217 ‒ Exercise, VO2 max, and longevity | Mike Joyner, M.D.

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  • @PeterAttiaMD
    @PeterAttiaMD  2 роки тому +57

    In this episode, we discuss:
    0:00:00 - Intro
    0:00:08 - Mike’s training as an anesthesiologist and interest in exercise physiology
    0:05:25 - How exercise increases longevity
    0:08:54 - The impressive data on the benefits of exercise
    0:14:33 - The Centenarian Olympics and other ways to mitigate age-related decline in strength and stability
    0:19:06 - The violent dropoff in strength and activity with age and how exercise preserves fitness in old age
    0:22:39 - Benefits of exercise on mortality and fracture risk, and the interplay of nutrition and exercise
    0:28:08 - How exercise benefits the autonomic nervous system and why this plays an important role in our health
    0:30:40 - VO2 max, heart rate recovery, heart rate variability, and other metrics of fitness positively impacted by exercise
    0:35:31 - Reduction in all-cause mortality with increased fitness levels and VO2 max
    0:44:04 - Does the relationship between exercise and longevity follow a J-curve?
    0:51:33 - Mitigating age-related decline in fitness by elevating your VO2 max at a young age
    1:01:51 - Breaking down the variables that drive VO2 max
    1:08:43 - Learning from elite athletes: Training regimens, aerobic efficiency, and other impressive metrics
    1:19:02 - Health benefits of light exercise for the average person
    1:21:55 - Simple training metrics to track, and Mike’s current exercise regimen
    1:31:24 - How to boost your VO2 max, and the importance of form and tempo with interval training
    1:39:49 - Training advice for the average person
    1:42:33 - Why professional athletes have longer careers than they’ve had in the past
    1:45:45 - Use of performance-enhancing drugs in professional sports
    1:54:24 - Can the miracle of exercise be put in a pill?
    1:57:58 - Mike’s current research and questions he’s most interested in answering
    2:00:44 - Use of convalescent plasma to treat COVID-19
    2:07:58 - Parting thoughts on the current state of fitness and exercise in society

    • @brokengames9020
      @brokengames9020 2 роки тому

      01:48:00 cycling is not state wide is private clubs.

    • @williamchase5698
      @williamchase5698 2 роки тому +3

      did I hear rucksack? as a veteran.... rucking is great zone 2-3 type training.....I've gotten back into it at 49yr old.

    • @ApaX1981
      @ApaX1981 2 роки тому +2

      I used to tend to have low iron levels. For that reason I started activly make sure I get plenty of iron. The thing I noticed: much more difficult to get the heat rate up. My legs would just blow-up. 6 month later, legs are much more capable to sustain the load....only now it is easier to get the hearrate up.
      I always understood the hearrate was request driven. What is causing the decline of max heart rate? Could it simply not be a decline in reqeust?

    • @brokengames9020
      @brokengames9020 2 роки тому +1

      You said you could "easily" get to 200, 205 bpm while you were under 20... Then above 20 you had problems getting to/over 180 bpm... Can you remember heart rate recovery rate?
      e.g. how much time you stayed at 200 bpm and how much it took to recover under 99 bpm?
      e.g. how much time you stayed at 180 bpm and how much it took to recover under 99 bpm?
      and these days
      e.g. how much time you stayed at 170 bpm and how much it took to recover under 99 bpm?

    • @SmoknJ
      @SmoknJ 2 роки тому +1

      Love your content, but the audio levels on this video aren't great. The podcast of this episode seems to be fine though.

  • @bgrimlan
    @bgrimlan 2 роки тому +155

    I get so discouraged every time I hear Dr Peter Attia mentions what I should be able to do in order to escape a short life. I am 49 years old with cerebral palsy (I walk, but have poor balance so I fall a lot). Everything is getting harder for me, but I am fighting by losing some extra pounds (22 lb in 10 weeks so far) and exercising. But...the things he lists (be able to get off of the ground with just 1 hand, do 3 miles in a hour, carry your body weight for 2 mins, etc) I am nowhere near achieving nor do I think I will ever be able to. But..I am fighting.

    • @ill_eye
      @ill_eye 2 роки тому +40

      Hei, don't get discouraged. The effort counts in these things. We all have limitations. It's not that you have to be able to DO those things, but that you work towards them adjusted to your inherent ability. Keep on keeping on!

    • @mirceabranda
      @mirceabranda 2 роки тому +15

      What you did with the extra pounds and the fact that you do your best every day it is inspiring. Keep doing it and more and more positive results will come. Read books about mindset and try to understand while doing exercise what is happening it our brain. I can highly recommend Habbits of a happy brain, Mindset, Grit and all Gabor Mate's books to understand what our early early years did to us. I wish you all the best. Hugs!

    • @non9886
      @non9886 2 роки тому +7

      man, i read some notes of one scientist or doctor which studied elder people quite long and extensively. there are a lot of interesting facts in it and few very interesting and surprising statistics and so. there are two things for you. what you did in previous life doesn!t matter so much as what you do in you older age. even if you are not able to do what average person in your age, it means nothing. just try to stay in best shape you can. other thing, even more important. they stated that physical activity is more important than condition! although it is quite connected, it is not the same. if someone has better dispositions and was more active as younger, he could stay in better shape than average. but when he stops or does too little, his health and life span can deteriorate faster than of people with worse condition which are more active in that critical older age...

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Рік тому +8

      That's for people with ordinary muscular control. You'll do better with more weight training, especially machine exercises. Look up cerebral palsy weight lifting.

    • @SammeerSRaawat
      @SammeerSRaawat Рік тому +4

      Hi CR1988,
      I like your spirit! Keep it up!
      It will be difficult for me to understand your problem, but I empathise with you.
      Listen to your body, try some yoga asanas for balance (usually standing on 1 feet).
      I wish you find peace, strength and wisdom to find right direction and goal.

  • @ginamiller9206
    @ginamiller9206 Рік тому +70

    I am 75 and in fairly bad shape physically but I am not giving up. I am learning so much from Peter and all his guests and I have given Peter’s book Outlive to my daughters and their husbands. They have a chance to do better.

    • @robertcunningham9626
      @robertcunningham9626 Рік тому +3

      The journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.

    • @tgere79
      @tgere79 Рік тому +2

      Hooray for you! It's never too late to get started. Find a good personal coach to guide you on your physical training path. Good luck on your venture!

    • @Simlatio
      @Simlatio 11 місяців тому +2

      The good news is you can start your fitness journey even at your advanced age and have massive improvements in your quality of life. You can still be 70% of who you could have been if you were into fitness your whole life, and that 70% is still fit enough to remain fully independent well into your 90s.

    • @Your_Favorite_Onion
      @Your_Favorite_Onion 11 місяців тому

      Carnivore diet is best for health

    • @marcoj25
      @marcoj25 10 місяців тому

      The body has amazing ability to repair!

  • @rliao
    @rliao 2 роки тому +15

    One of your best episodes yet. Excellent discussion of the J-curve phenomenon. Thank you!

  • @mmmyeahh
    @mmmyeahh 9 місяців тому +2

    I love listening to intelligent conversation, great discussion!

  • @davewyman
    @davewyman 2 роки тому +143

    For decades, from observation of older cyclists, I've believed I’d be fairly vigorous until I reached about 75 and then glide into a physical decline. That’s how old I’ll be next January. So I was shocked when the discussion turned to the claim that there’s a cliff almost everyone physically falls off of at that age.
    Thank goodness I hung around to listen to how fit Norwegian cross country skier‘s can be into their 80s.
    I have been a serious cyclist since 1975. I started to cycle seriously because I wanted to cardiovascularly strong for mountaineering. I’m no longer a mountaineer. I am still a cyclist.
    Waking heart rate: 39 bpm. I can briefly hit 180 with a very hard effort. My weight is low. On a casual ride, I keep up with cyclists decades younger than me. I can hang at higher speeds for a few minutes. I like riding up steep roads.
    Cyclists I don’t know who I ride with for the first time will sometimes ask me how old I am. When I tell the, they usually say they hope they will be where I am when they’re my age. I advise them to just keep riding.
    I’ll see what happens to me in five months. I think I will find some Norwegian in me. In the meantime, after watching this awesome video, I realize I really do have to start working with some weights.

    • @g99se9
      @g99se9 2 роки тому +8

      That’s great! My brother is a longtime cyclist as well. Me, I’m a walker/hiker/resistance training guy. I’ve heard that cyclists have a bone density deficiency due to lack of skeletal stress in the act of riding. Something to look into perhaps.

    • @ccamire
      @ccamire 2 роки тому

      Do swift 4x/wk classes in the winter, you will keep your vo2 max at high levels

    • @1pittmanj
      @1pittmanj 2 роки тому

      Dave I am very curious what your workouts were on the bike and what the carryover was to your mountaineering?

    • @Markhypnosis1
      @Markhypnosis1 2 роки тому +1

      @@1pittmanj He's talking about building his cardiovascular fitness with cycling for mountaineering. That's the carryover.

    • @ryankeels4661
      @ryankeels4661 2 роки тому +8

      I'm a strong believer that the physical decline that many experience is due to allowing the slip by not staying active. The people that are still participating in sports at that age are in shocking shape relative to the general population at the same age.

  • @briansndbrg
    @briansndbrg 2 роки тому +165

    My mother and Mother-in-law are both 95 and have no idea who Peter Attia is. They also have no knowledge of anything to do with exercise physiology. What they have in common is "Walking". They have both been walking for years.

    • @forajc
      @forajc 2 роки тому +9

      I agree there seem to be anecdotally a lot of women in the 90's in good shape and never did any of this training. Would they be even healthier if the engaged in these prescribed activities? The general population studies that these Dr's cite seem to indicate such. Not sure what to make of all this information. How much and to what intensity should one do resistance training and cardio? Still somewhat confusing.

    • @Noneofyourbusiness-rq9jq
      @Noneofyourbusiness-rq9jq 2 роки тому +6

      women do less high intense physical activity over there life .
      you drive your car fast for a long time and it doesn't last long take your time keep it ticking over and it will last longer.

    • @homefrontt
      @homefrontt 2 роки тому

      Don’t we all

    • @metalrunner4398
      @metalrunner4398 2 роки тому +4

      Tell them to at least get some sleep.

    • @caseydh73
      @caseydh73 2 роки тому +19

      My great grandmother just passed away this last year at the age of 106. Her health was just about as perfect as it could be her whole life. She grew up ranching and then walked everyday in her later life. Even at 106 she could walk, sit and stand on her own, lift her arms above her head, ect.

  • @treyjones5240
    @treyjones5240 2 роки тому +4

    Quality researchers and scientists who also have athletic ability like this individual are a pleasure to listen to.

  • @samiraba1
    @samiraba1 Рік тому +23

    Second time I’m listing to this podcast, thank you Peter and Mike for such fascinating and informative discussions.
    Shoutout to my dad who planted the seed of exercise in me at a young age in a part of world that this is not part of the culture, certainly not for girls. I’ve been active all my my and still going strong at 45!

  • @chrisbarnes10
    @chrisbarnes10 2 роки тому +25

    I'm 71 years young. Still power walk 4 miles everyday. I also go to the gym 3 days a week. I'm attempting to do the Asian squat.

    • @abejaamarilla4961
      @abejaamarilla4961 2 роки тому

      I do it naturally the squat, Im 60. Probably because I did it when I was a child in a little town to go to poop! My husband can not do it..

  • @upupandaway5646
    @upupandaway5646 Рік тому +17

    As a 63 male i still lift 5 days a week .strech and walk 1 hour every night hiking bike swim .been working out since 16 NEVER STOP NEVER GIVE UP

  • @ThePhotofit
    @ThePhotofit 2 роки тому +5

    This is so very illuminating! Thanks very much for conducting the interview and posting

  • @juliehelliker8629
    @juliehelliker8629 2 роки тому +45

    I’m 63 I fell down 8 stairs half asleep going to pee in the middle of the night , the stairs and the bathroom door right beside each other , I got a big bruise on my lateral upper thigh , no other injuries and couple of scrapes , I got up cautiously , back to bed and woke up next morning , and mopped my floors kitchen and dining area where I landed , I’ve been teaching group fitness all my adult life everything from step classes , cardio box , muscle conditioning classes , Zumba and aqua fit , I walk daily an hour sometimes two now that I retired last year, worked in healthcare as a care giver , very active daily job, raised my children ran the house , worked shifts, now a very active involved grandmother keeping up with toddler grand baby, just a testimony to my active life and balanced food intake, I plan on aging backwards lol continuing to be super active as I go!!! Hearing and keeping up with this current science through you and others in this community just justifies my life style and where it is going to take me!! 🙌🙌🙌💪💪💪thank you Peter!

  • @sandyfisbeck9488
    @sandyfisbeck9488 Рік тому +7

    Im 67 and do either yoga, pilates, or swim justabout evry day.Thats on top of working full time.I feel better than I ever have❤❤

  • @bwryuun
    @bwryuun Рік тому +1

    I have mild CP too. Wore leg braces as a kid. Jump rope? Forget it! Very poor at sports. Loosing weight too. You got me beat! But I’ve lost weight on NUTRISYSTEM twice… trying too

  • @scottymackay1801
    @scottymackay1801 2 роки тому +37

    There's just one thing that I feel Peter always misses when talking about older people and exercise. They simply don't want to. As they get into their final years, they lose interest in exertion. Their appetite naturally decreases too. Their bodies are preparing for death, yet Peter thinks they all want to deadlift. My grandmother lived till 103 and was in perfect health in terms of her organs, but died from falling and breaking a hip. She had a relatively active job, but had basically done nothing but go on short walks for the last 55 years. In her last 5 years she didn't want to go out for walks any longer. She was capable, but had lost the interest and motivation for it. Peter is thinking like a guy in his 40s wanting to extend his life. It's not the same feeling when you're 90.

    • @victoriajones7463
      @victoriajones7463 2 роки тому +7

      Amazing insight. I think depression sets in, somehow chemically, sometimes earlier. But what I see happens is just what you said. One becomes listless & uninterested in life. I think this is also a social phenomenon be in some cultures (Blue Zones) the elderly are revered, not seen as a burden and uninterested in LIFE.

    • @scottymackay1801
      @scottymackay1801 2 роки тому +6

      @@victoriajones7463 Yes, there could be a difference there. But my grandmother had no shortage of kids, grandkids, great grandkids etc all wanting to visit. She could only handle a few minutes before kind of 'switching off' or saying it's nap time or her TV time lol. They get into a very selfish routine. As I said, they're preparing and prepared to go. Peter is thinking he'll still want to squat. I doubt it. There are exceptions though, I'm sure.

    • @brettweidner7184
      @brettweidner7184 Рік тому +10

      Maybe point is it’s not about what you wanna do. I don’t wanna go to work but I do. I don’t always wanna work out at my age but I do. You just do. Who gives a shit if you want to or not. Weak mindset.

    • @BenOgorek
      @BenOgorek Рік тому +4

      I think I want to keep exercising, but yourself in 40 years is a stranger to you now

    • @CulbsDC
      @CulbsDC Рік тому +1

      Purpose is the best motivator and driver. And self-esteem. 😉

  • @perrysimpson6261
    @perrysimpson6261 Рік тому +9

    my word, this is an insanely valuable interview. life changing and life giving content - thank you, Peter and Mike.

  • @mikevaldez7684
    @mikevaldez7684 2 роки тому +2

    Fascinating, at 1:07:33 they speak about their peak heart rate being 150 & 170 ( on a good day) respectively -- I'm 62 & just started running this
    year & I've already gotten my h.r. up to almost 173

    • @JamesBMiller411
      @JamesBMiller411 2 роки тому +1

      It's a crap shoot. As a highly competitive triathlete in my late 30's I would see up to 204 and today at 60 I'd say I can go as high as 180.

    • @mikevaldez7684
      @mikevaldez7684 2 роки тому +2

      @@JamesBMiller411 interesting. Cycling in my teens in the Hollywood Hills I remember getting mine above 210; I'd guess mine now is probably 175, maybe higher. But it's all about stroke volume & how efficiently you can reabsorb the lactate within the cell vs in the blood & your power output

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому +1

      Max HR tells you virtually nothing. It is merely a widely variable genetic quantity. I’m 65 and max HR is 180-just saw it again doing VO2 Max intervals yesterday. But it means nothing. What matters is my power output (cycling) and endurance (duration of power) and recovery from VO2 efforts. A guy with a max HR of 130 could potentially kick my butt if he put out more power at the same level of intensity.

    • @johnkorth4048
      @johnkorth4048 Рік тому

      Age 64 181 max I think my heart is on the smaller size

  • @JeffJohnston-o3e
    @JeffJohnston-o3e Рік тому +5

    Hey Peter, I'm 60 and I bought your book this spring (audio and hard copy) and I'm all in. I've always been in good shape and interested in fitness, wellness and health span. I've done a Galleri test (clean), extensive blood work - LDL 212, HDL 62, LPa - 7, Testosterone 975, Ca score 12. 6'0", 190 (played HS football at 188). I had a VO2 Max recently - 43.8. The ExPhys guy said my max HR was 166 (resting HR 46-48) but my Aerobic Threshold was lower than he expected based on my results. He said my Zone 2 should be around 115 (which seems low)! Love to hear anyone's thoughts.

  • @christinestump6377
    @christinestump6377 2 роки тому +7

    More is better... except when it's not. Over exerting when HRV/HRR is low can be deleterious from many directions - fatigue, muscle building, injury to name a few. I have a suspicion this is more common in women than men and is also understudied. Timing of exertion is important, escalation rate of exertion, and a potentially new variable: timing of exertion during recovery from whatever the current variant is.

  • @onlyfoolriding8223
    @onlyfoolriding8223 2 роки тому +18

    Don't know about you guys, but measuring HRV and HR has given me IMMENSE insight into my recovery. It is fascinating to watch HRV drop and then gradually rise as I absorb training and recover.

    • @brokengames9020
      @brokengames9020 2 роки тому +4

      Is there any help... or you guys support Polar corporation that is abusing user data? User can't directly download their private, personal data without sending it via vulnerable world wide web network and store it where user have no oversight over their data? Since they can do whatever they want with the data and can easily lie they are not doing x or y with the data.
      Remember Polar had program that was Pro trainer... where there was no internet connection required to analyze personal data. Now this is not longer an option due their abuse corporate policy.
      So the watch we use have possibility to measure HRV. But it is artificially blocked by software developer, because they want us to extort out of money to add logarithm and features to the watch.
      They will not answer to support mails. We have been discriminated because we do not use their latest model despite hardware clearly support the features they have on never models.
      This kind of extortion should be illegal. Polar corporation doesn't care about your health. They will extort you any day they can. Will anyone do anything to stop this exploitation?

  • @The80shilling
    @The80shilling 2 роки тому +20

    At age 60, I finally got my VO2 max to increase. I have been swimming my whole life, and as I got older, I started to swim 3 times a week, anywhere from 1500 meters, to 6,000 meters, depending on my mood, available time and energy levels. For 3 years, I couldn't get my VO2 max above 41. 8 months ago, I started doing 1500 meters only, but THEN, after my 1500 meter swim, I started adding 750 meters of flat out sprints at the end. I split the sprints into 50s and 100s, and made sure I got 3 minutes rest between sets.
    I saw almost immediate results. After 6 weeks, my VO2 max hit 42, and now I'm at 45 as of this week.
    I also have added Mountain Biking 2 to 3 times a week.
    My resting heart rate hits high 30's (37, 38, 39) while I sleep, and I'm at 48 bpm as my average resting heart rate while awake. While swim sprinting, I hit around 165 bpm peak, and while Mountain Biking, I hit around 185 bpm peak.
    For the first time in my life, I feel like I have my exercise routine at a place where it is sustainable without burning me out, which was a problem previously due to the large distances I was swimming. Less overall distance, but with HIT sprints seems to be the magic solution for me.

    • @pierrex3226
      @pierrex3226 2 роки тому +3

      I've done a few triathlons and was able to be a half decent swimmer. Doing pyramids in the pool I always found pretty terrifying, drowning and all that. Now road cycling on the other hand, especially on a turbo trainer (WITH A FAN ON YOU), you can really do interval training without worrying about drowning, injury, form, and so on. MTB will likely make you a good sprinter (anaerobic driven stuff) but you don't really get to do 8 to 10min intervals at vo2max on a MTB. And those tend to raise your vo2max the most, it seems.

    • @whydoyouneedmyname6508
      @whydoyouneedmyname6508 2 роки тому

      @@pierrex3226 what, you can't train at vo2max for 8-10 mins lol

    • @pierrex3226
      @pierrex3226 2 роки тому +1

      @@whydoyouneedmyname6508 indeed, I meant FTP, not vo2max...

    • @VishalRaoOnYouTube
      @VishalRaoOnYouTube Рік тому +1

      What age did you start training regularly? I'm 43 and I'm motivated by Peter's discussion on relative hazard ratios to start Zone 2 and Zone 5 cardio.

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому

      Those increases in VO2 Max fall well within the error range of whatever test you are doing. And the main point is power or speed at VO2 Max and/or time at VO2 Max. That can increase whereas the number is much harder (or impossible) to nudge. ALL of it is hard as hell to measure. Just my two cents.

  • @Bungifun
    @Bungifun 2 роки тому +5

    Diet is a big confounder for exercise. The driver/conductor could be confounded due to snacking or whatever. Exercise/activity leaves less room for eating which may make you focus on proper meals outside of the feeding window making you feel more full outside the time spend on activity. It would still be a change in diet die to activity though so it can be attributed to exercise, at least in a natural setting

  • @michaelmcl2511
    @michaelmcl2511 2 роки тому +4

    As always great interview. But I think this guy needs a program from Inigo 😂... He's still a bit too "no pain no gain".. Also, please explain why you seem to downplay the role of diet when for 10 years now the WHO ranks diet the leading risk factor for death and disability.. ? Dr. Greger and others show the graph repeatedly in their videos. Sedentary lifestyle ranks maybe top 8.. ????

    • @dionysusnow
      @dionysusnow 2 роки тому +2

      I Don't think he is downplaying diet, it's just not the topic of discussion.

  • @KetzalSterling
    @KetzalSterling 2 роки тому +11

    Hey Peter. You really need to get Dr. Stephen Seiler on your show. He's probably the best exercise scientist to discuss training distribution etc

  • @Chille0
    @Chille0 6 місяців тому +2

    Mike Joyner is the definition of a class act and what everyone should aspire to be imp. I interacted with him briefly professionally and he treated me amazingly even as a grunt. Even from the start of this interview, so humble and yet extremely clear and obviously vastly knowledgeable. Love that guy!! XD

  • @-Stop-it
    @-Stop-it 2 роки тому +2

    I want to live long enough that I have the time to watch a 2:00 hour video about living longer. It is somewhat a catch 22. - You will live to be 95, but you’ll spend 10 years watching longevity videos.

  • @chriswalker7972
    @chriswalker7972 Рік тому +7

    Excellent information. Information for all levels of fitness. I have recently started to concentrate in my vo2 levels so look forward to the benefits into my golden years.

  • @williamerdman4888
    @williamerdman4888 2 роки тому +17

    I watch most of your interviews, Peter as a subscriber. THis one was particularly interesting to me... keep them coming!

  • @jonathanrobinson2628
    @jonathanrobinson2628 11 місяців тому +3

    I love these discussions Peter. As someone who cycles 10-15hrs a week (typically), and does a reasonably physical job, it's nice to understand the physiology of what effect it's having on my body as I age

  • @janetderouin9533
    @janetderouin9533 10 місяців тому +3

    Peter, you have been smiling lately. I like to see you at peace with the world. When you smile and seem more relaxed I have a better day. Thanks for your podcasts.

  • @apizer
    @apizer 2 роки тому +14

    Great interview. Only thing I would have liked is a deeper analysis of Mike Joyner's own workout regimen. He seems to have almost no Zone 2 in it, except maybe his short warm-up on his hard days. He described his easy days as "active rest," which sounds like zone 1. Would have liked if Peter had asked him about the lack of Zone 2, since it's such a fundamental part of Peter's workout recommendations.

    • @willnitschke
      @willnitschke 2 роки тому +1

      People are getting way too hung up on these zone fads. Peter is especially culpable. I did almost exclusively zone 5 a few years ago as that was the hot fad at the time. My functional fitness levels were rubbish. I noticed I'd be out of breath walking up a steep hill! Now I'm much more relaxed about things and do lots of walking, some high intensity and some medium intensity, and at 55 I'm the fittest I've ever been.

    • @forajc
      @forajc 2 роки тому

      I got the same thing from Dr Mike that he did not seem to prioritize zone 2 like Peter does. Dr Mike mentioned several high level athletes who seemed to use almost exclusive interval training.

    • @willnitschke
      @willnitschke 2 роки тому

      @@forajc Absolutely, but how many people are high level athletes? And probably their sports requires sprint type energy bursts. If you were a marathon runner it'd be pretty dumb to prioritize zone 5. I think the original idea was that if you focued on zone 5, zone 5 was so amazing, you didn't have to spend a lot of time doing cardio work. Like 20 minutes a few times a week and you'd end up super fit. BS on all that. I tried it and it didn't work in practice.

    • @wadehodges5740
      @wadehodges5740 2 роки тому +1

      I think you could read into Mikes easy day some zone 2 training.......

    • @bennetwolper8234
      @bennetwolper8234 Рік тому

      I wish Peter asserted his Z2 and VO2 program. I would have liked to hear Dr. Mike respond. I’ve been sort of following it and I was left somewhat hanging and disappointed. It seems a number of times Peter introduced it and floated the topic but then dropped it when Dr. Mike didn’t pick it up. Too bad Peter didn’t pursue it.

  • @iljaivantsov1771
    @iljaivantsov1771 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you 🙏

  • @ManjiMachine
    @ManjiMachine Рік тому +4

    Can you talk about how to recognize aerobic training fatigue and how to manage that? Signs of when to back off or when to ramp it up

    • @ManjiMachine
      @ManjiMachine 8 місяців тому

      Thanks for that. Very simple concept

    • @ManjiMachine
      @ManjiMachine 8 місяців тому

      @markmetternich1435im assuming intensity applies in the same way? How can increase watt output lets say on a bicycle while maintaining in zone 2 were as that increase would normally put me into a higher zone

  • @erwinrogers9470
    @erwinrogers9470 Рік тому

    Excellent interview 👏

  • @bwryuun
    @bwryuun Рік тому

    I use a Rollator (walker) to keep from falling these days. In my 60s

  • @ChrisDorpat
    @ChrisDorpat 2 роки тому +1

    Wow that was really good! 🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

  • @pierrex3226
    @pierrex3226 2 роки тому +2

    What's the paper mentioned at 38:30? Published in jam? :D curious to read it

  • @elizabethm.9556
    @elizabethm.9556 2 роки тому +5

    I grew up in an "active" family which saved my life.
    I was diagnosed with Crohns disease 5 decades ago, when i was 10 years old.
    By the time i was 18, i was 5 of 10 operations in and 7 years of almost continuous steroids. By the time I received my undergrad degree, my bones were light and i had other serious health issues from treatments.
    With help of surgeon, i decided to "fix" much of the unintended consequences of Crohns treatment, through exercise.
    I went off to law school with a firm plan. By the time i graduated i was planning on my first marathon, which was not cancelled when i had emergency surgery to resect my small bowel (100% obstructed). Two weeks post-op i was back training.
    When i survived septic shock the head of the ICU said "you must have 9 lives because there is no way you should be alive".
    I said "I train for these incidents, 40 miles a week with or without a central line".
    Fast forward to Covid and we got through as a family (i live in Trudeau's velvet Totalitarian state) with outdoor activity.
    My youngest nephew was 3 and my dad 82 and we (12 of us) skied (Lake Louise) every Saturday from November of 2020 until April of 2022.
    We got my dad an electric bike and from May of 2020 until October of 2021, we had family rides in Banff every Saturday and hikes on Sunday's.
    My dad is 84. He works out in a gym 3-4 times a week. Rides his bike in the summer and just got his "super senior" $19 season pass for Lake Louise winter of 2022/23. I have had 10 abdominal operations, i have a belly full of scar tissue, and do 6 days in the gym and just got my "adult, NOT $19 season pass.
    Attia & Joyner should be leaders of a task force whose goal is to create k-12 curriculum for 60-90 minutes of daily physical activity, for all public schools.

    • @abejaamarilla4961
      @abejaamarilla4961 2 роки тому

      We wish you the best, interesting way to live! I need more consistency, thanks for your sharing experiences!

    • @Chille0
      @Chille0 6 місяців тому

      Agree completely. Well done and ya it would be nice to see any kind of action in the US to promote healthy living and activity but sadly its more like the opposite here

  • @sandiegojoey1
    @sandiegojoey1 2 роки тому +3

    Listening now and looking at your existing video categories I see you don’t have a sorts performance folder, just thought you might want to cluster this one with Inigo, BioLayne and others you’ve interviewed about strength and endurance

  • @untonsured
    @untonsured Рік тому +3

    Joyner is very clear and a good communicator.

  • @bobmciver6437
    @bobmciver6437 2 роки тому +8

    Wow!Lots to digest here.As a 69 year old who loves sprinting, walking,hiking and weights/bodyweight circuit training, lately my instinct has been prodding me to increase the number of plexes (eg.
    currently 12 rounds of 100m sprints with supporting exercises)...So,I am understanding that I could increase the rounds (given proper effort) and benefit VO2 max?That prospect is exciting!Hope I am interpreting this correctly...both mind and body balk at the idea of any sustained distance running, swimming or cycling...all out 400m is my idea of a marathon, lol...

    • @bobmciver6437
      @bobmciver6437 2 роки тому

      @NipNinnies Since the comment,I have increased the number of rounds but decreased the plex of exercises so I am sprinting every 5 minutes...so Zone 5 back down to Zone 2.So far,getting faster recovery...which is a pleasant bonus.I have a female crossfit client 61 and we are experimenting with this approach.

  • @hillcevan
    @hillcevan 2 роки тому +11

    Referencing 48:00 I'm sure many would love to see a complete episode on AFIB - New diagnosis, methods of treatment - surgery vs lifestyle, causation, etc. Newly diagnosed and now understanding how common it is (and surprisingly even among younger individuals). Tying into this conversation - what are the long term implications of arrhythmic medications / beta blockers on VO2 max values and cardiac output over time

    • @SpiKrishPri
      @SpiKrishPri Рік тому

      I have arrhythmias due to too many overreaching runs, but it does not affect my potential. Maybe my heart is working better with those extra bip 😉

  • @davidnorman5488
    @davidnorman5488 Рік тому

    Is there a direct correlation between Nitric Oxide increase and VO2 Max increase? If so, what kind of protocols exist to do it. IF not, please explain the difference.

  • @nancys7326
    @nancys7326 6 місяців тому +1

    It’s very challenging to listen to someone, even if very knowledgeable, who seems incapable of a back and forth dialogue. At least let the person interviewing you get the question out and have an opinion once in a while.

  • @darcymyers3401
    @darcymyers3401 2 роки тому +2

    Love all the info, it's too much for me to grasp. How do I find a doctor in Arizona to help me through all this just like if I were to work with you @peterattia directly?

  • @aroundandround
    @aroundandround 2 роки тому +2

    If longevity is the metric you care about, it’s worth noting that the longest living humans are frail old women, and occasionally men, doing simple things like gardening who probably won’t know what VO2Max even means.

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому

      Not sure why you posted this. The woman gardening doesn’t know about VO2 but VO2 knows about her. And each of those people are merely N=1 so their genetics and circumstances combined in ways we’ll never know. First of all, to get there, they had to dodge catastrophic death. Probability play, and they probably didn’t know about statistics. So if you’re saying that NOT knowing about VO2 is somehow associated with longevity, then you live in your own world and I’m sure you’re happy there. These men are trying to understand how to think about not just taking life as it comes (in ignorance) but trying to understand and doing something positive. I am a bike racer and am in great shape, but I crash really badly at least once a year in a race. Hard crashes. They’ve started to really wear on me and could kill me. But I love racing. I’m doing it with eyes wide open, which is itself a particular lifestyle. Other than practicing “whataboutism” I can’t imagine your motivations other than to undermine what was a fascinating discussion.

    • @stanleymesen3692
      @stanleymesen3692 Рік тому

      I think the woman …😢

  • @crazylagggs
    @crazylagggs 2 роки тому +4

    I'm confused as a lot of elite cyclists still spend a lot of hours doing recovery pace riding day in day out, not zone 2 (based on their power data on Strava).

    • @XX-is7ps
      @XX-is7ps 2 роки тому +2

      I think it’s worth bearing in mind those are athletes seeking to optimise performance, not health as per the focus of this discusssion

    • @StatzGee
      @StatzGee 2 роки тому

      But I think you could say low v2 IS recovery training, especially when volume is kept in check

    • @XX-is7ps
      @XX-is7ps 2 роки тому

      Absolutely. 8hours in “zone1” is going to provide more stress (and stimulus) than 5minutes in zone2. We definitely get too caught up in the science of training zones and forget that they only relate to lactate rather than all the other physiological al processes - and even then they’re gradations not hard boundaries

  • @r3sid3ntttv9
    @r3sid3ntttv9 2 роки тому +2

    So true about open gyms! Every public school should allow access to the community that pays those taxes. Even if its regulated with an access card or something.

  • @MindfulSimpleSolutions
    @MindfulSimpleSolutions 8 місяців тому +1

    “Religious experience” that is for sure!! Great episode will listen to it again! Thank you!🙏❤️

  • @riverlevity
    @riverlevity 2 роки тому +3

    What effect does the air quality where you train have? Has there been any studies done regarding this? (City air vs Rural air)

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому

      Very important. Many studies on this. You’ll find them. Important for many reasons. Just as an example, some people have asthmatic reactions (EIB) to ozone which is generally a city pollutant. Smoke from fires as we’re seeing right now is also very bad for the lungs and the more vigorously you exercise in it, the worse it could affect your health. FWIW, my “pain cave” for cycling training has temperature and humidity regulation AND a very efficient HEPA air filter. I want the air to be in the mid-60s, low humidity, and clean. Significantly enhances my ability to work hard and achieve gains compared to people sweating, breathing pollen or other pollutants, etc.

  • @quantumdecoherence1289
    @quantumdecoherence1289 2 роки тому +1

    With all due respect to Dr. Joyner, if he's doing 300+ watts for an hour, I would maybe start by questioning the calibration of his Peloton. That is on another planet given his age.

  • @lisanewcombe168
    @lisanewcombe168 Рік тому +1

    My VO2 is avg 40-50. I have always been fit with regular exercise and eat a paleo/low carb diet with minimal processed food. I’m only 44. Why is it so low? I recently started adding in zone 2 to see if it helps…

  • @garrett7101
    @garrett7101 3 місяці тому

    Please help.. I’m a 49 year old male and my vo2max according to my Apple Watch is 19. It was 32 until a) I went on Clonidine for blood pressure and b) I listened to people who said lift and get your steps no heavy cardio needed. I lifted and I walked 10k steps per day and went to 19 vo2max. I recently realized how important vo2max and have increased to 23 in just 3 weeks or so, but I know 23 is terrible. What should I do? Do people coach you on how to increase vo2max? I never could figure out why I got winded so easy since I walk a lot. Bc of the blood pressure medicine it’s very hard for me to get my heart rate up. I have been losing weight and my BP is getting better and I want to get off Clonidine asap. Please help with any ideas or things I can do! Thanks!

  • @periososa
    @periososa 2 роки тому +1

    This centenarian Olympic is utter non sense. I’m 66 and I only care about being in shape at 66 so I can do all those things Dr. Attia is planning to do at 90 I can do them today. I enjoy biking, swimming, yoga, Pickleball, hiking….and to do all those things wanting or not you have to be healthy. I love the advise in this podcast and I try to take the best care in all areas to be able to wake up tomorrow morning and enjoy whatever my body allows me to do. If to do it at 90 is the goal then riding my e-mountain bike would be out of the equation because of the risk of falling and that would make me a very sad 66 y/o do I prefer to prudently take the risk and have the fun today!!

  • @tonystone3397
    @tonystone3397 2 роки тому +5

    Lance was full of all kinds of drugs, blood and God knows what else. How can you use he's heart rate as an example. Crazy talk!

    • @greentransmission
      @greentransmission 2 роки тому

      I don’t believe he was using that stuff constantly, just during the big multi stage races.

    • @johnepyttesr8947
      @johnepyttesr8947 2 роки тому +1

      I think I've heard that the things he took would give a percentage performance increase, but maybe not a large percent, compared to what he'd developed form hard work.

    • @justinkats7683
      @justinkats7683 2 роки тому +1

      How about you pump yourself up with the same stuff and maybe you can become as great as he was? Lol! Most cyclists were on the same stuff! Educate yourself.

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому

      He was a 3 standard deviation above the mean cardio athlete-naturally. Then add in an insane desire to win. As his biographer said about him (paraphrased), “If Lance wasn’t the greatest cyclist in the world he’d be diagnosed with severe mental illness.” But he had one other advantage that is, well, odd. He was racing with an entire peloton who was on PEDs, many the same things. But he not only naturally reacted well to training, even for an elite, but his system reacted extraordinarily well to doping. He got even more of an increment of performance than other elite athletes. It’s a different world in elite athletics. Their extremes are so extreme that it’s hard to make a case that they are the same species! 😅

  • @daviddestrebecq9806
    @daviddestrebecq9806 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks dear Peter
    Perhaps would you be interested in the works of V Billat .
    Notable she linked the loss of max heart rate beats with the loss of power with aging .
    I could gain again beats / min , going from 165 / min to 170 / min at age of 53 years old .My vo2 max is now 58 .
    By working out my power by working my speed with accélérations workouts on 30 meters .
    She got great results with Robert Marchand (105 years old )
    Perhaps would you be interested to invite her ?

  • @espinosalexis
    @espinosalexis 2 роки тому +1

    Unfortunately you did not ask the question about Tennis! Why Tennis and racquet Sports keep appearing top in the list for exercises that improve longevity? Have you properly answered this question already? Running and Cycling and Gym are regularly down on the reported lists! Why is that?

    • @espinosalexis
      @espinosalexis 8 місяців тому +1

      @markmetternich1435 Yeah, but this was a great opportunity to touch topic here again. Unfortunately, Attia does not like traditional sports and tends to lean towards "solo" type of training and sports. I think racquet Sports should be included in his protocol.

  • @jasoncornick-h9z
    @jasoncornick-h9z 8 місяців тому +1

    You may outrun a bad diet until you get arthritis from that bad diet then what do you do?

  • @GotDamBoi
    @GotDamBoi 2 роки тому +1

    whenever I don't feel like running I'll watch something like this and I still don't want to run. but I do. living is pretty neat

  • @lispendens
    @lispendens Рік тому

    You know it verily is interesting because like when i’m high on legal drugs like i am now i get super motivated to begin a serious training program and i want to start training 2x a day with running and swimming and getting super disciplined with my diet and sleep and drinking/partying and all of that, like i mean just get the fittest that my body is truly capable of (seeing what my “ceiling” is; what my true potential is), but then like it is so damn hard to continue in with that discipline day in and day out. I can do it for like a week or like maybe a week and a half and then i get so frustrated and tired. Ideas???

  • @miroslavnovak3711
    @miroslavnovak3711 2 роки тому +1

    Good talk. At around 1:30h, if he was talking he can hold 320w on bike for 1h, I think thats BS, he should get his trainer calibrate.

  • @keithmitchell1374
    @keithmitchell1374 2 роки тому +3

    On my 4th listen and still picking up subtle points. At around 1:26-1:27 Dr Joyner is talking about his easy days. He pairs workout with documentary or movie carrot. This technique works very well!

    • @pierrex3226
      @pierrex3226 2 роки тому

      It's called rewards bundling. Freakonomics made a podcast on it years ago. Works very well especially for all sorts of people, elite athletes or not

  • @kevinmorrison1516
    @kevinmorrison1516 2 роки тому +12

    The link between VO2 max and longevity is interesting . But I think the precursor to higher VO2 max is joint integrity , for a large majority of people this is the limiting factor , I could run/swim/bike or otherwise if my joints would not fail or be a limiting factor. So if you are lucky enough to have a very robust mechanical system while at the same time motivated to do increasing amounts of cardio I think its the perfect combination .

    • @eugeniebreida1583
      @eugeniebreida1583 2 роки тому

      Indeed. My lower body (knees) - and elbow - joints deterioration have me listening to much of this as a bystander.

    • @wildernesstraining1957
      @wildernesstraining1957 2 роки тому

      I’m 65 two new hips 3 & 4 years ago.
      Stem cell transplant January 2021 wiped me out physically.
      Back to good robust health. Boxing, resistance work, jogging up to 5k.
      I’d be ruined without the new hips, and stem cells of course…

    • @paulhorvat6
      @paulhorvat6 2 роки тому

      and don’t forget about sauna as aid for people with joint issues

    • @toomanymarys7355
      @toomanymarys7355 Рік тому +1

      1) make sure anterior and posterior chains are balanced. Most people are anterior dominant which causes things like runners knee.
      2) Collagen peptides and hyaluronic acid actually work!
      3) Far red and near infrared really works too!

    • @sueyorio424
      @sueyorio424 Рік тому

      ​@@toomanymarys7355
      I agree with your comment❤ not many know about red infrared Heating pads that heals you on a different level! Thank you for mentioning... It really works. And it is not hot. It's not cold! It just works!

  • @k1mfor
    @k1mfor Рік тому +1

    What's the study mentioned in 54:45? I can't make out the name of the doctor he says.

  • @damir2052
    @damir2052 2 роки тому +1

    First, teaching faculty as well as student the science of physical health and education. Like this talk in this podcast. Make it relatable, and then go out there and implement it.

  • @trismegistus3461
    @trismegistus3461 2 роки тому +1

    1:31:24 - How to boost your VO2 max, and the importance of form and tempo with interval training

  • @r3sid3ntttv9
    @r3sid3ntttv9 2 роки тому +4

    Thank you Dr Attia for making content. I found some clips from you and have been falling deep into the rabbits hole. I have learned so much and appreciate all that you share.

  • @rigaleb
    @rigaleb 2 роки тому +1

    Peter - a discussion about orthopedics and neurosurgery would be of great interest. You are talking about exercise in many podcasts, but there is a certain point after which people cannot exercise, because of chronic low back and neck pain. What are the future developments for those, cause people keep fusing those spines like crazy and replacing those discs with devices that no one really knows how are gonna work after 10 years and how are people gonna be able to exercise, even zone 2 training..
    Curious about your approach and the experts you know on this subject which affects probably a lot of your viewers.

  • @tommyrq180
    @tommyrq180 Рік тому

    Swimming is not less impacted. It is less reported by governing bodies. Swimmers were some of the leading edge PED users in history (e.g., East German swim team looked like Skeletor…) and you simply cannot attribute continuous record breaking to better training and nutrition. It’s entirely a function of national governing bodies, not some sort of extra-national drug testing regime. Not only is chemically dodging positive tests endemic, but so is dodging positive tests bureaucratically. The Russians got caught because, in typical Russian fashion, it was egregious, ham-handed, and over-the-top. There’s a culture to it, and they broke those cultural norms. Which is why they proceeded to expose some of the “culture” after they got caught red-handed, pun intended…

  • @HubertAlacoque
    @HubertAlacoque 5 місяців тому

    I found this interview very informative indeed. I am 67 and swim 2000 meters 6 days a week. I feel all the benefits discussed, and I am learning more and more about these metrics such as mets, VO2 max etc... With all that, I am intrigued with the low level hyperbaric chambers used for sports injury recovery therapies and what not... Have these low level hyperbaric treatments or applications ever been used, studied or tested for any effect they may have on affecting VO2 max and any other performance and health enhancement strategies????

  • @andreasneeb7448
    @andreasneeb7448 3 місяці тому

    Hi Peter, if you are testing individuals with an already high VO2max, this could be a group in terms of all-cause mortality, as this group has survived has survived risks of training. For example, there are a lot of accidents when you do a lot of outdoor cycling. So more training is better, but maybe the risk of training injuries cause a J-curve. You could test the effect by comparing a type of indoor training with low risk with an outdoor training training with high risk.

  • @LubaWang
    @LubaWang 10 місяців тому

    Michael Phelps grows up with Ritalin/dexamphetamine, that increase his strength, pain threshold through his training, nothing special about his performance, just like Simone Biles performing in Tokyo Olympic without the Ritalin(banned for any usage in Japan), she had to quit the events and run away

  • @stevestone9526
    @stevestone9526 11 місяців тому

    This interview was so horrible..... How can two people speak so many words and say nothing in the end.....???? After your guest and you went on and on I still have no idea what steps can be taken to improve my health through exercise. He was so so much in his head, just to hear himself talk, thinking he was so smart. He talked about it, from every direction and never said what everyone was waiting for him to say. You need to exercise in this way and this how you do it.... It was torture to listen thinking he may finally get to the point and never, never does. You didn't help at all....

  • @mimosa9638
    @mimosa9638 2 місяці тому

    In this clip you do look more calm and relaxed, Peter. May be because you just listen without having to speak much when your brain was running at double speed.
    To be a good listener is the best way to know others but much more about ourselves. Meditation is just that-stay silent, listen with the mind and Voila we are enlightened…just whatever bit. 😊

  • @fhowland
    @fhowland 2 роки тому +1

    I’d like to hear Peter do a podcast about cycling induced E.D.

  • @RHIMYM
    @RHIMYM 27 днів тому

    You can not out train a bad diet. The example of lumberjack ia not an example of bad diet because they just need this amount of calories to function, it's not because it's 6000 calories that it is bad.
    A better example are sumo wrestler who train very hard, and eat a lot. See the results. So no you can not go against (with minor variations) calories in and calories out.

  • @boballen6589
    @boballen6589 11 місяців тому

    10 minute mile equates to a VO2 max of 35?? More like 27, as far as I can tell. VO2 max of 35 would be more like an 8 minute mile. No?

  • @emilybarry9410
    @emilybarry9410 2 роки тому +4

    This was a FANTASTIC conversation, which I sent to both of my parents in an effort to encourage them to get active. 🙏 Peter and Mike!

  • @georgeelgin3903
    @georgeelgin3903 Рік тому

    gotta say preferred #151 fir it;s concise presentment. It might seem to BE VO2 max might be an indirect result (anti-correlated) to NO production's; not just muscle utiilization )which you seem so obsessed with). I thought the J-curve discussion of interest. Never heard of such a thing [and my degree is maths]. So i am wondering if the hook of the J has an inflection pt [2nd derivative 0]. If one replotted that part of the inflection curve on a log x-axis what that might reveal ?. the data probably is NOT asymptotic ie it gets large [small] very quick but not infinite [except AT death].

  • @99billnichols
    @99billnichols 2 роки тому +1

    So much of this is a narcissistic ego bath between them with occasional recognition there is an audience. Good info but terrible communication skills.

  • @cjtuccio
    @cjtuccio Рік тому

    @PeterAttiaMD.... At 1:23:00 he says 180 minutes a day. Is that realistic or did he mean 3 hrs a week?

  • @blengi
    @blengi Рік тому

    what about adjusted for IQ which is highly correlated with longevity and cardiovascular health, the association shown to be mostly genetic? _"In a whole national population year of birth cohort followed over the life course from age 11 to age 79, higher scores on a well validated childhood intelligence test were associated with lower risk of mortality ascribed to coronary heart disease and stroke, cancers related to smoking (particularly lung and stomach), respiratory diseases, digestive diseases, injury, and dementia."_ (Childhood intelligence in relation to major causes of death in 68 year follow-up: prospective population study)

  • @JDEG100
    @JDEG100 Рік тому

    Why are they completely missing the fact that vo2 max is specific to the muscles trained? There is research showing this where only one leg has been trained, and Vo2 improvements were not seen on the untrained leg.
    This makes me wonder if Vo2 max is really a good predictor of cardiovascular health, and where cardiovascular improvements actually occur.
    If it were in the cardiopulmonary system, the improvement should be seen even in the untrained leg, but it was not.
    I think the enhancement occurs peripherally in the mitochondria.

  • @marquezkw
    @marquezkw 9 місяців тому

    I did not watch, but my instincts tell me that I want advice from people that manage to keep their hair well into their late years.

  • @dann6893
    @dann6893 Рік тому

    "You can't outrun a poor diet" If you exercise but don't eat healthy, it is eventually going to catch up to you. Top athletes who eat tons of calories of carbs and sugar cannot maintain that and be healthy. My friend works out A LOT, he has like 2% body fat, but he eats the Standard American Diet. He went to the doctor and his bloodwork was not great and he was somehow "shocked" by this.I had a co-worker who was very "fit" and was an avid runner and during a race fell down having a heart attack and died. I believe exercise and nutrition are equally important.

  • @dblissmn
    @dblissmn Рік тому

    At around 27 and a half minutes, a comment about the conditioning of Tour de France cyclists. One thing it omits is that nutrition on the bike in the pro tour has roughly doubled just in the past five years in terms of caloric value -- everything from the usual energy bars and drinks down to sugary gels that are basically pure empty carbs but formulated so as not to cause an upset stomach. Not coincidentally, power outputs of the top cyclists are now equalling those at the peak of the EPO doping era in 1998 and 1999.

  • @cypriano8763
    @cypriano8763 Рік тому +1

    316watts ftp at 65 . even if a bigger man thats crazy.

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому

      It is, but he was a 30 minute 10K D1 track athlete, so he has phenomenal genetics and a lifetime of training. I race against guys his age (I’m 65) and some have FTPs over that and are lighter and go up climbs like mountain goats. They’re out there, and more every day.

    • @cypriano8763
      @cypriano8763 Рік тому

      @@tommyrq180 maybe I can keep my 300ftp at 140lbs until 65, I'm 50 now

    • @tommyrq180
      @tommyrq180 Рік тому

      @@cypriano8763 Depends on how much headroom you have genetically and lifestyle-wise at that 300 FTP. If you’re plateaued out now, when maybe it will be tough. And the real question from a racing POV is how you translate your watts/kilo. You’re obviously a climber at 63.5 kilos. I’m betting you are around 70” tall or 5’8-5’10. Which means you mainly translate FTP into climbing, not necessarily TT or bridging or lead out or sprinting. So it depends on how you want to translate FTP into capability. If you want to climb like a monster until you’re 65 or beyond I think it’s possible, although you’ll have to deal with systematic loss of lean muscle mass over that period (deal with it through weight training combined with more protein intake) and any limiting lifestyle issues you might have. After retirement I found it much easier to train. I was smarter about it and had more time to plan it and execute it well. But COVID hammered me in 2022. I lost about 25% of my FTP, which was over 300. I’m clawing it back now and it was difficult. I have a version of “long COVID” which makes me a bit more fragile. But it can be done without PEDs (TRT, etc.) if you are a lot smarter about how you train. Just one piece of advice as you get older: if you are not training indoors on a top-level power trainer, you will likely never keep that FTP. Build yourself a great pain cave, put a KICKR or equivalent in there, install a good environmental control system (temperature and humidity) and a bomber air filter. Then train your a$$ off. But if you’re one of those people who just can’t stand training inside, well, good luck. Just my two cents! 🇺🇸

  • @markflolid5930
    @markflolid5930 Рік тому

    You use stroke volume and heart rate as important metrics, but why no mention on ejection fraction (EF). Most cardiologist only focus on is EF. This makes sense to me, because EF can be a poor indicator of cardio fitness as ones heart becomes enlarged from exercise.

  • @unchartedexe
    @unchartedexe 2 роки тому +3

    CORRECT
    Great podcast. 😁

    • @BrianS-ny9yd
      @BrianS-ny9yd 2 роки тому

      You could make a drinking game based on "correct."

  • @christinasmith9368
    @christinasmith9368 2 роки тому

    When you throw around statistics related to VO2max etc, would it not be valid to mention that males and females have different ranges? Perhaps I am wrong but maximum oxygen capacity and hematocrit figures vary by gender, but BP and HR ranges do not.

  • @kirstinstrand6292
    @kirstinstrand6292 11 місяців тому

    Hopefully, folks will get into some exercise in their early 60s at the latest. People do not like changes. Few will begin and stay with an exercise routine in their 70s. 😮

  • @billongabe2173
    @billongabe2173 Рік тому

    Peter, I remember when I first started following you and you were very physically active but over weight and metabolically unhealthy. Going keto reversed this but you now say you may be able to “outrun a bad diet”. What has changed or is this just another case of a conveniently short memory?

  • @edlop6954
    @edlop6954 Рік тому

    You should be discussing the dangers of bot exercising to death! Do not dismiss this group and the dangers they are probably NOT fully aware of. Do not presume they know the dangers and choose to ignore.

  • @stevepace-first8617
    @stevepace-first8617 Рік тому

    I have watched a few Attia videos, have yet to come across any mention of Tempo runs. As I understand it he does zone 2, zone 5 and strength work. Is there any place for tempo runs?

  • @christinasmith9368
    @christinasmith9368 2 роки тому

    Regarding the J curve: My experience in elite cycling suggests that in female endurance athletes training load often results in amenorrhoea with a potential loss of bone mineral density. Is this not an example of the J? I was diagnosed with osteoporosis in my 30s and had to reduce mileage and gain weight in order to recover my cycle and tey to regain bone density before true menopause. I know that the current Olympic road race gold medallist switched to cycling due to injuries running. She was suffering amenorrhoea and took a year off her pro carreer to try and recover but ultimately decided to sacrifice her bone density for her cycling career. Surely there is a point where over-training exists if the body sacrifices reproductive capacity and normal hormone health in order to meet exercise demands?

  • @cypriano8763
    @cypriano8763 Рік тому

    oh no, that must have been hard to admit that vegetarians live long. the mental gymnastics to explain this one away are pretty hilarious. talk about restrictive diets, coming from the keto guy. funny

  • @Kate_08
    @Kate_08 Рік тому

    That shit breaks my heart. I’ve always had the worst vo2 max, literally like 2nd percentile. I’m gonna die in two hours probably

  • @enriquebrizuela2088
    @enriquebrizuela2088 4 місяці тому

    Another key factor for longevity might be, to choose your life partner wisely.

  • @jerryjanusz1410
    @jerryjanusz1410 2 роки тому

    My wife is double vaccinated. My kids are not and I have one dose of Pfizer. She is going through her second go of omicron and me and the kids are fine. New study from Norway suggest the Vax has a negative effect in the omicron era