in this 2015 study where, um, pea protein supplementation outperformed whey for increasing 00:42:22.860 |
I was really sad to see that because I was weighing it up and I was like, oh God. 00:42:28.720 |
That study has not been replicated, but okay. 00:42:32.220 |
We finally have studies where we're looking at completely vegan regimen, a group who's totally 00:42:37.460 |
vegan, no, no animal products at all in, in the diet versus an omnivore group and, uh, 00:42:44.820 |
put them on a resistance training regimen, 12 weeks. 00:42:48.760 |
This was, uh, done by Lorraine and colleagues. 00:42:53.020 |
And so they optimized protein or at least made it at the bottom of optimal at 1.6 grams per 00:43:02.040 |
kilogram of body weight per day in both groups. 00:43:06.420 |
And so, but the unique thing about this study, it was the first time ever we're comparing 00:43:12.860 |
So there were no significant differences between groups in muscle size and strength gains by the 00:43:19.280 |
end of 12 weeks where they were put on a progressive resistance training program. 00:43:25.840 |
Meaning, uh, for those that don't know what that means is total number of calories ingested 00:43:29.880 |
per day, same in the vegan versus omnivore group. 00:43:33.060 |
Isocaloric, isomacronutritional, you know, isoproteic, everything, everything is equated 00:43:41.920 |
No significant differences in the size and strength gains. 00:43:46.580 |
And, um, they're suspecting, oh, and by the way, the vegan group, their protein intake was boosted 00:43:53.060 |
up to 1.6 grams per kilo or 0.7 grams per pound. 00:43:56.860 |
It was boosted up by a soy protein supplementation. 00:44:01.520 |
So, apparently, I mean, we're beginning to see that at a dose, a total daily protein at 1.6 grams 00:44:09.480 |
per kilogram of body weight, the totally vegan group was able to hang in there against the 00:44:17.040 |
omnivore group for muscle size and strength gains, at least within the conditions of the 00:44:21.920 |
study and at least for those 12 weeks and at least for the, the subjects that, that were 00:44:27.740 |
used who weren't necessarily, you know, these high level athletes or, or, yeah. 00:44:31.880 |
So you can, if you construct it properly, you can follow a vegan diet as long as you get 00:44:39.720 |
And the weird thing, man, is the vegan diet overall had significantly less essential amino 00:44:46.420 |
acid content and significantly less branch chain amino acid content. 00:44:51.580 |
But apparently the resistance training stimulus is robust enough to make protein effects, ah, 00:45:02.260 |
I'm getting right back to exercise, probably being the major lever in, in everything. 00:45:07.360 |
Oh, well, sleep, I would argue is the major lever over time. 00:45:11.980 |
But I will say this because then people think if they get one bad night's sleep to not train, 00:45:16.020 |
I don't know if you're familiar with these recent studies showing that you can offset the 00:45:20.640 |
inflammation that arrives from getting five or fewer hours of sleep the previous night with 00:45:27.080 |
You just don't want to get into a habit of it. 00:45:28.900 |
So, um, but if you're easier said than done, I know if you're on the fence about whether or 00:45:33.800 |
not to train because you're sleep deprived train, but don't do that more than one to two days 00:45:39.980 |
And even, even better would be to get great sleep and train, but, um. 00:45:43.500 |
I know you're, you're gearing up to, to hit, hit the next thing. 00:45:46.420 |
I want to mention that this study I just talked about was not a one-off. 00:45:51.580 |
A couple of years later, Monteen and colleagues did the same thing, but they used mycoprotein 00:46:04.500 |
So you'd seen that, that, um, that, that I think it's on, is it on Netflix or HBO? 00:46:10.040 |
It's the last of us where that fungus makes people anabolic. 00:46:19.640 |
Some, some of the audience will, will chuckle or just think I just busted the most terrible 00:46:33.120 |
It's one of these weird, uh, types of products that is unfortunately expensive. 00:46:40.220 |
And, um, so the plant-based or the animal free group, their protein intake was boosted with 00:46:51.880 |
And then they were compared against omnivores with mixed, mixed protein sources. 00:46:56.720 |
And by the end of the study, I believe it was a 12-week study, no differences, no significant 00:47:03.600 |
differences in increases in muscle size and strength. 00:47:07.260 |
And they, you know, progressive resistance training regimen. 00:47:09.920 |
Once again, not necessarily highly trained people, but we basically saw the same thing. 00:47:16.060 |
Um, as long as total daily protein is where it needs to be, then apparently the, the animal 00:47:23.280 |
free group can hang with the omnivores, at least for the conditions of that study. 00:47:27.680 |
So I, I always look at these things skeptically. 00:47:30.800 |
Um, but the mycoprotein also outperformed milk protein for muscle protein synthesis in this 00:47:39.340 |
acute study that preceded this longitudinal study. 00:47:42.780 |
And so there's some weird stuff that we can look at aside from animal protein that could 00:47:48.780 |
Um, so yeah, that, that's the story with animal versus plant and or fungus-based protein. 00:47:57.000 |
And so, so yeah, I just, I just had to throw in the, the Monteen. 00:48:03.140 |
You know, I think when people hear soy, you know, there's, has been this, you know, kind 00:48:07.760 |
of a salt on soy for years and, um, and I've, I've avoided it not for any specific reason, 00:48:13.200 |
but because I prefer other sources of calories. 00:48:16.200 |
Um, I like meat and berries and eggs and this kind of thing. 00:48:18.960 |
Um, but it's interesting that some of these engineered proteins and soy protein and pea 00:48:25.100 |
protein, when you really put them to the test under the right conditions, you know, they 00:48:32.160 |
They seem to, uh, to perform just as well as the animal proteins. 00:48:35.940 |
You did mention, however, that satiation, uh, satiety rather is a key factor. 00:48:44.280 |
I don't know if they measured this, whether the people in the vegan group felt that they 00:48:48.620 |
were, um, happy with what they were eating as compared to the animal protein group. 00:48:53.700 |
You know, at the end of the day, are they still craving more food? 00:48:58.000 |
Do they feel, um, like they desperately want a ribeye steak in order to follow a fairly strict 00:49:03.180 |
diet of any kind, but in particular plant-based one has to have a good reason. 00:49:08.300 |
You know, I, I think that otherwise you, you just kind of fall into the, the availability 00:49:14.540 |
You know, it's a lot easier to fight to eat an omnivore diet. 00:49:18.080 |
Um, that wasn't measured in either of the studies and I always look at these things 00:49:24.680 |
skeptically when you used essentially untrained subjects because untrained subjects are always 00:49:31.520 |
going to kind of incur this newbie gains effect for the training regimen where the, the gains 00:49:39.480 |
that you get from the resistance training alone are going to just mask any potential advantage 00:49:47.360 |
And so, um, you know, people would, well, Stu Phillips will argue with me on that all day 00:49:54.460 |
We did a two day long, uh, Twitter argument about that. 00:50:05.220 |
He is, he is a legend in the protein research area, but he will argue with two to three days 00:50:12.080 |
And so, you know, we always end up at the same spot where, um, look, we need more research 00:50:17.540 |
to see whether, um, and, and this wasn't about, this wasn't about vegan, uh, versus, uh, animal 00:50:26.180 |
This was about just total daily protein intake, period. 00:50:30.460 |
Um, we, we, we just need more research on, uh, highly trained, highly resistance trained 00:50:36.860 |
subjects to see whether, uh, in fact, a completely plant-based protein regimen that's optimized 00:50:44.180 |
calorically and total daily protein amount wise can really run with, um, the animal based stuff 00:50:51.020 |
like the, the high quality animal based proteins. 00:50:54.180 |
And so, uh, it, it almost depends on where you want to place your bets and, and where you, where 00:51:02.420 |
So if you're, if, if gold is on the line at first place at a professional or national level 00:51:10.160 |
I don't know if I would, but, uh, everybody's ideology is what it is. 00:51:15.360 |
And some people are just kind of governed by what they want to stick to. 00:51:19.060 |
So it really depends on the population and what the goal is. 00:51:22.740 |
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I'd like to talk a little bit about body recomposition. 00:54:20.460 |
Is it possible to, quote unquote, gain muscle while at the same time losing fat? 00:54:42.700 |
My friend and colleague, Chris Barakat, he collected all the studies that witnessed this 00:54:49.140 |
recomposition phenomenon with a recomposition, we call it recomp, you know, with simultaneous 00:54:58.280 |
He collected 10 studies, and this review was put out five years ago. 00:55:04.040 |
So you can imagine there's probably a few more studies that have shown recomp now. 00:55:07.280 |
So we can say at least a dozen studies have shown this phenomenon, which we didn't necessarily 00:55:15.240 |
You know, we thought, okay, you need a caloric surplus to gain muscle, and you need a caloric 00:55:21.820 |
But what happened in these studies is the recomposition phenomenon is, I think, seven out of the 10 studies 00:55:35.560 |
So in other words, more lean mass was gained than fat was lost. 00:55:40.120 |
So there were net gains in body mass by the end of these trials, which would at least very 00:55:46.940 |
strongly imply that fat was lost in a caloric surplus. 00:55:50.980 |
If you were going to suggest to somebody the best way to approach this, let's say somebody, loosely 00:56:01.240 |
This could be a man or a woman, assuming that the same advice would pertain to both, is willing 00:56:07.300 |
to do resistance training three to four times per week. 00:56:12.200 |
Do some cardio three times per week for about an hour each session for those. 00:56:17.760 |
And they are willing to eat maintenance calories or slightly over, and their goal is to gain 00:56:30.920 |
Where would you set the calories relative to their needs? 00:56:37.960 |
I realize that's hard to say because we should talk in percentages, but let's just keep it 00:56:43.400 |
How much more than maintenance should somebody ingest? 00:56:47.820 |
And let's assume that when they go in the gym, they know what they're doing. 00:56:50.760 |
They warm up for five, 10 minutes, and then they train hard. 00:56:55.680 |
They're doing, you know, three to six sets per body part. 00:57:00.820 |
And when they do their cardio, they're somewhere between zone two. 00:57:04.400 |
And maybe they throw in a, you know, a max heart rate workout once a week. 00:57:08.500 |
They do some sprints in the middle of their zone too and go back to, you know, this I think 00:57:12.460 |
is pretty typical of what a lot of people are willing to do or currently doing. 00:57:15.280 |
I would say sort of the simple and direct answer is to try to keep the caloric surplus pretty 00:57:24.160 |
So 10% ish above maintenance conditions, which could, which could be for somewhere between 00:57:30.740 |
a 200, possibly 300 calories above what, what you see as maintenance. 00:57:36.400 |
And the common thread amongst these recomposition studies was that protein was very high. 00:57:44.860 |
Protein was somewhere between a gram to a gram and a half per pound of body weight. 00:57:52.700 |
Could we even say that the caloric, this 10% above maintenance should come from quality 00:58:00.240 |
And there's a series of studies done by Joey Antonio and colleagues where they fed the subjects 00:58:07.580 |
four to 800 calories above and beyond their habitual intakes just in protein. 00:58:15.620 |
And either recomposition happened or no significant change in body composition happened. 00:58:25.180 |
And so what protein apparently does when you consume very high amounts of it up to, you know, 00:58:31.640 |
a gram, a gram and a half per pound of body weight is it just sort of spontaneously does 00:58:39.520 |
It'll drive down your intake of the other macros. 00:58:41.920 |
It will potentially increase your exercise energy expenditure and or your non-exercise energy 00:58:55.040 |
Like I talked to Joey Antonio when he got some feedback from the subjects on his very high 00:59:00.120 |
protein study where he subjected them to two grams per pound for an eight week period. 00:59:05.300 |
And he had subjects come into him saying, hey, I'm like sweating while I'm sleeping. 00:59:09.340 |
When you say two grams of protein per pound of body weight, are we talking about increasing 00:59:15.580 |
total caloric intake or just using more of one's daily caloric needs, devoting more of that to 00:59:24.500 |
See, that's the super interesting and kind of mysterious part. 00:59:27.520 |
They're literally saying, okay, maintain your usual dietary habits and then just add 50 to 100 grams 00:59:36.100 |
So you're eating an extra chicken breast and a couple of scoops of whey protein or maybe some 00:59:41.200 |
And you're just adding more quality protein, adding more quality protein on top of what you're 00:59:45.140 |
already eating on top of what you're already learning that we can distribute that pretty 00:59:48.180 |
much wherever we want, get, get, just do what's most comfortable for you relative to your 00:59:53.960 |
And you're saying then, but they're sweating in their sleep. 00:59:57.180 |
Extra 80 to 100 grams of protein, just add it. 01:00:00.380 |
And it's a, look, it's a, it's a free living study. 01:00:04.980 |
So we're not surveilling people in a metabolic ward. 01:00:08.640 |
So the increase in protein could have translated to greater energy expenditure through a, you know, 01:00:16.300 |
a number of pathways, non-exercise pathways or exercise pathways. 01:00:19.400 |
It could have put more power to the ground during their training. 01:00:23.280 |
There could have been some, you know, sort of some magic thermic stuff going on, who knows. 01:00:28.320 |
But, and, and also we can't discount the fact that when you're telling people to add, let's 01:00:35.080 |
say 80 or a hundred grams of protein to, to their habitual intake, the weird thing about 01:00:41.440 |
subjects self-reporting is they tend to over-report the healthy stuff that, that you assign them and 01:00:53.300 |
And so there could be some misreporting going on there, but over a series of like five-ish studies 01:01:04.660 |
It's, yeah, it's, it is pretty freaking awesome. 01:01:07.380 |
Now here's the, the, the thing that needs to be said. 01:01:10.820 |
So there was a metabolic ward study done in 2013-ish by Bray and colleagues where they subjected 01:01:18.080 |
the participants to escalating amounts of protein. 01:01:27.060 |
There, there were three levels of protein intakes. 01:01:29.700 |
There was 5% protein diet, um, a 15% protein diet and a 30-ish percent protein diet. 01:01:36.060 |
The calories, the total calories escalated too. 01:01:40.280 |
There was no exercise involved with this metabolic ward study. 01:01:44.120 |
And the subjects gained both lean mass and fat mass with the escalating protein amounts. 01:01:51.680 |
So there's different stuff going on when you lock people up in a metabolic ward and they 01:01:57.080 |
can't train, and then you're escalating their protein intakes and calories, they will gain 01:02:02.040 |
But in free living conditions with resistance training, if you just over protein the subjects, 01:02:12.860 |
And it is, it's a really interesting phenomenon because it's been seen repeatedly. 01:02:21.280 |
The message I'm getting is if you're going to add calories, add quality protein. 01:02:28.400 |
I'm building on the previous things we talked about. 01:02:30.320 |
The distribution of the protein probably doesn't matter as much, uh, as just getting the total 01:02:37.160 |
And I find it very reassuring that I can train fasted or not fasted, mostly because very few 01:02:46.880 |
So sometimes we need to train first thing in the morning and we got to catch a flight or head 01:02:50.520 |
to work and sometimes people only have time in the evening, this kind of thing. 01:02:54.300 |
Um, I want to make sure that we talk about some of the other macronutrients. 01:03:07.340 |
I think, can we actually put fiber, um, onto the shelf quickly by saying fiber is good, right? 01:03:19.980 |
Um, and get it through fruits and vegetables. 01:03:24.660 |
And if you, if you're not doing that, get it through some supplement, but ideally through 01:03:30.400 |
Fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains, grains are a double-edged sword. 01:03:37.080 |
You got the, you know, you got the refined grains, the flour foods, and then you have the 01:03:40.940 |
whole grains, but even some of the whole grains, there's such thing as whole grain, uh, goldfish 01:03:45.440 |
So, you know, a bit of a treacherous little area there for people who are trying to economize 01:03:50.620 |
on the, the junk and the calories that they consume. 01:03:52.900 |
You can still have a whole grain diet that has just a bunch of crap. 01:03:56.940 |
So fruits, vegetables, get, but get your fiber. 01:04:01.120 |
But when we talk about carbohydrates, let's divide them crudely into starchy carbohydrates. 01:04:07.000 |
So stuff that basically will melt in your mouth. 01:04:12.580 |
A piece of cooked potato, a piece of cooked yam, you know, if you, yes, if you put a piece 01:04:16.980 |
of cooked pasta in your mouth long enough, or even uncooked pasta, it'll eventually dissolve. 01:04:23.060 |
Or a, you know, a piece of broccoli, which, you know, most of it is not going to melt in 01:04:29.380 |
You, you'll be waiting several weeks for, you know, it's because there's a lot of fiber 01:04:33.080 |
So, um, this is the, uh, crude way of distinguishing between fibers and non-fibers, uh, you know, 01:04:45.940 |
They can fuel things like resistance training. 01:04:50.020 |
All the ketogenic folks would be like, I think best fasted, or I think best keto, but, um, 01:04:56.420 |
What is your take on carbohydrates with respect to maintaining or losing body fat? 01:05:03.580 |
Do carbohydrates make it harder to do that, um, if one is doing everything else equally? 01:05:10.840 |
Uh, meaning you're getting exercise, you're, um, you know, you're not exceeding your daily 01:05:17.640 |
Um, is it, uh, is it, are starches inherently bad? 01:05:22.360 |
Um, I'm in, I defer to the evidence, you know, you've got, and of course, evidence is its own 01:05:30.240 |
You've got, you've got research here and then you have observations and anecdote here, right? 01:05:37.480 |
Um, but it generally tends to circle around to what people find has worked best for them. 01:05:45.800 |
But I think, um, what I like to emphasize on this podcast and what you do so beautifully 01:05:51.020 |
is to talk about like, what does the best possible set of controlled studies say when kind of 01:05:57.680 |
lumped together, unless there's one study that kind of rises above the rest because it was 01:06:01.980 |
I mean, I think it's so hard to do quality studies in humans. 01:06:08.680 |
The more you control, the less natural the conditions are, right? 01:06:13.180 |
The more natural the conditions are, the less can be controlled. 01:06:15.800 |
This is why there will never, there will always be jobs for people in nutrition and fitness 01:06:19.860 |
because ultimately you bring people into a metabolic ward. 01:06:25.540 |
You let them free range and just tell you what they ate. 01:06:28.540 |
They lie or they forget or they, uh, and they cheat. 01:06:32.700 |
They like sneak, uh, they sneak, uh, uh, some starburst and they don't tell you about it. 01:06:37.360 |
So that's just life, you know, even clients who are paying you a lot of money, you, you, you, 01:06:43.280 |
you can't necessarily trust a hundred percent of what they're reporting to you, you know, much 01:06:46.800 |
less like a group of subjects in, in, in a study. 01:06:49.260 |
So, um, yeah, the, the carbohydrate thing, starch, whether it's starches, whether it's 01:06:57.720 |
So the body of research on carbohydrate and fat loss, you can distill it down like this. 01:07:04.280 |
As long as between the two groups, you have equated total calories and you've equated protein 01:07:12.160 |
intake between the groups, then body fat reduction by the end of every well controlled trial in 01:07:18.620 |
So protein is kind of the great equalizer that protein and, and total calories. 01:07:28.500 |
Now here's the, the little wrinkle to that answer. 01:07:32.360 |
If you take somebody who's on a standard Western diet and you put them on a ketogenic diet, or 01:07:40.820 |
if you control the experiment with like kind of a high carb, a low fat type of regular run 01:07:47.600 |
of the mill control diet versus a ketogenic diet. 01:07:49.820 |
diet and you don't equate protein, then the ketogenic diet will beat the crap out of the 01:07:56.040 |
control diet every time with fat loss and weight loss because it has more protein. 01:08:00.100 |
And in some cases, uh, you know, if you go as extreme as like carnivore type diet and stuff 01:08:05.960 |
like that, then you're looking at a narrowing of your options. 01:08:10.360 |
So the reduction in variety and possibilities also leads to less total caloric intake. 01:08:16.660 |
So with ketogenic diets, there routinely is when it is an ad libitum ketogenic diet that 01:08:26.520 |
You maybe explain ad libitum, um, to people, uh, whose Latin is lacking or haven't worked in 01:08:35.460 |
But, um, so ad libitum means that you are not consciously calculating or restricting. 01:08:45.620 |
And so when you assign somebody a ketogenic diet where you say, Hey, avoid this, this, and this 01:08:53.000 |
And that you can eat as much as you, you feel like with the proteins and the fats, go, go do 01:08:58.680 |
What happens when you assign somebody that is they spontaneously eat across the range of 01:09:05.440 |
studies somewhere between four to all the way to 900 calories less per day compared to 01:09:11.480 |
their habitual intakes or compared to the control diet intakes. 01:09:17.780 |
Because they, they could eat more if they want. 01:09:20.920 |
I think this speaks to how satiating protein is and especially how satiating protein and 01:09:28.860 |
I mean, I mean, if I'm hungry on a long drive and I can only eat one thing, I'm assuming I 01:09:42.140 |
It's Christmas day, but there's a in and out burger. 01:09:53.780 |
Even though calorie for calorie, I think, you know, probably landing about the same place 01:09:57.900 |
more or less because there's just something so inherently satiating about protein. 01:10:02.040 |
So that makes sense that the keto diet makes sense. 01:10:06.700 |
The issue I have with the keto diet is that until pretty recently, it was tougher to remain 01:10:20.060 |
I don't like crackers, but you can't have a piece of sourdough bread. 01:10:29.020 |
And then people struggle a lot with holidays. 01:10:32.260 |
I think keto is tough for people around the holidays. 01:10:35.080 |
As long as we're in this category of discussion, what are your thoughts about inflammation? 01:10:42.920 |
And here's why I ask, and I ask it this way, is I know many, many people who've struggled 01:10:51.520 |
A lot of male friends, some female friends who, when they adopt a diet of the following 01:10:57.620 |
things, meat, fish, eggs, Parmesan cheese as the only category of dairy, so hard cheese, 01:11:05.660 |
fruit and vegetables, olive oil, butter, coffee, tea, fine, but no sodas or anything except diet 01:11:14.440 |
They lose significant amounts of body fat, probably some water too. 01:11:19.520 |
So they're not eating any starches, no rice, no oatmeal, no bread, no pizza, nothing. 01:11:24.440 |
But they have all managed, this is anecdote, but they've all managed to lose anywhere from 01:11:33.640 |
They're exercising typically, sometimes just cardio. 01:11:37.040 |
So significant amounts of body weight and they keep it off. 01:11:41.120 |
And a number of their health challenges seem to resolve themselves, perhaps secondarily 01:11:49.180 |
But I often wonder whether or not this quote unquote, what some people call a low inflammation 01:11:55.260 |
diet, because there's so few processed and highly processed foods in this regimen, has 01:12:00.560 |
additional benefits that start to synergize with the fat loss. 01:12:05.200 |
And it's remarkable how much better they look, how much better they feel, and they can maintain 01:12:11.060 |
Cause you can say, you know, I'll pass on the, on the bread and the, and the pie, but 01:12:14.740 |
you know, I'm going to have double serving of Turkey and Brussels sprouts. 01:12:17.820 |
And I, you know, it's kind of remarkable what can be accomplished with what I just described. 01:12:27.660 |
But what are your thoughts on inflammation and how certain macronutrient profiles perhaps 01:12:34.900 |
are pro-inflammatory or anti-inflammatory or something people rarely talk about, which 01:12:39.840 |
is inflammatory neutral, kind of keep you in a neither high nor low inflammation state, 01:12:45.240 |
but just kind of a normal fluctuations in inflammation. 01:12:47.960 |
Long question, but I feel like it's one I've wanted to ask for a while and you're the guy 01:12:54.900 |
I think that any diet that facilitates substantial fat loss is going to lower the amount of inflammatory 01:13:05.620 |
cytokines circulating and emanating from the adipose tissue. 01:13:09.340 |
And so if you can get that body fat down, then you can get chronic low grade inflammation down. 01:13:16.400 |
If that body fat is reduced from everywhere, the subcutaneous space, especially the visceral 01:13:21.660 |
space, then you're going to do a lot of good things for long-term health. 01:13:25.200 |
The reason why the diet that you described is so effective at this is because it lacks hyper 01:13:35.480 |
And so the way that you create hyper palatability, hyper palatability is basically the tendency 01:13:41.600 |
for a food to be very flavorful, very delicious, and very easy to passively over consume. 01:13:48.780 |
And so the formula for hyper palatability is basically refined carbs, fat, mix together, 01:14:01.940 |
And there's your formula for food that is easily passively over consumed. 01:14:12.040 |
And the diet that you described doesn't have these ultra-processed, highly engineered, fat, 01:14:20.180 |
carb, refined carb, and fat combo foods that we are just kind of driven to just inhale down. 01:14:32.580 |
And so I think that my view could possibly be a little bit too simplistic, but I think the 01:14:38.260 |
inflammation issue is really tied to an excess body fat issue. 01:14:44.680 |
And again, I've seen so many friends that will lose significant amounts of body fat and stick 01:14:52.000 |
It's also one that if one were to have a slice of cake or a piece of pizza, you're not really 01:14:57.620 |
deviating that far from the total contour of the nutritional plan. 01:15:02.960 |
It's not like you're suddenly out of keto or something. 01:15:06.300 |
And they don't tend to cascade into binges and things of that sort. 01:15:09.740 |
I will say that most of these people also quit drinking alcohol at the same time, which 01:15:17.620 |
And there are some nutrients that are directly anti-inflammatory, like omega-3 fatty acids, 01:15:22.120 |
huge literature on their anti-inflammatory effects. 01:15:31.160 |
And I know that there is some controversy and some infighting with the idea of supplementing 01:15:38.640 |
Now people are afraid of atrial fibrillation and things like that. 01:15:44.800 |
And if you look at the literature, especially the randomized control trials, it is mostly 01:15:53.740 |
I mean, you could find negative literature on almost anything that you do. 01:15:57.580 |
But on balance, I am still comfortable with supplementing with fish oil at this point in 01:16:04.380 |
time, regardless of the mounting evidence that, oh, it might not do anything or, oh, it might 01:16:09.620 |
have this or that potentially adverse effect. 01:16:12.160 |
I kind of think it's a no-brainer if you're not somebody who eats fatty fish regularly through 01:16:18.440 |
The high quality sources of fatty fish tend to be very expensive and they're harder and 01:16:26.220 |
And talk about controversy, you get into this debate about whether like different sources 01:16:33.440 |
I'm sure there are great sources out there, but that's a whole discussion into itself. 01:16:40.700 |
And, you know, so I'm grateful to hear that you do as well because you're the expert. 01:16:46.640 |
So the, yeah, the anti-inflammation effect, if nothing else, seems to warrant that. 01:16:57.000 |
I've had people on this podcast, um, sit where you're sitting and basically paint a picture 01:17:02.640 |
of sugar that it is not quite as bad as crack cocaine and meth, but not too far from that 01:17:11.400 |
And I've had, um, people who land in the more, um, kind of tempered response to sugar, but 01:17:19.700 |
Um, we're not talking, when I say sugar, I'm not talking about fructose in fruit because 01:17:26.740 |
in fruit you've got, uh, fructose, but you've got fiber and there's a high water content and 01:17:32.600 |
some, sure, some fruits have higher fructose content than others, mangoes versus apples, 01:17:39.520 |
But when I'm talking about sugar, I'm talking about if one looks at a package or a label and 01:17:50.420 |
Because those are really the ones that tend to, you know, fall into this bin of quote unquote 01:17:58.940 |
So they, they, they dilute the, uh, the nutritive value of the diet and they contribute to hyper 01:18:08.700 |
If you're talking about extrinsic sugars added to, to the diet, you know, they, they're only 01:18:14.240 |
really only two sources of intrinsic, um, sugars are in fruit and in, in milk. 01:18:20.800 |
Um, everything else, you're just pretty much adding it with the exception of like maybe agave, 01:18:27.100 |
but that's kind of a, a rare esoteric thing, but added sugars to the diet should be consumed 01:18:36.900 |
Uh, the working, um, recommendation is to try to limit added sugars to the diet to 10% of total 01:18:46.940 |
So if you're somebody who likes to put maple syrup on whatever you might do, or somebody who 01:18:52.100 |
likes to put honey on whatever you might do, then you may want to limit that to typical, 01:18:58.840 |
You might want to limit it to like a maximum of 40, 50 grams a day. 01:19:16.740 |
Like if I, I have to try and not eat the entire block of Parmesan cheese. 01:19:23.000 |
I've, I've, I've, I always joke that I have an inner fat boy within me, but I actually have 01:19:29.280 |
been technically obese by BMI standards, like, uh, 10 years ish back. 01:19:41.300 |
I asked, this is what guys ask each other nowadays. 01:19:43.280 |
You on, are you doing any hormone augmentation? 01:19:45.620 |
So, um, Alan says no, and I believe him completely, but yeah, you're in great shape at 53. 01:19:51.200 |
Um, and you have a sweet tooth and a savory tooth. 01:19:59.540 |
Cause I can dish out something practical here. 01:20:02.600 |
Protein powder satisfies the heck out of my sweet tooth. 01:20:05.560 |
And, um, I, I actually don't have the full 50 grams of, uh, added sugar. 01:20:09.660 |
I might add like a tablespoon of, um, maple syrup to my coffee in the day. 01:20:18.960 |
So, you know, those mocha, mocha pot thingies. 01:20:24.860 |
Um, it's like some, it's a piece of hardware. 01:20:29.440 |
It's the thing where you, it's this odd, like, oh, right. 01:20:34.420 |
It's like an hourglass, uh, shaped, uh, coffee pot. 01:20:40.020 |
And, um, what I'm trying to do, I'm trying to duplicate the, uh, the, the, the Thai coffee. 01:20:50.000 |
It's really fricking good coffee that either Vietnamese coffee. 01:20:58.380 |
But I, I'm trying to do a version of that with the mocha pot. 01:21:01.500 |
And if I put maple syrup in that tablespoon, it's fricking awesome. 01:21:05.940 |
And I have that with, uh, with half and half. 01:21:09.120 |
Um, you gotta, you gotta fat sugar combination plus caffeine. 01:21:16.460 |
I go through these phases, but I, I have that. 01:21:18.880 |
And so the extent of added sugar in my diet is that tablespoon of, of maple syrup. 01:21:24.160 |
So I, you know, I do agree with you 50 grams could, could be a little bit up there. 01:21:29.440 |
I, like I said, if I had a sweet tooth, I, what's interesting. 01:21:37.380 |
I used to love like sour patch gummies and gummies. 01:21:44.040 |
I lost it by doing something that probably has no scientific basis. 01:21:49.700 |
But, uh, I heard years ago that if I took a teaspoon of L-glutamine and put it in high 01:21:56.020 |
fat in half and half in cream, basically, and took a shot of that twice a day, that it would 01:22:09.760 |
So it could have been any combination of things or it could be total placebo. 01:22:15.520 |
Um, although I've recommended this to some self-professed sugar addicts. 01:22:21.480 |
And they're like, yeah, it kills the sugar craving, but then they always add the, but I still miss 01:22:31.680 |
This is where I headed off the, the, the sweet stuff. 01:22:35.380 |
I make protein smoothies and they're just, they're artificially sweetened. 01:22:41.240 |
So it satisfies, um, that, you know, that dessert craving, if you will. 01:22:46.880 |
Well, along the lines of artificial sweeteners, um, why, if you want something sweet, wouldn't 01:22:54.820 |
you just replace the, the honey with like stevia? 01:22:57.940 |
Cause it doesn't create the same, um, satiety that, that the maple syrup does for you. 01:23:05.380 |
So maple syrup aside, um, the, you get caloric savings, you know, if, if, if your protein 01:23:13.480 |
powder is artificially sweetened, let's say with, with stevia or sucralose or monk fruit 01:23:23.380 |
Um, you get caloric savings and you just kind of get the, the macro savings if you will as 01:23:29.620 |
And so protein powders are like, I mean, in my opinion, they're just such a breakthrough 01:23:36.280 |
because they satisfy the protein requirements or they significantly augment the protein requirements 01:23:42.220 |
and they take care of like essentially having something that, that is the experience of a 01:23:48.320 |
Anyway, I make some really good fruit smoothies. 01:23:53.560 |
Um, sometimes I do like a mocha type of smoothie. 01:23:56.820 |
Sometimes I do like a tropical fruit type of smoothie. 01:24:07.520 |
I've seen some literature that points to the possibility that they might be quote bad for 01:24:15.520 |
There are some human data, but I think nowadays saying artificial sweeteners is too broad. 01:24:21.580 |
As we say in science, there are lumpers and splitters. 01:24:23.760 |
And I think we need to split that because there's low calorie sweeteners like stevia, right? 01:24:33.240 |
And then there's artificial sweeteners like aspartame, sucralose, saccharin. 01:24:37.180 |
And my understanding is that sucralose and saccharin have some bad properties if consumed in excess. 01:24:47.220 |
So we're talking aspartame, sucralose, saccharin. 01:24:51.720 |
And let's leave aside monk fruit, stevia, et cetera, for the time being. 01:24:56.940 |
You can pretty much simplify it by saying out of all the sweeteners that we study, whether 01:25:03.820 |
they're the natural kind or whether they're the artificial kind, it's saccharin that is 01:25:13.320 |
So for example, the negative effects on gut microbiome that have led to impaired glucose 01:25:21.560 |
tolerance in humans over a short period of time. 01:25:24.840 |
Of course, they, you know, the dose is debatable that they're flooding these humans with, but 01:25:30.500 |
nevertheless, it's saccharin that showed these effects with even body weight gain comparing 01:25:39.320 |
saccharin, sucralose, and I believe it could have been one of the others, aspartame. 01:25:43.940 |
The saccharin group, apparently maybe appetite was dysregulated, actually gained weight. 01:25:52.220 |
And so there is something about saccharin that is not great as far as the range of low calorie 01:26:02.480 |
But thankfully, saccharin is almost commercially extinct. 01:26:08.780 |
It's hard to find saccharin unless you go to a Denny's or some sort of greasy spoon place 01:26:15.120 |
So now we've got this other range of low calorie sweeteners to choose from. 01:26:21.280 |
And it's a little bit of a mystery of which of these low calorie sweeteners has the best 01:26:31.440 |
But they're all pretty much in the same boat. 01:26:34.220 |
You can find a bunch of good stuff with stevia, like the dirt on artificial sweeteners. 01:26:38.600 |
You can find a bunch of potential dirt on aspartame. 01:26:40.880 |
You can find a bunch of potential dirt on sucralose. 01:26:53.460 |
Improved glucose tolerance and things of that sort. 01:26:58.660 |
I always called it stevia, but now it's stevia. 01:27:19.160 |
So if you don't mind the taste, and I happen to like the taste, stevia seems like a perfectly 01:27:27.140 |
I tend to be amenable to all artificial sweeteners, honestly, even aspartame. 01:27:32.880 |
It's, you know, the sheer amounts that you would have to consume of these things, even hypothetically 01:27:37.600 |
to incur negative health outcomes is just absurd amounts. 01:27:42.340 |
It's probably, you know, more dangerous to step outside and breathe in the LA air, you know, 01:27:48.160 |
than engage in like some, you know, aspartame or sucralose on a regular basis at, you know, 01:27:54.740 |
I don't think that can affect people in the course of a lifetime. 01:28:03.620 |
Although my read of the literature of people that drink artificially sweetened soda or stevia 01:28:09.160 |
sweetened soda as an augment to their efforts to consume fewer than needed calories per day 01:28:16.340 |
in order to lose body weight, body fat in particular, is that diet sodas can actually 01:28:24.620 |
You know, and I went back and forth on this literature because I thought, no, water would 01:28:29.260 |
But they compared water, two liters a day or a liter or more per day of diet soda. 01:28:34.880 |
And it seems like it's a pretty good weight loss tool for people that would otherwise be 01:28:40.860 |
drinking soda or would otherwise be drinking just water, which really surprised me. 01:28:46.500 |
But for weight loss, maybe diet sodas actually provide an important role for people. 01:28:53.100 |
I do think that the most, if not all, of the controlled intervention trials show positive 01:29:01.100 |
effects of artificially sweetened or low calorie sweetened beverages on weight loss and all of 01:29:09.180 |
the consequences of the metabolic consequences of what happens with weight loss. 01:29:14.520 |
There's some observational literature that casts some doubt on whether diet sodas are a good 01:29:21.480 |
But then we have the issue of, in quotes, reverse causality, where people who are in poor health 01:29:28.460 |
are sort of seeking out these diet sodas rather than the diet sodas causing the poor health. 01:29:34.000 |
So on balance, artificially sweetened beverages tend to be a net positive for health. 01:29:42.520 |
But I know that a lot of people have a lot of issue with that because people have just sort 01:29:47.860 |
of this natural hippie streak within them that would want to preach only water, water, water. 01:29:54.700 |
I think it's a good idea to practice drinking plain water to, you know, to get that experience 01:30:02.120 |
And I encourage it, but sort of the vilifying of artificially sweetened beverages is just not 01:30:09.600 |
necessarily founded in, in especially the controlled intervention literature. 01:30:15.200 |
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Function. 01:30:20.060 |
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I'd been eating a lot of tuna while also making an effort to eat more leafy greens and supplementing 01:31:15.160 |
with NAC and acetylcysteine, both of which can support glutathione production and detoxification. 01:31:19.940 |
And I should say, by taking a second Function test, that approach worked. 01:31:23.680 |
Comprehensive blood testing is vitally important. 01:31:26.400 |
There's so many things related to your mental and physical health that can only be detected 01:31:31.500 |
The problem is blood testing has always been very expensive and complicated. 01:31:35.060 |
In contrast, I've been super impressed by Function's simplicity and at the level of cost. 01:31:41.280 |
As a consequence, I decided to join their scientific advisory board, and I'm thrilled that they're 01:31:46.640 |
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Is there any evidence that coffee or other caffeinated drinks have a thermic effect that allows you 01:32:12.100 |
So if I drink, I'm a yerba mate fan, so if I drink cold brew yerba mate or hot brew yerba mate 01:32:17.780 |
before working out, let's forget fasted, I happen to do it fasted, and then train. 01:32:23.160 |
Am I going to burn, mobilize more body fat by ingesting a stimulant like caffeine prior to 01:32:35.880 |
The issue is whether the amount that occurs is something meaningful that would be durable 01:32:45.140 |
enough over time for us to be able to say, hey, we can use coffee and or caffeine as an agent to 01:32:53.500 |
I'm not sure if we're there yet, but the literature on balance shows a modest effect, a modest advantage 01:32:59.780 |
on fat loss with caffeinated beverages like tea and coffee. 01:33:04.400 |
I don't think that's discussed very often these days. 01:33:06.780 |
That was kind of more in the 90s, but I think it's a great thing for people to hear because 01:33:10.840 |
90% of adults worldwide consume caffeine every single day. 01:33:17.140 |
Man, you know, I just looked at this huge umbrella review on coffee and health effects. 01:33:28.920 |
A range of clinical outcomes, cardiovascular health, different effects on sort of intermediate 01:33:42.020 |
So almost everything that we can think of that most people generally care about, coffee either 01:33:50.680 |
has a neutral or positive effect on it, but the threshold of benefits sort of cuts off 01:33:58.100 |
So much more than that or, you know, after that threshold, then we're looking at potential 01:34:04.440 |
I suppose the only thing is to remind people to not consume caffeine too close to bedtime, 01:34:10.580 |
because even if you can fall asleep, it's going to disrupt the architecture of your sleep. 01:34:14.480 |
I, and I am sure so many people are so relieved, even delighted to hear that coffee and other 01:34:19.860 |
forms of caffeine are healthy for us, and maybe even pro-longevity. 01:34:26.700 |
Whereas it's been debated, and it continues to be debated, whether alcohol is good or bad 01:34:34.240 |
Last week, another study saying champagne was good for longevity. 01:34:38.240 |
I think it was, but plenty of studies recently showing that alcohol increases cancer risk 01:34:43.980 |
so much that the federal government now is talking about putting this on any, on the label 01:34:58.740 |
So we can't lump alcoholic beverages into this single bucket. 01:35:06.220 |
The literature on red wine specifically, man, you would be hard-pressed to find carcinogenic 01:35:13.840 |
effects from red wine, either epidemiologically or interventionally, and even down to like 01:35:22.500 |
the mechanistic in vitro stuff, like tumorigenesis, anything like that. 01:35:32.600 |
And, you know, even the brain-shrinking threat of alcohol intake, red wine consumers actually 01:35:39.080 |
in at least one controlled trial showed improvements in neuropsychological tests. 01:35:44.900 |
And so I don't think we can say alcohol as a group. 01:35:52.640 |
We have to sort of look at the individual drinks. 01:35:55.720 |
Because I'm sure there's differences between red wine versus some other alcoholic beverage. 01:36:01.700 |
But people study the crap out of red wine, and there's almost nothing but good stuff that 01:36:08.720 |
Who knows how biased it might be, commercially or other? 01:36:15.160 |
I don't like to dismiss studies based on funding source. 01:36:18.340 |
But the red wine literature is almost all positive. 01:36:23.160 |
I feel like I have to push on this a little bit. 01:36:27.920 |
I think assuming everything about those studies is intact and not biased, et cetera. 01:36:36.880 |
I do think that when people are consuming alcohol and thinking about the potential longevity effects 01:36:41.440 |
of red wine, that there's some questions that come to mind. 01:36:47.820 |
You know, so if you're drinking a glass of wine, you're consuming calories. 01:36:52.880 |
Perhaps that's taking up room for quality nutrients that could come from other sources. 01:36:58.020 |
I have a theory, which is that the controversies in the alcohol, around the alcohol literature 01:37:06.080 |
and longevity, in my mind, could boil down to something as simple as sleep disruption. 01:37:11.180 |
For instance, drinkers have more inflammation, but in those particular studies, perhaps, I'm 01:37:18.140 |
speculating here, they're drinking with dinner, and we know that disrupts sleep architecture, 01:37:25.120 |
I mean, this has just been shown over and over again. 01:37:26.780 |
And chronically, over time, especially on a backdrop of a high-stress lifestyle, perhaps 01:37:32.480 |
leads to more systemic inflammation and poorer health outcomes. 01:37:36.020 |
In another culture, maybe in Sardinia or something, or in one of these, dare I say, blue zones, 01:37:42.160 |
people perhaps are eating and drinking and living longer and have lower inflammation because, 01:37:49.440 |
you know, they might drink just as close to sleep, but they have a smoother, lower stress 01:37:56.860 |
And so the disruption in sleep might not be a problem. 01:37:58.800 |
There's an afternoon nap in many of those cultures. 01:38:00.740 |
So when I look at sleep as kind of the foundation of mental health and physical health, which is 01:38:05.960 |
clear, it's at least one of the layers of the foundation, I then wonder whether or not that 01:38:11.820 |
the alcohol studies can be evaluated just strictly on the basis of the measures that are being taken. 01:38:17.620 |
And that if we start to think about the context in which alcohol consumption is occurring, social 01:38:22.600 |
context, sleep hours, stress and lifestyle, genetic predisposition to cancers, et cetera, high 01:38:28.280 |
processed food, you know, and on and on and on. 01:38:31.540 |
I wonder whether or not some of this is going to shake out in the noise, as we say. 01:38:38.940 |
And here's the thing, like my statements on alcohol mainly had to do with red, wine and cancer. 01:38:45.520 |
So if we look at a typical, what would be considered a moderate amount of drinking, one to two glasses a day for little people. 01:38:56.380 |
And then let's say two to three glasses a day for larger people that that is sort of the kind of the moderation models for those for those two. 01:39:03.060 |
Regardless of red wine or not or something else, there is a degree of disinhibition that occurs with drinking that can make you say, ah, screw it. 01:39:14.880 |
And potentially have you just wipe out the entire pasta plate, for example. 01:39:23.900 |
And there's also the inherent calories piece to where I don't know a whole lot of guys who I am aspiring to become look like body comp wise who are regular significant drinkers. 01:39:41.900 |
Okay, so that's sort of the observational side of things. 01:39:44.260 |
And then there's the addiction side of things where you read the stats on the percentage of the general population that has some degree of alcohol use disorder. 01:39:55.120 |
So in a room of 10 people, chances are one of them is going to have alcohol use disorder. 01:40:01.900 |
Well, it's the easiest addiction to mask because, you know, alcohol is so freely available. 01:40:11.240 |
It's the alcohol intake, at least until recently, things are changing, is the one – it's the one drug because alcohol is a drug. 01:40:19.440 |
It's the one drug that if you don't consume it as an adult, people often are put off by that. 01:40:29.980 |
They're sort of like, hey, like what's wrong with you kind of thing or like I thought real men drink or something like that. 01:40:35.660 |
And my – so I quit drinking a long time ago and I didn't have alcohol use disorder, but I didn't like it because I wouldn't sleep well and I like to train in the morning. 01:40:41.780 |
So when people would say like, you don't drink, what's wrong with you? 01:40:44.500 |
And I said, no, I train in the morning while you're sleeping and then let's check in at – I used to be a little – in my 30s, I was kind of cocky. 01:40:51.060 |
So at meetings, you know, I'd say – they'd be like, oh, you're going home at 9 p.m. on the first night. 01:40:55.820 |
I'm like, yeah, but let's check in on Wednesday of this five-day meeting. 01:40:58.440 |
Let's look at how you're hanging in there versus how I'm hanging in there. 01:41:02.340 |
And so I was always interested in the long arc of things, how I could maintain 8 or 9 out of 10 performance, maybe even 10 out of 10 performance day after day after day after day. 01:41:11.880 |
Not necessarily a healthy mentality, but, you know, this is what happens if you have, you know, my mentality and I think it's typical of many people. 01:41:19.360 |
So for me, drinking was a hindrance to life performance. 01:41:23.640 |
I think for many people, alcohol is the way that they mesh with the people around them and I respect the fact that that exists, that it's hard to be the odd person out. 01:41:33.120 |
It can be socially isolating and social connection is important. 01:41:36.400 |
Here's what I found with quitting alcohol, a couple of funny things. 01:41:41.680 |
I was in the Dominican Republic and – at the dinner table and I like pina coladas, you know, virgin pina coladas. 01:41:52.040 |
So I ordered a virgin pina colada and the server just like cracked up and it laughed at me and made fun of me for doing a virgin drink. 01:42:00.320 |
So I actually have gotten shamed for ordering a virgin pina colada. 01:42:04.120 |
But one of the reasons that I was afraid to quit is because I thought that events would lose their fun. 01:42:12.920 |
I felt like I would sort of lose my ability to, you know, be social and have fun and have the same degree of, you know, it's a weird thing. 01:42:26.620 |
You don't know until you quit drinking that things are just as fun. 01:42:31.160 |
You're – obviously you're lucid and you take a lot more in and you can, you know, you can enjoy everything moment to moment and there's no lost patches of time. 01:42:45.040 |
So the interesting thing and the positive thing about quitting drinking for me and I haven't drank not one drink in almost seven years now, come August, is that it taught me how to sit in my feelings and cope with the stress and come up with solutions. 01:43:05.700 |
Whereas prior to that, oh, I know the solution, put the alcohol band-aid on it. 01:43:18.680 |
It impairs coping capabilities and I think those are super important for just basically, you know, being an adult. 01:43:27.900 |
And so those were kind of the hidden benefits that I experienced from quitting alcohol on top of having better training sessions, having better training recovery, consuming 1,000 calories less per day or almost 1,000 calories less per day, improvements in body composition, just mental health. 01:43:49.040 |
And all departments of life just kicked up and improved after I quit drinking. 01:43:54.720 |
But see, I was one of those 1 in 10 who got into the drinking routine and I'm one of those guys, if I like something, I'll have it every day. 01:44:05.640 |
Like I'm probably going to have either coffee and or eggs every day for the rest of my life. 01:44:14.060 |
Same thing happened with alcohol, but the thing with alcohol is you have to try to maintain the buzz, which increases over time because of tolerance, as you know. 01:44:22.160 |
So that was the issue, you know, with me and alcohol. 01:44:29.120 |
Again, we're not here to ram anything down anyone's throat, but I think there are many people. 01:44:33.960 |
And I think that many people can do alcohol in moderation. 01:44:36.520 |
I just was one of them who was much better off quitting. 01:44:40.580 |
Well, I appreciate you sharing that very much. 01:44:42.660 |
So let's talk about seed oils, the dreaded seed oil debate. 01:44:50.660 |
Let's assume somebody is going to maintain calories. 01:44:55.080 |
Like they're not adding seed oils as a source of additional calories above what they would normally be taking in. 01:45:01.760 |
They can consume a seed oil like canola oil or soybean oil, or they can consume olive oil in place of it. 01:45:12.080 |
And let's just compare like which one is better if either. 01:45:16.080 |
And is there anything inherently bad about seed oils? 01:45:19.620 |
And I want to make sure that we talk about the processing because people will say, ah, the seed oils aren't bad if they come from a quality source. 01:45:26.960 |
But most of the seed oils are through this high pressure, high temperature refinement process. 01:45:37.100 |
The big picture is that people over vilify seed oils. 01:45:40.440 |
One side over vilify seed oils, just like the other side over vilifies, let's say your standard, you know, land animal fats like beef, tallow, butter, lard. 01:45:53.240 |
But when you compare those two, like seed oils versus the butter, beef, tallow, lard, you compare the evidence base of those two things, you can find more dirt as far as adverse health outcomes from the land animal fats compared to the seed oils. 01:46:14.420 |
It's really weird that seed oils are being vilified right now because that's not the scientific consensus. 01:46:23.620 |
People who have their nose in the literature are just kind of scratching their heads at the whole seed oil scare thing. 01:46:30.800 |
And there are some people on the fringe who laser in on their philosophies and ideologies about seed oils. 01:46:37.180 |
But then all you need to do is ask a short set of questions. 01:46:43.160 |
And you specified the seed oils in the question, which is great. 01:46:56.920 |
And what health outcome are you concerned with? 01:47:00.500 |
And then what trial do you find most compelling that supports your fear of the seed oil? 01:47:06.480 |
And so everybody, like nine out of 10 people, immediately will say, ah, okay, you want to know what seed oil? 01:47:17.560 |
And one of the hardest things to do is find dirt on canola oil amidst all of the positive effects. 01:47:28.380 |
There is even a meta-analysis comparing directly the effect of canola oil versus olive oil on blood lipid profile. 01:47:38.380 |
And maybe, you know, unsurprisingly to some, but surprisingly to most, canola oil outperforms olive oil for improving blood lipids in the sense of lowering LDL cholesterol. 01:47:53.560 |
That's surprising to me because I assumed that olive oil can do no wrong. 01:48:03.620 |
I would have been just fine with seeing there's no damn difference, one of these anticlimactic results. 01:48:09.620 |
But when you take a look at canola oil's composition, it has a kind of an extraordinarily high proportion of omega-3 fatty acids compared to olive oil and compared to the rest of the seed oils for that matter. 01:48:26.320 |
It does contain omega-6 and that is the predominant fatty acid in canola, but it has a high omega-3 content as well. 01:48:39.960 |
I don't know the exact proportion of omega-3, but what makes canola kind of special as far as the vegetable oils go is its high omega-3 content. 01:48:50.560 |
That's going to surprise a number of people, including me. 01:48:54.800 |
My sense is that any ill effects to come from seed oils are because of who seed oils hang out with, right? 01:49:04.380 |
This is sort of the old, if you're old enough like me to remember, I'm 49 turning 50 in September, so I'm not quite 53, but we're of the same generation and there was- 01:49:15.800 |
Well, there was a discussion around cannabis, for instance. 01:49:19.820 |
We didn't paint it as good or bad, although I do believe that young people, especially young males smoking high-THC cannabis can predispose to psychosis. 01:49:29.520 |
I mean, there's a bunch of debate around this, but back in the day, it was, if you use cannabis, soon you'll be using crack cocaine. 01:49:39.160 |
And over time, people realized that cannabis has its own potential benefits and its own potential risks, right? 01:49:47.100 |
It seems that people who consume a lot of seed oils consume them in conjunction with a lot of starches and perhaps with added sugars as well. 01:49:56.740 |
And when you lump those together, you end up with a pro-inflammatory, often hypercaloric set of conditions and people aren't getting enough quality protein. 01:50:05.880 |
And then we know what that picture looks like. 01:50:09.940 |
And so I do think that there's something about who olive oil and grass-fed butter hang out with that has the opposite effect. 01:50:22.580 |
Like people who go, oh, this is a really high-quality olive oil, generally, in my mind, are the sort of people who are thinking about the quality of the salad ingredients. 01:50:31.040 |
They're thinking about the sourdough bread as opposed to maybe a more refined sugar-containing bread. 01:50:37.140 |
And the people who talk about grass-fed butter are thinking about the quality of the meat sources. 01:50:41.560 |
And they're not eating other protein sources that are laden with other preservatives. 01:50:46.060 |
So to me, I think a lot of this, quote-unquote, seed oil debate will be resolved when we start pulling apart the individual components. 01:50:56.920 |
And I think that from a cost perspective, you know, this hadn't occurred to me until I started voicing a little bit of this online, in which case you learn a lot quickly. 01:51:06.400 |
And what I learned was, you know, there were a number of people who said, yeah, I'm hearing all this great stuff about grass-fed butter and olive oil, but there are people for whom the cost margins are just too high to consume all organic and olive oil. 01:51:21.460 |
And, you know, you have to listen to that and say, okay, well, you know, for people needing to feed an entire family, you know, perhaps some of these other fat sources are more affordable. 01:51:32.700 |
And therefore, what are the real health risks with those? 01:51:35.820 |
So anyway, I was a bit of editorializing there, but I have a feeling some of this is going to shake out in the fine parsing of these different diets. 01:51:46.580 |
What people do with seed oils is what people do with dairy. 01:51:49.540 |
They say dairy as if it's some monolithic thing. 01:51:53.620 |
You know, with dairy, you've got the hard cheeses, you've got butter, you've got yogurt, you've got milk of varying fat levels, you know. 01:52:02.880 |
You're kind of hard-pressed to find negative stuff on yogurt. 01:52:06.460 |
You'd be kind of hard-pressed actually to find negative stuff on hard cheeses. 01:52:10.560 |
Butter, of all of the, you know, the range of dairy foods, butter is the one that you can find the dirt on. 01:52:21.700 |
Like, try to find some negative stuff on flax seed, chia seed, sesame seed. 01:52:29.880 |
I mean, yeah, if you dig hard enough, you can. 01:52:39.660 |
You can look at the literature and it doesn't paint this sinister picture either. 01:52:43.740 |
And so, I think people are missing the forest for the trees in general when they're focused on, honestly, the cooking oils. 01:52:53.440 |
You shouldn't be drowning or deep frying your stuff on a regular basis anyway. 01:52:58.040 |
So, yeah, and beyond that, when you look at the effects of seed oil that are examined in the literature for various outcomes, you know, everything from the intermediate outcomes like biomarker effects, all the way to the, in quotes, hard endpoints like mortality, heart attack, you know, cardiac events and heart disease. 01:53:23.900 |
So, the hard endpoints as well as the intermediate or soft endpoints, they're all superior with the seed oils compared to butter, lard, beef tallow. 01:53:37.240 |
On the whole, so there is a severe misunderstanding and falsely founded scaremongering with respect to seed oils to the point where I just think it's incredibly silly. 01:53:53.020 |
People just have to get a hold of themselves and focus on the overall quality of the diet and not really get into these absolute, you know, death matches over what oils they use to cook their foods. 01:54:12.780 |
I could, honestly, I could like do shots of the stuff. 01:54:17.000 |
And, um, and I love sesame oil, you know, but sesame is a seed oil, but sesame oil has been consumed by very healthy populations throughout Asia for the last 5,000 years. 01:54:27.760 |
Um, and so, uh, I don't necessarily like canola oil, you know, like as far as the sort of the stickiness and the oddness about it. 01:54:36.840 |
But I, I'll still acknowledge that the literature shows overwhelmingly positive stuff about it in the majority of trials. 01:54:48.200 |
And, and I would almost feel more comfortable recommending that if, if you like olive oil, then that should be your go-to rather than oils that are, I guess, maybe Frankensteined or engineered to a degree. 01:55:02.520 |
And you mentioned the whole idea of the, like how these oils are produced. 01:55:06.320 |
Like one of the concerns is hexane use to extract the oils from the seed cakes and stuff like that. 01:55:12.340 |
So the, the use of solvents to get these oils out of their native source, uh, I, there's some interesting literature showing higher hexane levels in, um, olive oil than in, I forget, it was some, some other seed oil, whether it was canola or sunflower. 01:55:30.580 |
And so, but nevertheless, the hexane amounts were well below established safe thresholds. 01:55:38.900 |
And so I think, I really do think that people are getting sort of lost in the weeds and kind of missing the forest for the trees, focusing on the little grains of sand and missing the big boulders. 01:55:50.120 |
I think it's going to clarify a number of things for a number of people. 01:55:54.380 |
Over the years, I've tried to consume less butter. 01:55:58.460 |
Can, can I interrupt and, and let, you know, I'm not anti butter at all. 01:56:02.240 |
I just, um, when you look at the evidence, if you butter everything up in your diet and you really pound like the, it's just eating sticks of butter, then you're hedging your, uh, bets in the direction of increased cardiovascular risk. 01:56:18.080 |
And there's even a really interesting study comparing cream with butter on blood lipids. 01:56:25.060 |
And so cream actually had a neutral effect on blood lipids, whereas butter kind of skewed things in an adverse direction. 01:56:32.820 |
Usually it's, it's typically an increase in, uh, LDL. 01:56:36.720 |
The reason why cream had this neutral effect is what they're figuring, and this is based on other studies as well, is it's got this component called milk fat globule membrane, MFGM, which gets churned out of butter. 01:56:52.360 |
And so even within the dairy category, you have very differently behaving types of foods. 01:56:59.440 |
And once again, I'm not anti butter, but we have to acknowledge that some foods within a given food category are a little bit riskier. 01:57:06.240 |
And you should be a little bit more careful about the, just the sheer amounts you consume of it over a lifetime. 01:57:12.520 |
Uh, years ago, when first starting the podcast, when I wasn't aware of frankly, how big the podcast was going to grow to, I made a joke about like, I eat slabs of butter to increase my cholesterol. 01:57:27.180 |
Um, I, I've always, I've always, I've always, I've always, um, I've always tried to get a little bit of saturated fat. 01:57:35.820 |
In my daily diet, either through red meat or through eggs or through, you know, a tablespoon or two, maybe a butter, depending on, um, how hard I'm training and how, what my caloric needs are. 01:57:46.620 |
I don't like to drop my saturated fat to zero because I find my skin gets dry. 01:57:51.620 |
My blood profiles actually suffer a little bit. 01:57:54.220 |
I do well, but I wouldn't, I just want to, uh, reemphasize. 01:57:59.100 |
I don't think people should consciously try and increase their butter intake. 01:58:02.560 |
Um, but between butter and olive oil and the fats naturally occurring in nuts and eggs and red meat, um, consuming some omega-3s through fish oil or through some fatty fish intake, you can get a pretty nice, uh, contour of the different lipids that include a bunch of micronutrients too. 01:58:21.920 |
I feel like the idea of just emphasizing tallow and butter and red meat to the exclusion of every plant-based fat or nuts to me, it seems nuts. 01:58:32.000 |
And, and I'm friends with Paul Saladino and I'll say that. 01:58:34.960 |
I also think that if you eat a, uh, diet that's very low in saturated fat, like very, very low in saturated fat, um, most of the people that I know who've done that and certainly myself, uh, it leads to drier skin, brittle hair, um, achy joints. 01:58:52.500 |
I do think there's really something to including some saturated fat in one's diet in, in, in, I would say low moderation, right? 01:59:00.840 |
And I know, uh, all the carnivore folks are probably like left the conversation by now. 01:59:05.620 |
You know, the Mediterranean keto model is legit. 01:59:11.060 |
I mean, it's, it's got nothing but positive, uh, effects that, that have been seen in the literature. 01:59:16.140 |
So like if you wanted to go keto, but you're, instead of eating a bunch of lard or butter or beef fat, you swap it out with nuts, avocado, extra virgin olive oil, um, you know, some extra virgin coconut oil. 01:59:32.780 |
Then you have a much better cardiovascular risk profile and you can still be on keto and you can still consume, you know, the range of, uh, protein sources and you're sort of getting kind of like a win-win there. 01:59:45.120 |
Um, you know, oddly the government, the U S government used to recommend, and they used to dish out this recommendation of your fat intake, a third of it. 01:59:54.000 |
So the government has always been into low fat. 02:00:04.880 |
And so they kind of had, had, had the right idea there with kind of getting a variety of the, the fat types in there. 02:00:11.200 |
And I'm familiar with, uh, the literature on, um, saturated fat and cholesterol and testosterone levels. 02:00:17.920 |
And, and, you know, as, as somebody who is not on exogenous testosterone, dude, I, I'm going to be grabbing for whatever, um, dietary advantage I can get as far as keeping my testosterone levels up. 02:00:31.180 |
And so I, I personally would, I would not engage a zero saturated fat diet either. 02:00:41.460 |
Are you aware of any female specific nutrition advice aside from, uh, you know, adjusting for, you know, body weight in, on average, women tend to be lower body weight than men. 02:00:55.600 |
Not always, but, um, and so on lower lean mass, et cetera. 02:00:59.640 |
Is there anything specific about some of the topics that we've discussed thus far that from your experience, and I know your, your wife is, is extremely skilled in, uh, in the department of training and nutrition, et cetera. 02:01:12.580 |
For clients, uh, that is truly female specific, like that they really benefit from doing certain things or not doing certain things that men can get away with or don't have to pay attention to. 02:01:26.300 |
There's very little in that direction, almost nothing, almost no meaningful, um, differences that you can sort of universalize about women need to eat this way. 02:01:39.200 |
The only thing that, that, that I, I would concede to is that if you're, if you have somebody with the goal of, um, you know what, forget about the goal. 02:01:51.620 |
If, if somebody is of childbearing age, she's going to have a monthly menstrual cycle. 02:01:57.240 |
And during that monthly cycle for about a week out of the month, her cravings are going to go through the roof. 02:02:02.360 |
She might have lethargy at the same time, just feel generally like crap and, you know, even emotionally things will be kind of, um, dysregulated. 02:02:10.440 |
During that time, I don't think, I don't think women should totally fight their, their cravings. 02:02:20.020 |
And, um, especially if somebody is on, uh, a weight loss diet. 02:02:24.200 |
So there's a, a, a tactic that we use, we can use with clients called diet breaks. 02:02:31.020 |
So if you're endeavoring weight loss, then you can go, you know, you can go hard for three weeks and then on the week of the menstrual cycle, kind of take it easy. 02:02:42.440 |
And then given to, to your cravings, so to speak for that week. 02:02:47.180 |
And I'm not talking, use that week to undo the progress you made in the previous three weeks. 02:02:52.020 |
But I think that if you're going to diet in a cyclical fashion, um, and this works quite well with women observationally, then your week off or your higher calorie week or your maintenance week, just coincide it with the menstrual cycle. 02:03:11.320 |
And that way you're not fighting mother nature. 02:03:13.640 |
You're sort of kind of riding with mother nature and you can have potentially easier time improving body composition that way. 02:03:21.460 |
Um, as far as the other claims that float around about the, you know, the, the perimenopausal period or the menopausal transition and women have to eat this way. 02:03:31.840 |
They have to avoid this and that and, and eating, you know, there's a, there's all kinds of claims being made. 02:03:37.220 |
Uh, they should be framed as speculations, honestly. 02:03:42.280 |
And, um, with the menopausal transition, like menopause is a really hot thing right now amongst the influencers and things like that. 02:03:50.960 |
And there is some research showing that, um, there is fat mass that's gained during the menopausal transition and lean mass that's lost at a general population level. 02:04:01.520 |
But there's a lot of scaremongering around that as well. 02:04:09.660 |
It's the, it's the longest and, uh, largest study on, on this topic. 02:04:15.420 |
And they looked at the four to eight year menopausal transition. 02:04:20.080 |
And that usually occurs in women from like mid forties to mid fifties. 02:04:24.120 |
And they looked at early menopause, mid menopause, post menopause. 02:04:28.460 |
And they looked at the effects on body composition or the relationship at least with the menopausal transition and body composition. 02:04:37.100 |
During a concentrated three and a half year period where most of the changes took place, the average body fat gained was 1.6 kilograms. 02:04:49.540 |
The average amount of lean mass lost was 0.2 kilograms. 02:04:56.000 |
So yes, these things occur, but the magnitude of which they occur. 02:05:04.480 |
This isn't in like fitness people who are really meticulous about high enough protein resistance training, et cetera. 02:05:10.120 |
I don't think this, the scaremongering is warranted. 02:05:14.080 |
I know that there's very real symptoms associated with the menopausal transition that make adhering to a, you know, a fitness program or a diet program, very tough. 02:05:25.100 |
You know, the hot flashes, the lethargy, joint pain, changes in sexual function, the combination of those things, how they affect sleep, poor sleep affects everything negatively. 02:05:38.740 |
And so when you work with somebody as a practitioner who's going through the menopausal transition, I would grant that maybe you set their expectations at maybe 50% the amount that you would with somebody who was not in the menopausal transition. 02:05:57.000 |
So whereas you would maybe set somebody to expect like a pound a week loss if they're trying to lose body fat, then you should maybe set somebody in the perimenopausal period to be okay with like half of that. 02:06:11.800 |
Because of the other changes that are occurring that make the rest and recovery more difficult. 02:06:20.640 |
I know it's a topic that's, as you mentioned, is more frequent these days. 02:06:27.740 |
It's been a topic that hasn't received a lot of attention until fairly recently. 02:06:32.860 |
I think because, A, the Women's Health Initiative studies weren't completed. 02:06:39.040 |
A lot of them were completed in recent years. 02:06:42.860 |
I think also the effects on brain, like the relationship between estrogen, testosterone, and brain function in males and females is something that we're just now starting to really understand with modern imaging tools and so on. 02:06:56.760 |
So this is an area, of course, that's going to evolve quickly in the upcoming years. 02:07:11.340 |
My read of the data on collagen is that the amino acid profile in collagen, which typically comes from fish, I believe. 02:07:24.540 |
That the amino acid profile is not terrific from the perspective of muscle protein synthesis. 02:07:32.000 |
Low in leucine and other branch chain amino acids. 02:07:37.100 |
But that the amino acids that it is high in comprise a significant fraction of what skin and other soft tissues are made of. 02:07:48.600 |
So that ingesting 15 to 30 grams of collagen per day might be beneficial, independent and separate from dietary protein for sake of muscle protein synthesis. 02:08:01.160 |
It also so happens, if you don't mind me saying, you have very nice skin. 02:08:11.560 |
And what are your thoughts about people who want to take collagen specifically to improve skin appearance and for no other reason? 02:08:19.520 |
Okay, so I want to start off by saying that fitness professionals in the, in quotes, evidence-based community, they have almost a pathologically minimalist approach to supplementation. 02:08:35.340 |
So it's almost like if you can avoid a supplement and dismiss it and poo-poo it, hey, great, we won. 02:08:43.540 |
I'm not like that with a few supplements and collagen is one of them. 02:08:48.980 |
And for one thing, of all the proteins in the body, collagen is the single most abundant. 02:08:56.760 |
And collagen comprises about, gosh, you know, 20 to 40% of the proteins in the body. 02:09:08.480 |
It comprises a significant amount of bone tissue and not just the joints and ligaments and tendons. 02:09:14.560 |
And so from a very kind of no-brainer troglodytic level, it's like, what is everybody's issue with providing the raw materials to the body that it can use to build these tissues? 02:09:29.840 |
And the pushback on that is the idea that the body takes any protein, breaks it down into its constituent amino acids, and the amino acids get shuttled to where they need to go depending on the homeostatic need of the body or, you know, whatever need the body has at the moment. 02:09:48.000 |
Okay, well, if we go with that logic, then we would say, okay, so then there's really no such thing as better proteins than others, as long as we have sort of a basic amount of the essential amino acids. 02:10:01.240 |
And then beyond that, the interesting thing about collagen, and this is debated as well, is its resistance to full hydrolysis where you've got these collagen fragments that can float through circulation and into the target tissues. 02:10:19.880 |
These diantripeptides, right, they've been observed through isotopic tracer technology, and they make it into the chondrocytes or the, you know, the joint cells, and they increase activity in the chondrocytes. 02:10:34.700 |
But beyond that, it's like, why would people, nobody balks about consuming enough calcium, dietary calcium, to maintain the integrity of the skeletal system. 02:10:52.740 |
But, hey, you talk about consuming enough collagen to maintain the integrity of connective tissues throughout the body and including skin. 02:11:01.100 |
If skin is 80% collagen by dry weight, then people lose their crap, you know. 02:11:07.020 |
I kind of think it's a no-brainer to at least be optimistic about collagen supplementation if you're somebody who never eats the cartilage of the meat, the bone, the connective tissue parts. 02:11:22.840 |
If you don't eat, you know, your animal foods nose to tail, and you're just eating muscle meats, I think the guy who does that but takes collagen as a supplement is going to have an edge on you throughout the life course. 02:11:36.920 |
And, you know, on a related note, I think that's one of the disadvantages that vegans might have until they find a genius way to manufacture a non-animal collagen molecule. 02:11:50.280 |
There are multiple systematic reviews showing the benefits of collagen on various skin outcomes, which are debated, of course. 02:11:58.780 |
Whey protein always seems to kick collagen's ass for muscle-related outcomes, but, you know, that's not what we're taking collagen for. 02:12:09.640 |
So, back to your original question, yeah, I do take collagen. 02:12:18.240 |
To me, it's kind of a no-brainer, just like, you know, getting enough—you're providing the raw materials that the body is going to use and need anyway, 02:12:28.700 |
and the debate is whether or not the bioavailability is meaningful or not. 02:12:34.640 |
I'm willing to just do the first world thing and take that chance and take the collagen supplement. 02:12:43.860 |
What other supplements do you take and what—maybe we can establish a hierarchy of supplements or clusters instead of, like, the top one. 02:13:02.300 |
So, let's agree that the main thing is get enough sleep, exercise, eat well. 02:13:10.140 |
To eat well, you want to emphasize what you talked about and to try and get the best quality sources that you can afford. 02:13:16.980 |
Let's assume that somebody has the amount of disposable income to be able to buy, you know, one or two supplements to take on an ongoing basis. 02:13:26.620 |
And let's set aside food supplements like whey protein from vitamins and performance supplements and just kind of put them all out there and say, 02:13:37.820 |
okay, let's say I've got—it's going to differ by country, but let's say I've got $150 of disposable income where I could get, like, one or two supplements I can take on going. 02:13:50.240 |
If the goal is keep lean tissue the same or increase lean tissue and keep body fat where it's at or lose some body fat, overall vigor, overall health, longevity. 02:14:04.100 |
Okay, so my answer to this is going to be very bro-scientific because it is so hard to study those outcomes that we almost are just, you know, placing our bets when we do the supplement thing 02:14:23.580 |
beyond having a diet that is diverse across and within the food groups and provides all the essential macro and micronutrients, 02:14:31.820 |
which it often doesn't, especially if we're dieting, especially if we're training or a combination of both, 02:14:38.100 |
especially if we're caught out in not eating an optimal diet, traveling all over the place, which we often are. 02:14:44.920 |
So I personally see a multivitamin, multivitamin and mineral, as a no-brainer. 02:14:55.660 |
Like, who do you know eats this pristine diet that just nails all the micronutrients in optimal amounts? 02:15:05.340 |
That's a very rare person, and that person would have to be covering the food groups and eating a whole lot of calories of the different groups and across and within the groups. 02:15:23.780 |
A double dose of the same one or two different ones? 02:15:41.820 |
Usually with multivitamins, it would have to be an absolute horse pill to get enough vitamin D, vitamin D3 in that. 02:15:54.960 |
Oh, that's where I get real bro-scientific on you, man. 02:15:59.060 |
The literature cuts off with benefits like below 1,000 IUs. 02:16:10.880 |
I mean, listen, I have female family members who were having some health struggles that – for whom the only change, the only change was 5,000 IU of vitamin D3 per day. 02:16:23.120 |
And it made a significant positive effect on a number of different subjective metrics and some objective metrics. 02:16:32.080 |
And these were people that were getting their sunlight and eating very high-quality food, really putting time and effort into it. 02:16:44.620 |
D3 is getting PubMed-ed right now in a similar way that fish oil is getting PubMed-ed. 02:16:54.840 |
So now it's a controversial thing to take, you know, vitamin D3. 02:16:58.520 |
You know, you have position statements rolling out. 02:17:01.360 |
Oh, well, we thought you need – you don't really – 02:17:04.560 |
So good multivitamin with iron, especially for women who menstruate, right? 02:17:20.600 |
Not three grams combined EPA, DHA, but three grams in three one-gram capsules. 02:17:27.840 |
I would say – does that get you over the one gram per day of EPA? 02:17:33.580 |
One gram per day of EPA, which means taking about three grams total. 02:17:36.780 |
Yeah, it's about one gram a day of combined EPA, DHA, and the atrial fib literature is showing 02:17:47.680 |
I don't believe everything I read, even in the peer-reviewed literature. 02:17:53.640 |
You've been a scientist too long to believe everything you read. 02:17:59.320 |
Certain things, you just take it with a grain of salt. 02:18:01.320 |
You recognize the literature evidence base, and then you make the judgment call just based 02:18:07.900 |
on your own sensibilities and how you respond individually. 02:18:10.160 |
The regular hierarchy of evidence is one way, but I think at the very tip is how do you respond 02:18:19.780 |
So, yeah, and so fish oil allows you to take that. 02:18:25.100 |
Another thing that would blow up the size of a multivitamin is getting enough magnesium to show 02:18:34.020 |
I'm cool with pretty much anything except magnesium oxide. 02:18:43.620 |
And I do take creatine, about five grams a day. 02:18:48.500 |
And I do take another bro science maneuver, which, boy, I'm really incriminating myself here. 02:18:58.560 |
I take vitamin C, extra vitamin C, a gram a day. 02:19:02.940 |
What effect are you seeking with the vitamin C? 02:19:05.220 |
Effects on immunity plus kind of a potential synergy with the collagen. 02:19:13.860 |
I realize that you're framing all of this very cautiously under the umbrella of bro science. 02:19:21.840 |
But I think there are good data on vitamin D, on D3, on combining 15 grams of collagen with vitamin C, 02:19:30.360 |
at least in the studies looking at skin elasticity. 02:19:36.200 |
I'm realizing, and the audience is certainly realizing just how cautious and conservative you are with your words, 02:19:45.000 |
So the five grams of creatine, some vitamin C, anything more esoteric than that? 02:19:52.240 |
No, nothing beyond the multi-vitamin D, fish oil, vitamin C, creatine, magnesium. 02:20:01.860 |
How many days per week are you resistance training? 02:20:11.340 |
So here's the thing that a lot of people would ding me on is I try to make my resistance training cardio-y. 02:20:19.080 |
So my cardio, if you can call it cardio, would consist of just walks around the neighborhood on occasion 02:20:29.580 |
or just really light hikes on occasion and maybe pacing around between sets. 02:20:40.420 |
I mean, everybody wants to wait two to three minutes between sets to move the maximal amount of loads. 02:20:50.060 |
You can do progressive overload even within a short rest paradigm. 02:20:55.680 |
I mean, as long as it's trending up, you know, your net tonnage moved is trending up over time. 02:21:02.240 |
It won't move up as quickly as if you were to freaking rest two to three minutes between sets. 02:21:13.400 |
I like to lift heavy and slow, like three to five minutes between sets. 02:21:19.060 |
Now I'm in like two to five repetition range. 02:21:24.420 |
But I like to run and I do other forms of cardio for cardio. 02:21:27.600 |
But we should make sure that at some point you and Cameron Haynes train together because he does the circuit trick. 02:21:33.400 |
His run-lift-shoot thing that he does every day. 02:21:35.320 |
You know, he shoots arrows to practice his archery. 02:21:43.000 |
And he does the circuit style lifting training that I've done with him. 02:21:54.400 |
But it sounds like it's very well tuned to what you thrive on. 02:22:01.220 |
Can you explain for people what a cluster set is? 02:22:03.880 |
A cluster set is you basically you're breaking up a set with rest periods that range from anywhere from, gosh, five to like 20 seconds within like a single like set. 02:22:16.260 |
So like leg extension, leg press, and then squat as. 02:22:20.460 |
That would be more like a super set or a giant set. 02:22:34.340 |
I'm talking to you as if you're a bodybuilder. 02:22:38.060 |
I like to run and I lift to stay strong enough and stable enough to run. 02:22:48.300 |
So I'll do, I go very heavy on like hack squats or belt squats. 02:22:57.600 |
So let's imagine you pick a weight for leg extensions that you can do. 02:23:02.060 |
Your first work set after however you might warm up. 02:23:06.240 |
Your first work set, pick a load that will enable you to fail out at about, let's say, 16 reps. 02:23:22.680 |
My colleagues would say, okay, well, you know, I'll leave like one rep in reserve and what, you know. 02:23:27.780 |
I like to train to failure all this freaking time. 02:23:34.180 |
I don't hurt myself with training to failure. 02:23:35.640 |
And I wouldn't train a failure with a freaking bench press or a squat. 02:23:38.720 |
But you can choose the exercises you can take to failure. 02:24:11.140 |
You know, if you breathe fast enough, you kind of won't hit it. 02:24:13.500 |
But if your five slow breaths are slow enough, you'll hit the six reps in this case. 02:24:28.780 |
That's a cluster set with failure built into it a couple times. 02:24:34.120 |
And how many cluster sets would you do per body part? 02:24:40.640 |
This seems like a great thing to do if one is low on time. 02:24:45.360 |
And perhaps if one has a nagging injury that you need to work around by avoiding heavy weights. 02:24:53.100 |
I hope to never be in the position to have to do this workout. 02:24:56.800 |
And you can add a drop set to the second exercise. 02:25:00.880 |
Cut the weight down by 25-ish percent and go right into it and drop set. 02:25:06.200 |
So kind of the point of that and how I'm sort of defending my non-love for formal cardio is a lot of my resistance training, I try to make it – I sort of try to gamify it in that sense. 02:25:21.480 |
And it ends up stimulating cardiorespiratory pathways to a greater degree than your typical resistance training. 02:25:30.520 |
I would never deny the benefit of formal cardio, but just how I navigate my training and sticking with what I enjoy, I do enough volume through the week to where I would say that, look, whoever loves endurance adaptations, you know, increases in VO2 max, pushing that in, great, good for you. 02:25:50.560 |
I just think that there's a limit to how much that will benefit cardiovascular health and or longevity compared to just staying physically active, keeping good body composition, and just being consistent with that. 02:26:05.120 |
And, of course, the other lifestyle factors too. 02:26:10.820 |
Yeah, but I think it weaves very nicely into what we've been talking about up until now, which is a real-world scenario. 02:26:20.060 |
I, you know, touch on what works for me, but this is what works for you, and you're able to kind of merge cardio and resistance training in a way that sounds very time-efficient. 02:26:29.900 |
Well, I don't always do the cluster set thing. 02:26:35.640 |
So, if I'm, you know, if I'm at a station where I can superset chest and back work, I'll superset with minimal rest. 02:26:47.480 |
And, or, you know, you know, bicep versus tricep work or anything that you can do sort of supersetting antagonistic muscles. 02:27:00.300 |
I don't necessarily always do the cluster set thing. 02:27:08.580 |
And do you train your female clients this way? 02:27:11.520 |
The reason I ask is that in my experience, I realize this is a generalization, but I've had female training partners before. 02:27:17.980 |
Some of the best training partners I've had, by the way, are female training partners. 02:27:20.560 |
They worked hard, and they were also great athletes. 02:27:26.720 |
They tended to view resistance training, at least at first, as something to limit the rest periods between sets. 02:27:34.060 |
Like, they felt like if their heart rate wasn't up continuously, it wasn't exercise. 02:27:38.600 |
Those people often were pleasantly surprised by doing lower repetition, longer rest work. 02:27:43.980 |
But in general, do you recommend what you just described more for your male or female training clients? 02:27:51.260 |
You know, being perfectly honest, it's just what I enjoy doing, and it is probably not the most efficient way to make muscle gains. 02:28:08.200 |
When I was training folks for the specific goal of hypertrophy, I would put them through kind of the standard, you know, let's rest between sets, move the maximum amount of load. 02:28:21.620 |
I don't—you know, I'm sort of with Brad Schoenfeld. 02:28:25.200 |
I think Brad has done the best work in the hypertrophy realm. 02:28:30.060 |
And training for hypertrophy is one of the best ways to train for, I guess, optimizing metabolic health. 02:28:39.420 |
So there should be some hypertrophy training included in any program, in my opinion. 02:28:50.860 |
And I realize it does go against a lot of the typical, like, consensus. 02:28:59.260 |
I think it highlights, if nothing else, that doing what one enjoys in the realm of fitness and nutrition is equally important to what's best, 02:29:07.620 |
because if you don't enjoy it, you're unlikely to stick to things. 02:29:12.320 |
Listen, I want to extend a huge thank you for coming here today. 02:29:17.900 |
I always knew from our first in-person meeting that we would do this at some point, and I'm so glad we're doing this now. 02:29:24.600 |
I must say you have an absolutely staggeringly impressive command of the literature. 02:29:32.400 |
You know, anyone that's listened to this realizes that you don't just say stuff. 02:29:38.000 |
You always precede your statements with the origin of the information you're about to convey, whether or not it's your own personal experience and preference, whether it's from a meta-analysis, whether or not it's from a particular study. 02:29:49.660 |
And as an academic, I especially appreciate you always credit the authors of the study. 02:29:54.960 |
I mean, I know people heard this, but I want to underscore the scholarly nature with which you present evidence and attribution to the original authors of the work. 02:30:05.360 |
And it's so clear that you've got your mind wrapped around these massive topics that are of immense confusion to the general public and importance. 02:30:15.060 |
And to take us back to something I said at the beginning, you know, when I think of Alan Aragon, I think of immense amounts of knowledge shared and this immense property of clarifying things for people. 02:30:29.960 |
Today, you've taught us that protein is extremely important, what qualities of protein exist in different domains of the different food groups, timing of a protein intake, timing relative to exercise, timing of exercise, type of exercise, talked about collagen. 02:30:47.300 |
Yes, you can gain muscle and lose fat simultaneously. 02:30:50.060 |
And you make this information not just clear, but extremely practical. 02:30:54.780 |
So thank you, thank you, thank you for the immense amount of information you provided us today and that you continue to provide online and elsewhere. 02:31:02.580 |
We, of course, will provide links to where people can learn more about you and from you. 02:31:13.420 |
And I'm so grateful that you came out here today and that I said the wrong thing on social media so that we had the opportunity to meet. 02:31:24.800 |
And I really, really think this will bring a lot of value and just thank you for everything. 02:31:34.600 |
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Alan Aragon. 02:31:37.980 |
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