Dynamic Dialogue with Danny Matranga - PCOS, Female Physiology + Training Tips for Women with Lyle Mcdonald (Encore)
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Hey everybody, welcome into a special episode of the Dynamic Dialogue podcast.
In today's episode, I am sitting down with none other than Lyle McDonald.
Lyle McDonald is one of my favorite fitness industry experts.
He has been in the fitness space for longer than I've been alive,
and he is somebody who is really well-researched when it comes to women's physiology.
I trust Lyle's opinion a ton, and so I wanted to re-air an episode with him today where we talk about women's physiology, PCOS, insulin resistance, a variety of different health factors, including things like menstruation and female hormones.
And because I'm in the middle of moving from one house to another, I didn't want to leave you guys without some awesome fitness content.
So sit back and enjoy this killer hour plus long interview with Dr. Lyle McDonald. And I'm telling you right now, if you're interested in performance and women's physiology, you are going to love this
one. Enjoy. Welcome back to the podcast, everybody. This is your host, Danny Matranga. And today
we are sitting down with Lyle McDonald. Lyle is one of the industry's most sought after authors
and experts. And this guy really has
a handle on all things exercise physiology and training. But today we are diving into a topic
that I'm particularly excited to share with you, which is women's physiology. Now, while this might
be a little bit dense and perhaps scientific at times, I strongly encourage you to stick with me.
Lyle has the ability to talk about things at a very high level, but he does tie them
all together quite nicely. Today we talk about everything from the menstrual cycle, to birth
control, to PCOS, even the history of women's sports. This is a fantastic episode and I
promise if you stick through it, you'll
love it. Thanks so much to Lyle for coming on and enjoy the podcast. So Lyle, how's it going, man?
Ah, very well. Thanks for having me. Excellent. No problem. I've been looking to get you on for
a long time. I've listened to most of your work, read much of your work. And for anybody listening
who's not familiar with Lyle's work, Lyle has kind of been in the fitness internet
space probably as long as I've been alive. And quite frankly, contributing some pretty damn
thorough work. You've got several books, several articles, a lot of just really,
really detailed stuff that I think you
could find. You can't really find somebody who's covered as many topics with so much breadth.
So I really do appreciate you coming on. But today I want to talk a little bit about female
physiology because I think you speak to this as good, if not better than anybody I've heard.
And one thing you've said many times that I really, really think resonated with me and will resonate with the listeners is women are not just small men.
Too frequently they get trained that way or they get, they're, you know, exposed to that
type of just general talk in the industry.
So what would you say about that?
You know, women are not just small men.
What does that mean?
And expand on that a little bit.
Well, a lot, I mean, make, no, I'm pretty sure I didn't come up with that line.
Like I've seen other, other, there's another little terribly written book called They're Not
Boys, which is aimed at sort of adolescent athletes. But what I'm getting at is, if you
look at the history of sport, from the early days, you know, women didn't really enter sport to a great degree till the 60s and 70s.
And what's really actually interesting, there's a, I've got a brief history of women in sport on
my website that I look sort of looked at this, like you look at the first Olympics in 1896,
there were, I think it was either zero or one woman. There were like four at the next one.
And it wouldn't really be till the 50s and 60s until that really started to change.
And what's interesting is that it was the Germans and the Russians
that were really pushing for more women in sport
because this was about the time that the Olympics was becoming about politics.
We were in the middle of the Cold War.
They wanted to make the Olympics.
Whoever won the most medals had the better political ideology.
I know this sounds ridiculous, but that is how they thought.
Given the general, given the lesser numbers of women at the elite level, the Germans and Russians, or the Russians especially, knew that it would be easier for them to win medals.
So not only did they throw more resources into women's sport much earlier, they pushed the Olympic Committee to add more
women's events, because they just wanted more chances to rack up gold medals. And that would
end up getting Britain and America to go, well, we're losing politically to the Russians.
We need to get more women in the game. And you look back even further, there were German countries
that were having all women's sporting events long before, you know, more Western countries were doing it.
So things in America really changed in the 70s and with something called Title 12.
And at this point, the ratio of women to men in sport was like one to four.
It was just and the question then became, is it a lack
of interest? Is it a lack of accessibility? And Title 12 in the U.S. said, all publicly, all
government-funded schools, all public schools, all public universities must allow equal exposure
to both men and women, to all, and that just, it wasn't just sports, it was art, it was music, they had
to have equal amounts of accessibility, but that included sport, and women's sports exploded,
and within a decade, it was, it was obvious that the reason women or even younger girls weren't
entering sport was, it just wasn't available, it wasn't a lack of interest, they didn't, and once
they had access, the numbers
came up and up and up. And now if we look at the modern era at the Olympic level, it's about 45%
women. And this is true in like, it's not quite parity. It's not quite equal. And I think that's
because there are certain sports that there just aren't women's versions of. In America, American football will always skew the numbers.
But if you look at the grand majority of sports, it's about equal.
One thing I've seen in the industry in my field over the last 25 years
is the change in the strength sports.
Look at powerlifting.
Look at Olympic lifting.
Look at even strong man, strong woman, strong person.
I don't know what they're calling it now.
Back in the 70s, if you saw, or in the 80s,
if you saw a woman at a powerlifting event,
like Jan Todd, who's married to Terry Todd,
she was the first in the 70s,
only because her husband was involved.
Now, they're holding women's only powerlifting events in Texas.
And in other, I know in other places,
because there's enough interest. It's been a real, but anyway, the consequence of this was
up until the last couple of decades, most athletes were men, most coaches were men,
and realistically, most research was done on men. And that's still the case, unfortunately.
was done on men. And that's still the case, unfortunately. It's something like 80% of research is still done on men compared to women. And in sports, it's changing. I'm seeing
proportionally more research done on women. But what that all meant was all the training concepts,
all the training ideas were basically developed by men for men. And when women entered sport,
they just said, well, we'll just do the same thing. And we'll just treat them essentially like
smaller, weaker, slower men. Now, in some ways, there is truth to this, right? A lot of the
differences between women and men do come down to just differences in body composition right on average women have between 8 and 11 percent more body fat between 8 and 11
percent less muscle mass and this is comparing athletes at the same level right obviously you
can find an elite female that will stomp a recreational male but if we're talking about
the highest level and if you look at the performance differences they tend to average about eight to ten percent so there is a primary component of body composition
but there are still profound physiological differences and what these come down to
fundamentally is hormones right if you look at little boys and little girls before puberty, their physiology is
pretty much the same. Their performance is pretty much the same. Like there's slight differences.
Younger girls have a little bit more body fat than boys even before puberty, but it's about the same.
And when puberty hits, that's when the changes occur. Boys under the effect of testosterone gain lean body mass, tend to lose body fat.
Performance goes up. Women, due to estrogen and progesterone, as they start their menstrual cycle,
tend to gain more body fat. Women also have differences in how their muscle is distributed,
and I'll come back to that, in terms of they tend to carry more in their lower body,
proportionally less in their upper body. And going back to that performance difference, things like running and cycling, the difference
is about 8% to 10%.
In jumping events, women are significantly further behind men because they're having
to move basically because you're having to project your body weight.
And since they carry more fat, it hurts them much more.
And in upper body dominant sports, kayaking, shop hooding, discus, the difference is
also much greater because of this differential in upper body muscle mass. But once that happens,
that's when the big, and that's when you see the performance differences really develop as a
puberty. At that point, the highest level men are about 10% faster, stronger in terms of performance
than women. And that, so it's really, it happens at
puberty under, so, but it's still, that's still a body composition thing, right? So still at a
first approximation, we don't see big differences, but there are some, well, let me back up.
And there's reasons for this. If we were to take a woman's muscle and a man's muscle,
put it under a microscope, they're mostly the same. There's some slight differences.
Women's muscle tends to have a little bit
more fat stored in it than men's.
Some studies suggest
there's differences in fiber type that are called
slow and fast twitch muscle fibers.
Even that data sets are really variable.
On average, that's true.
On an individual level, it's not.
We took a woman's
heart, put it under a microscope, they're identical. Women's are simply smaller took a woman's heart put it on a microscope
they're identical. Women's are simply smaller and or they have less of it. But
the hormonal effects cannot be ignored and this is probably where I said where
the big difference is right. So if you look at a man's testosterone level it's
pretty much the same. Like yeah there's small's small fluctuations. It changes seasonally a little
bit. And as we get older, it goes down. But pretty much when a dude comes into the gym,
he's the same dude he was yesterday and the week before. As I put it to pander a little bit,
once guys hit puberty, we're basically just the same jackass till our 70s and frequently until
then, right? We're just the same. We're constant, which makes it easy,
relatively easy to coach. You always know he's walking to the gym, you know, his performance,
he may be tired from yesterday or whatever it is. By and large, he's the same. The impact of
the menstrual cycle is profound. And let me sketch that out, right? So the average menstrual cycle
runs between 24 and 32 days. We assume it's
28 and I'm going to pretend it is just to keep it simple. It's divided into two phases. The middle
is ovulation. That's when the egg is released, right? The first half, which starts with menstruation,
it's called the follicular phase. This is when the follicle, the egg is developing
till ovulation when it's released. And then the second half of the cycle
from ovulation to right before menstruation occurs, it's called the luteal phase. And that's
because when the egg bursts, it produces something called the corpus luteum, hence luteal phase.
All right. So the first half of the cycle, again, day one is the first day of menstruation,
just by convention. Estrogen is dominant. Estrogen starts very low,
sweeps up to a peak, comes back down at ovulation. That's that first half of the cycle. Now,
estrogen is blamed for a lot of women's problems. But if anything, most of its effects are
beneficial. It's anti-inflammatory. It increases muscular remodeling from training. It decreases muscle damage.
It controls appetite and hunger significantly.
And right before ovulation is when women, those three or four days,
is when women's hunger for both food and drink is decreased.
And I phrased that a little oddly because one of the most interesting, trivial things I came when I was researching my book.
The idea, well, ovulation
is for pregnancy. And there's other data, women are more receptive to giving out phone numbers,
their hips, like that's when you're supposed to have sex and get pregnant, right? And the biology
changes to promote that. There's also a little spike of testosterone right around them, which I
think is to probably make women a little bit hornier.
And the researcher proposed that the reason women's hunger for food and drink goes down during those days is so that their appetites for, let's just say pleasures of the flesh will go up.
Wow, interesting.
And there's data to that. If you actually, they did surveys and women basically report that when
their hunger and appetite is the lowest for food and drink that's when their sex drive is highest and like so
there's something and it's all under its hormones affecting you know neurochemistry and physiology
yeah no doubt would you say that that three-day lead-in to ovulation perhaps might be the best
window for performance as testosterone elevates and estrogen climbs kind of simultaneously
probably that's been kind of simultaneously?
Probably that's been kind of thrown out there, that little bump in testosterone.
And I'll come back to performance because it does frequently vary.
It's a good question.
Don't let me forget it.
All right.
So that's the first half of the cycle.
Generally good things going on.
There's one thing I wrote about.
I think I'm the only one who even came across this data, is if women are going to start a fat loss diet, they should do it in the first half of the cycle. Because that's when again, hunger and appetite is the most well controlled due to estrogen. That's a good way to
get a couple weeks of just, you know, forward momentum and positive reinforcement and everything
is really easy because in the second half of the cycle is when it all goes wrong. And I want to
make it clear when I
use terms like right and wrong and good and bad, I'm not, these aren't judgmental terms. I'm just
sort of comparing them. Even when I say that, you know, women are relatively weaker, slower than
men. I'm not playing the weaker sex. It's just compared. They're different. Of course. Yeah.
Just in a performance. I don't want to make sure like that's one of those things that is a leftover of decades and again this history of sport article i
talk about the fact that they thought that women could not physically handle the stress of sport
but it was unwomanly that the marathon would make their ovaries fall out the training would turn
them into men and make them infertile like there is a century's worth of this stuff, which in hindsight
seems really ridiculous. And it mostly is, but there are truths to it in terms of differences
in women and men in training. And this is stupid. This is something that when we come out of the
data, looking just at men, when women entered sport, they started to get a lot of problems,
knee injuries, which I'll come back to. All right. Second half of the cycle,
get a lot of problems, knee injuries, which I'll come back to. All right, second half of the cycle,
the egg is released, the follicle bursts, and I just think that's the imagery in my mind is the egg is available for fertilization, the remainder forms the corpus luteum,
that produces progesterone. So during the second half of the cycle, right, so estrogen went up
and crashed. In the second half of the cycle, here's estrogen, here's progesterone. So during the second half of the cycle, right, so estrogen went up and crashed.
In the second half of the cycle, here's estrogen, here's progesterone. They both kind of sweep up
to the middle, to the end of the third week, and then they come back down.
And that fourth week of the cycle, when estrogen and progesterone are both going down, is typically
when, if a woman's going to experience premenstrual syndrome or premenstrual tension in other countries, or the full-blown,
what's called premenstrual dysphoric disorder, which is the severe, severe form of PMS,
it's typically going to be in that final week. Now, even there, huge variability, and I'll come
back to this. Some women are incapacitated, right? Some women cannot get out of bed. They're in too much pain.
Many will experience, or not many, a percentage will experience suicidal thoughts.
That's at the very extremes.
That's PMDD.
That's premenstrual dysphoric disorder.
Small percentage, but that belies the fact that for any woman experiencing it, the percentages
don't matter because she's having to live through it.
PMS is a less extreme form, and there's all, it can be mood swings. It can be appetite changes.
There's obviously water retention that's occurring. All kinds of things can happen,
cramping. And then some women will go through that and not have a problem at all.
And frequently will not understand what's the issue. I don't experience. And of course, as men, we don't have a clue.
We may have experienced it indirectly through our relationships,
but we don't have a clue about it.
And sort of as a random note, this is completely,
this is just how I give podcasts.
A friend of mine told me about this company that made bras,
and it had all of its male employees, like it would hire men, and it would make them wear a
weight, a bra weight around for several weeks when they started working there, so that they would
have some conception of what it was like for women with breasts in terms of the body weight, how they move,
low back pain, upper back pain, to give them perspective.
Now, it's not the same, but it's something.
And I believe, well, I believe two things.
One, if men had to experience one or two menstrual cycles and the mood changes,
all of them, it would make relationships so much healthier.
Because we would stop just being like, can you not do, this is neurochemical, this is bio, and I know some women are like, no,
it's just an, this is a biochemical, neurological, physiological effect. By the same token, women
often can't understand men's relentless A, attitude, and B, sex drive. I've known some women that went on low-dose
anabolic steroids, and they're like, I get it now. I get it because their sex drive is relentless.
They finally understand why dudes are like this. Anyway, I'm off topic. So four-week cycle,
first two weeks of their follicular phase, estrogen is dominant, good stuff.
Week three and four, luteal phase. When progesterone
is dominant, progesterone is really what causes most of the problems. It is directly involved in
fat storage, specifically in the lower body. These hormonal changes tend to increase appetite
and cravings during this part of the cycle. Progesterone not only has its own negative
effects, but blocks the effects of estrogen. So you're blocking
estrogen's anti-inflammatory effects. You're blocking estrogen's positive effects on muscular
remodeling. Mood tends to go down. Progesterone can even increase protein breakdown a little bit.
So this is the two weeks of the cycle where I said appetite's typically up,
cravings are up. Now metabolism goes up a little bit, but hunger tends to go up further.
And then, of course, in that fourth week of the cycle, all bets are off, right?
It could be anything from don't experience a problem whatsoever to can't get out of bed.
And on top of everything else, well, let me talk about the dieting thing.
This makes the second two weeks of the cycle the worst time to, sorry, the third and fourth week of the cycle,
the worst time to start a diet.
Your hunger's up, your appetite's up, good luck.
I mean, can it be done?
Sure.
But you're going to struggle for two weeks,
which can make it tough to get that momentum,
to get that positive reinforcement of success.
Some of you are suggesting, and there's, I think, some truth
to this, right? Without getting off into the flexible eating thing. Since your metabolism,
since a woman's metabolism is up by a couple hundred calories, if you are dieting and you
want to include a little something, and one paper actually allowed like dark chocolate,
just like one piece. I don't mean eat the bag. If that helps you get through those two weeks, you've got a few extra calories to play with. That's one way to approach it. A little bit
of a buffer, right? It's easy to, you know, not every, but whatever. But a function of this on
top of everything else, on top of the mood swings, well, another big issue is water retention. And
this is important for tracking weight loss or fat loss because again for men it doesn't matter
what day we measure every monday is the same as every monday every friday is this other than what
you our weekly schedule is for women every week is different typically body weight will be at its
lowest in the first week of the cycle two or three days after menstruation it typically goes up a
little bit before ovulation. And this is because estrogen
makes the body hold more sodium. So if you eat more salt, too little potassium, it tends to be
worse. So it'll go up a little bit. And how much it goes up varies. Every woman listening to this
knows what I'm talking about. Her numbers may differ from any other woman's numbers,
but they're probably pretty consistent. In week three, weight typically comes back down a little bit.
One of the things progesterone does do that's nice tends to clear up the skin,
tends to cause a loss of water coming out of that bit of it.
And then in week four, if a woman is going to retain a lot of water
and have her body weight spike, that's when.
Because again, these crashing hormones, the body starts to retain more sodium if you're eating a lot of salt,
which you probably are because your cravings are off the map or can be off the map.
So if a woman is trying to track her weight, let's just say weight loss,
we know that weight and body fat aren't the same.
We all know this.
It doesn't change the fact that we all live and die by the scale at the end of the day.
I do it.
I've known hardcore athletes and physique athletes.
They all know better.
They still go crazy when the scale goes up, right?
This cuts across all neurotic dieters, men and women alike.
So a woman starts her diet on week one, right?
She tracks her weight, which is still a good metric if you use it correctly.
Doing everything right.
Two weeks later, her body weight's up two pounds or a kilo.
I don't know if you're listeners or non-US.
And she goes, what the hell?
I'm doing everything right.
My coach gave me this.
He said it would work.
What the hell?
And then week three comes back down
cool diet's working and then week four it all goes wrong well i've been dieting and exercising
for a month and my weight's up four pounds screw this yeah it's a real real it's screw it's a mind
game yeah and what that means is that while this dude can technically track his results week to week or
every two weeks women have to wait a month you have to compare the same week to the same week
week one three days after menstruation whatever you pick week one to week one week two to week
two week so women have to wait longer under those conditions and what you or you what you can do
track for a couple of months see what your normal normal patterns are. And you just have to adjust it. If you know that your body weights up three pounds, roughly kilo and a half right for ovulation, you just got to factor that in. And generally, I just say just don't get on the scale week four, just just don't. Nothing good can come of it by and large, just track weeks one, two, and three, but you have to be comparing.
This is not something men deal with. No, I think that women would, and it, it, it is, it's,
it's a head game. Um, and even measuring body composition, many methods will be thrown off
by water retention, right? If you're using a tape measure, which is another good way.
Well, every woman listening to this for or most women know, you know,
they're called cankles. They know that their lower body, their calves and ankles will swell
and it's water retention. It doesn't make it suck any less. And don't hear me as ever being
dismissal. I'm not saying, oh, it's only water. It's only waterway. It doesn't change the fact
that it is mentally stressful. Those don't fit right. You don't feel it is what it but you throw a tape
measure around there it's going to go up even doing everything right but uh biological impedance
will be impacted because it's measuring water in one direction the other calipers may be so even
tracking actual body composition i just saw a paper that dexa right dual energy x-ray
absorptometry if you drink a ton of water right before it,
it will overestimate your lean body mass and underestimate. Water can throw off all of these.
So if you're tracking body comp or taking pictures or whatever you're doing,
you have to be consistent. So there's one major issue in terms of body composition.
There's also the performance issue. Now, some women don't notice, again, there's huge variability.
Some women don't notice any difference across the cycle.
Others notice small differences.
And other women, enormous differences.
I'm embarrassed to say about 15 years ago, I had a significant other,
and during week four, her performance would crater.
Like literally couldn't lift weights that used to be warm-ups.
And me, being an idiot male coach went what do you mean you can't lift the lift away what's wrong with you
because even then i had my head on my own butt until i watched it and watched it went okay
started looking into it then i was like ah and then i adjusted her training based on and what
i found was that in week four,
her coordination went out the window,
her strength was down, her performance was down.
So I would just make that an easy week.
We would go far.
We would just go goof off and do machines at 60%.
And then as soon as she started,
she would come back and she would hit PRs in three days.
But I had to track that pattern.
Now I would say if there's a common pattern,
typically women are usually pretty strong within a few days after menstruation. My experience has
been that's when performance is the best. There's variability. Typically it goes down a little bit
right before ovulation, which is a little weird. A testosterone spike should help, but you've got
a lot of other stuff going on, right? If you're training someone who's in what I will call a gravity sport, right, where they're
having to move their body weight up against gravity, whether it's jumping, running, riding a
bike up hills, climbing, a few pound, kilo and a half body weight increase can wreck performance,
right? Anybody that can do chins, you can do like, you can do like you can do five or whatever
with body weight and your body weight's up two or three pounds one like it makes a stat so that is
that is a factor typically so it may go down a little bit right for ovulation may come up a
little bit again right after probably due to that testosterone, a little bit delayed effect. And then if it's going to be bad, usually the worst week will be week four. Women's coordination
can go out the window. So if you're doing very complex activities, you might not be able to do
it. Or you might have to do it very light, right? Their performance just generally may be down.
There is also the psychological component. And I want to
tread very carefully here with my words. Because again, I don't want people to mishear what I'm
saying. Right? I'll give a better example. I have a therapist or did at one point. And we talked
about this when I was writing my book. And he goes, yeah, when I'm when when I'm, when I have male patients, I know who I'm getting every day.
When a female patient comes in, I won't know till five or 10 minutes in. And if all of a sudden,
a conversation that was normal the previous session has her in tears, well, that's who I'm
treating today. I'm not saying he's treating her negatively or judging. As a coach, we're doing the
same thing, right? Now there's a lot of auto-regulation, right? You look at him, you go,
okay, yesterday you looked great. And today you look like just a hot mess during your warmups.
And we adjust the training. But what you may see with many female trainees or female trainees may
see in themselves is a very systematic repeatable pattern.
Yeah. So I just want to jump in here because I think this is absolutely fantastic, particularly because so much of this is multifactorial. It's societal, right? It's baked into the hardwiring
of American sport, American physical culture. Women not really being included into much of
this stuff until like you said, the 70s and
80s, at least at a recreational level, let alone at a high level. Right. That's within the last two,
maybe two and a half decades. It's very recent. So you don't have a lot of education around it.
For many of the women listening to this, they might be aware that they have these fluctuations,
but they've never had them qualified or quantified in the way that you just did. So that's massive, particularly because to the point you made,
even a coach who's quite qualified and maybe has tremendous success with some clients might be
annihilating his female clients simply because this stuff just isn't out there, at least at the
level it probably should be given some of this
hardwiring and underwiring that's going on. Yes. So what are, given that to the point you just
made, some of these things are repeatable. They become patterns that you can observe.
What are some things that a female who perhaps doesn't have a coach can do with auto-regulation, with training strategies
to kind of work with this built-in physiological hardwiring that men just simply get to say,
fuck it, I'm going in, I'm going, I'm going. Yeah, I'm going as hard as I can. Okay. So I
just want to bet something you mentioned that is still a problem. Most strength coaches are still men. It is a field that is
dominated by men. It is changing oh so slowly. And there's also, I think, a big difference
at the higher levels of sport, right? Once you get into beyond the recreational, even the high
school level or junior high, I think you're seeing more attention to this. There is also an unfortunate
issue at the highest levels of sports. Once you introduce the anabolic steroids, you can train
the women like men anyway. Years ago, I read something that the Chinese coaches originally
trained the women differently than the men according to the menstrual cycle, and then they
didn't. I'm like, aha, that's when they brought the hard drugs in. And we'll come back to that
when we talk about PCOS.
I don't want to spend too much time on this.
But at the lower levels of sport, you have, you know, let's face it,
a lot of high school coaches or strength coaches,
they're just the guy that played sports.
I mean, it's just I've seen some really appalling papers that looked at this
at like strength coaches at the high school level.
One of them,
the female coaches when they existed were less likely to have this to be expected to have the
same academic credentials. The female athletes were not given anything to do during the summer
because a lot of people still just don't take women's sports seriously. Yeah. And it's not right,
but it is right. I'm not saying I'm like, and it's changing, but it's changing very slowly.
Like we've kind of opened Pandora's box in this. That's a really bad comparison because Pandora's
box was bad. We've opened the window on this because now that the trend is starting,
once women got into sport, it can't ever go back. Yeah. Because, and this even started in the 70s,
you go back and look at some of those pioneering female athletes, Martina Navratilova, oh, who is the other? There were several that they were completely,
complete outliers, and they pushed hard for the inclusion of women's sports. And as more women
came in, their daughters, the younger, saw that and went, wow, you mean I can do that? You mean
that's a thing? And then they got into it and
now we're a couple generations deep this won't and same thing as women are entering coaching
and some of the greatest female sports teams coaches were women uh the is it i think ut
knoxville hats summer summit yes thank you Which an aunt of mine had an absolute crush on.
She was one of the most winning coaches in history
because she knew how to handle the female basketball team.
And so that's changing and it's getting better.
A lot of this information still hasn't really...
So anyway, your question, what can women do with this?
Well, one is I can speak in generalities and I can speak in averages,
but that will not describe any individual woman's experience.
Like I said, some women listening to this are like, this guy's full of shit.
I don't experience any of this.
And others are like, oh, my God, you mean when my coach told me I was being lazy?
It was my physiology telling me, right.
And I'm not saying either of you are right or wrong about that. It's just every woman is going,
there's so much more individuality. So what I would generally recommend, and I saw a paper
about this, they took high school soccer players, female high school soccer players,
what they did is they gave them the same workout for a month, identical on whatever the workout was during the week.
They just repeated it.
And they looked at things like rating of perceived exertion.
I'm sure they looked at like heart rate and things of that nature in soccer.
But that's other than just noting it.
That's probably the best way to do it.
And everyone will have to be your own best scientist or their coach or both, ideally.
Rate, you know, how are you feeling what's your motivation is my body
weighed up but if you do let's just say give yourself the same workout let's say you're just
you're a strength trainer and you typically do a weekly workout split of whatever it is
just keep everything static for a month and record was there a difference in how difficult it was, right? Did I have to work
harder this week? And again, there's other barriers. Did I sleep well? Did I eat enough?
Am I stressed out because we're in the middle of a global catastrophe? There's a lot going on,
but track that. And what you may see, right? So it's like, let's say here's the workout,
right? And I'm going to use that generic pattern I described. In week one, let's say here's the workout, right? And I'm going to use that generic pattern I described.
In week one, let's say it's like, here's the workout and it's this easy, right?
Here's the difference.
Like you could have done this much more.
Now in week two, maybe you're not as strong.
Okay, you're a little bit closer to your limits.
Week three, maybe it gets a little bit easier.
And then week four, you may even find that you go in and you can't even complete the workout. Well, you've
just established your own pattern of strongest, little weaker, stronger. Oh my God. Yeah. And
that would be a way to get, well, I mean, you can always, you can auto-regulate. That can take some
practice on an individual day. Go in,
how do I feel? Warm up. I mean, I've told people that before. Frequently, the best workouts you have are when you feel the worst. You go in and you warm up and you feel, and I go, warm up. And
if you still feel like dog meat, go home or do an active recovery and go home. But once women
identify these patterns, I think they're more consistent than not. Now, what I have, what I
think of general experience, and I'll and let me back up to some research.
If you read the research on menstrual cycle and performance, it generally says there's no effect.
The problem is if I take 10 women and five do fine and five get cratered, the average is zero.
They're also typically looking at endurance sports. Now, endurance sports are a whole
different thing because most endurance training is submaximal.
Even when I felt terrible, I could always go put in two hours on the bike.
You can always do it.
When you're looking at more maximum levels of performance,
it's very, very different, right?
So bodybuilding training, right?
Let's say 8 to 15 repetitions.
Even if your strength is down a little bit,
you can probably get through the workout. It is down a little bit, you can probably get through
the workout. It may take a little, it may be a little bit harder, right? But if you're normal
a hundred percent and you're training at 80% and you're down at 90%, you can do it. It'll suck more,
but you can do it. If you're looking at a power lifter, an Olympic lifter, someone doing that
maximal effort, right? Let's say you're trying to do triples at 90%.
So here's your week one.
You can do that.
Week two, if your strength is at 90%,
that's an impossible workout.
What was a triple is now a maximum.
In week three, maybe you're at 95%.
You might get through it.
And if in week four, your maximum is down to 85%,
you can't even do one. So I think you tend to see a lot more profound differences at the higher
ends. And that's what you also see when you start looking, you know, if you're looking at interval
training, sprints training, that's when you see the big differences. When you're trying to work at a hundred percent output, if you're, if your normal a hundred percent is at 90%, you can't do
the workout. Physically, you cannot do it. And once you get that pattern, well, let's say you're
a power lifter, you know, your strongest, a little bit weaker, stronger, and everything goes wrong.
Well, this is your heavy week. is your light week moderate week moderate heavy and
this is your make that your deload week yeah boom now you have found a way to adjust your training
because you can't adjust your physiology to your training right that's just the thing
if this is your pattern we can't fix it and i hate to use those terms because it's not
it's not a problem it's not broken but we
can't change that physiology short of putting steroids in or birth control and this will make
the transition yeah does affect us what we can do is fit the training or the diet to your individual
response no i quite like that and there's actually there's there's one paper this came out after i
did all this work on diet where i came up with my whole premise, which real briefly, women tend to use more carbs
for fuel in the first half of the cycle, less in the second. So you can eat a little bit higher
carb diet week one, a little bit lower protein stay in you, just dietary fat, and that tends to
help things. And then a paper came out that did exactly what I had come up with. And they did find
that the results were better because women were better able to adhere to it.
Yeah.
Right?
Because if during the second half of the cycle, you are trying to follow this really hardcore diet while your appetite cravings are up, you are fighting with your own physiology.
Can it be done?
Sure.
But if that's not working, if that's failing, you can adjust the diet to fit your individual
physiology.
And in the long term, that works better.
But first, you have to identify your own pattern.
No, I quite like that, particularly in regards to strength sport or high level power work
like sprinting or track and field.
You're looking at a situation where essentially the first two weeks of your training are somewhat
similar.
There's a drop off from week one to week two. Yeah, but it's not major. Yeah. Yeah. And then you get a little bit
of a bump in week three. So you can front load the higher intensity work followed by a pretty
consistent deload. And I don't think it's unreasonable to say, hey, you go about 21 days
of moderate to high training, then you take about seven days off. Yes. And then go ahead. Yeah. With
hypertrophy training, the first two weeks of the cycle, you're perhaps a little bit more sensitive
to carbohydrate, which lends itself great for that glycolytic type higher volume work. Yep. And
maybe you front load your volume and then perhaps you, you add in some intensifiers or things on
week three where you're maybe not as glycolytic, but you have the ability to
really push and then you fade and you drop off towards the back end, which for most women,
what I've found is the exact opposite of how they train intuitively because there's a goal to
consistently do more again, multifactorial baked into the societal underpinning of how everybody
thinks they need to be better, better, better.
Absolutely, yes.
And it sounds to me like working with your physiology in the long run is going to be exponentially more healthy and more fruitful for your gains
than simply pushing, pushing, pushing with the goal of getting better every week because it's just not built that way physiologically.
Yes. And on that note, just
briefly before we transition, there are about five or six studies that have looked at adjusting
weight training to the menstrual cycle. And with the exception of one, which was like a weird
blood flow restriction study, what they found is that the growth and strength response is generally
higher in the first half of the cycle.
So what they do is they're like, okay, you're going to train five days a week,
the first two weeks of the cycle, and then once a week in weeks three and four.
Or we're going to reverse that.
We're going to do five days a week in the second half of the cycle,
and then one just distributed three, three, three, and three.
What they find is that there's like a 30% or greater increase in muscle growth and strength front-loading that volume into the first
two weeks. Even compared to a more, and I'm not saying that women are not getting gains in the
third and fourth. They're not getting as much. And sort of to your point, right, there is this mentality, I have to be better every week,
or every day or whatever it is. And in some cases, like I said, and some men can do that,
at least briefly, right? And women are fighting with an inherent physiology. And again,
also, if they've been told that, ah, you should always be able to just suck it up, just butch up.
If they're a woman that in the fourth week of the
cycle are really decimated physiology, they're going to be that much more decimated when they're
told you need to suck it up and go. And physiologically, not psychologically as much,
but physiologically, they can't do it. You're telling that you basically, you're just telling
them to do something that at that time, the body is not physically, you know, it happens with
over-trained athletes too. Athletes dig themselves too deep in a hole and the athlete themselves is,
okay, I'm underperforming. I should push harder. And their coaches are like, why are you so slow?
Why are you so lazy? And they are trying to do something that they are physically at the moment.
and they are trying to do something that they are physically at the moment.
What they need is to listen to that and take a few easy days or take the easy week and come back and then there'll be that much. It takes a while to learn that lesson.
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the podcast and enjoy the rest of the episode. All right, so birth control is insanely complicated,
and I'm going to try to give a very short version of this in as much as this is possible. So birth
control fundamentally provides synthetic versions of women's hormones, right? There's a synthetic
estrogen, although lately there's at least one version that uses a bioidentical form
and i think as we go that will become more common and then there is a synthetic form of progesterone
called a progestin now the estrogen is easy they have typically used something called ethinyl
estradiol it's about five times more potent than estrogen back in the original early days of the
pill in the 70s they used very high doses. Now they use very, very tiny doses, usually between about 15 and 25 micrograms.
Where things get complicated is the progestins, because there are at least eight different kinds
across four different generations based on when they were developed. So first, and they vary in
their potency, in their effects in the body.
Because a very complicated thing about progesterone is it can act like other hormones in a woman's body.
It binds to the progesterone receptor.
But because of how it's structured, it can bind to the receptor that normally binds testosterone, the androgen receptor.
It can bind to the cortisol receptor.
And it can bind to the receptor involved in water balance.
And each generation tends to hit those differently.
And this, it impacts on their overall effects, their side effects, everything.
Now, the ones I'm going to focus on in terms of performance have to do with its effects at the testosterone receptor.
Okay, what's called the androgen receptor.
The first three generations of synthetic progestins are androgenic.
That means they bind to that receptor and send some sort of signal.
And that's why, if you go back, the early types of birth control were notorious,
causing acne, which is a common effect.
Androgenic just means those are the masculinizing effects,
right? It's why men get body hair and acne and oily skin, and this can happen whenever you
increase androgenic signaling. Women who take steroids often get that. Women with polycystic
ovary syndrome, which hopefully we have time for, can get that. The newest progestin called drospirinone, it is antiandrogenic.
So it binds to that receptor but either blocks the normal signal
or sends the opposite signal.
Women love it.
It tends to clear up the skin.
It tends to make the skin less oily.
It often causes a little bit of weight loss, although it's dehydration.
Found in Yaz and Yasmin are two of the brands.
And I don't know know there's a million
different brands okay so yeah here's where it gets unbearably complicated first we'll just
talk about oral contraceptives the pill technically oral contraceptives well all forms can either be
combined they have a synthetic estrogen a synthetic progesterone or progesterone progestin only
there's no such thing as estrogen only birth control it is used for like
hysterectomies they'll use that for hormone but there's no so it's either both or progestin only
so we look at combined birth control the pill the majority of them are combined they have both
synthetic estrogen and progesterone there's one called the mini pill that was a progesterone only
i don't even know how much. Usually that's used in cases
where women can't medically take synthetic estrogen. I don't know exactly medical stuff.
Originally, oral birth control was taken 21 days on and seven days off. It's called the withdrawal
period. Now here's a super bit of bizarre trivia. There is no reason physiologically for that week off. Back in the 50s, when this was
being developed, scientists, mostly men, of course, but some women, basically felt that women would
feel more natural if they bled for a week. And the bleeding from birth control is different than a
normal menstrual cycle, but there was no physiological reason for it.
And in recent,
in more,
the more modern era,
most people take it continuously.
You just don't go off and that's become far more common.
Yeah.
Now,
even there,
most birth control is 21 on seven off summer,
24,
four.
And I think there's a 26 too so that's just oral birth and
they all vary in slightly and how much synthetic estrogen but what type and how much of the
progestin are involved and there's just dozens of these things yeah all right so that's oral birth
control now tends to be very effective but there were problems practically you have to take the
pill about the same time every day women Women would travel and forget. There were reasons that
it wasn't ideal. So that led to the development of other forms that were meant to be sort of easier.
So one is the patch. Patch is just a topical. You put it on once a week and you wear it three
weeks on, one week off. I think they're using that continuously,
but don't swear me to that.
I won't.
There's the cervical ring.
Yeah.
Same thing.
It is inserted into the vagina.
It releases hormones and it is also used once a week through.
I actually know you think you wear it for three weeks straight.
Maybe it's three on one off.
Don't remember offhand,
but these are basically now we don't have to worry about it daily.
We just worry about weekly. Yeah. All right right there's the shot depo provera depo provera is a
once every three months shot and if i have time to cover it i think it should be taken off the
market it has all of the worst side effects of any of these compounds in terms of weight gain
compare bone mineral density its only advantage is that it's easy.
It's one shot once every three months and then you're done.
It's easy to go off of.
You don't want to stop taking it,
you stop taking it.
It uses a very high dose,
very early generation,
very harsh progestin.
It's been in use for 50 years
and I don't know why they haven't developed anything else.
I don't. That's haven't developed anything else. I don't.
That's my least favorite. Yeah. There's, there is the implant originally called Nexplanon and now
called Implanon. It was a little plastic thing, small incision in the back of the arm. It releases
the synthetic progestin, much less harsh than Depo for three years. So if you know that you want
contraception for three solid years, for whatever
reason, I'm not going to talk about why women use birth control for any number of reasons. Frequently
it's for just to prevent unwanted pregnancy, but it may be to control their menstrual cycle.
I've read that some women will use it to control their cycle so that, and this is going to sound
horrible, but it's what I've seen in the literature, and what women report so that they are not menstruating when they're, say, on vacation
or on holiday, and you can just take that where you will. It's just a reality, right? To control
mood, it's used in severe cases of blood, like there are reasons that are not just, many athletes
will use it to regulate their cycle. Yeah. Because going back to the menstrual cycle,
just many athletes will use it to regulate their cycle yeah because going back to the menstrual cycle imagine you're a high performance athlete at the olympic level world championship you have
trained your ass off for years and that championship that olympic qualifier that olympic
trial falls in a week of the cycle where you've already established that your performance is shit
yeah what do you you know? Tough. They don't get
to reschedule that. Even weight class athletes, if you're trying to cut weight and make weight
for powerlifting, Olympic lifting, if that competition falls in a week where your body
weights up, you got to work that much harder. Yeah. What's the answer? Tough. That's it.
Birth control is often used to regulate that interesting so that's
that's the implant on next one on three solid years finally is the hormonal IUD
right there are there's a cut there's a there's a non hormonal IUD it's a little
copper t-shaped thing yeah it is a minor surgery they insert basically blocks the
tubes the sperm can is just a barrier method but there's also a hormonal
version that releases synthetic progestin locally. Now the hormonal IUD is interesting. All the other
forms release hormones into the bloodstream. Yeah. And they work through two main mechanisms.
One is simply to shut off women's normal hormonal cycles. Yeah. Basically to prevent the egg from
being released in the first place. No egg, no pregnancy. Yeah. The synthetic progestin also thickens the cervical mucus. It makes it more
difficult for sperm to get in there. And the mini pill, which is that progestin, is one of the least
effective. Interesting. It's not strong enough to shut down ovulation, but I don't even know how
much it's used. It was a very early development. The hormonal IUD is totally local.
Women will still have a menstrual cycle.
They will still have the normal hormonal fluctuations because the hormones dunk it into the bloodstream.
All right, so those are all the major types.
They all use, some of them are combined.
Some of them are progestin only.
Generally, the longer acting forms are progestin only.
For reasons I'm not clear on.
But they all contain progestin.
Yes.
Period.
End of story.
That's essentially.
Of varying types.
Yeah.
And,
but that's the piece that essentially says to the body,
no egg drop.
Well,
kind of what it is,
is that without getting,
so the,
the hypothalamus,
the pituitary,
which are controlling hormone release and something called FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone,
and LH, luteinizing hormone, those get shut down.
So basically the follicle, it's just like enema,
men take steroids and shut that down,
and just things, they stop producing sperm and all that.
But they just always, there's always a progestin present.
I think some of it, it might be related to cervical
cancer don't swear me to that but for some reason estrinol doesn't get the job done okay so but the
difference is they each have different types of progestins depo provera is that harsh first
generation yeah the others use either second or third to my knowledge there's no long acting form
that uses that fourth generation yet they'll
probably develop it so this brings us to the two big questions that women always ask body weight
and body fat and performance or trainability let me do the first one for the body weight and body
fat first there is an old idea that birth control causes an increase in body weight. It's been around for decades,
and it was certainly the case with the first generation.
And a lot of that was estrogen causes water retention.
So frequently there's a weight from that and that alone.
Now, if you look at the studies, the big meta-analyses,
if you look at the average weight gain from birth control,
it's usually a couple pounds.
Average, and that's the key word. So when you look at the average weight gain from birth control it's usually a couple pounds average and that's the key word so you look at the individual studies the range is staggering found a couple papers that looked at like different forms in one study the the biggest
weight loss was like 32 pounds wow the biggest weight gain was over 60 pounds in a year
unbelievable 30 kilos but part of one of the things they see is that you see the same variation Wow. The biggest weight gain was over 60 pounds in a year. Unbelievable.
30 kilos.
But part of one of the things they see is that you see the same variation with non-hormonal
athletes.
So again, I don't want to sound, I'm not dismissing any individual woman's experience.
And some physicians feel that one out of four women are more prone to weight gain than others.
It seems to be more lifestyle related because there's like two studies in
athletes who are presumably controlling their activity, controlling their appetite or controlling
their food intake. You don't see these changes generally, but there is huge variability. Now,
Depo that's shot average weight gain, seven pounds doubles the risk of obesity because it's severe.
Like I said, that's the one that i would
always unless there's some really good reason to be on it i would always recommend the gowns
but on average now there's another component i forgot this is about oral birth control
instead it gets so complicated i can't remember it all birth control
can become in one of four types there's only two that matter what's called monophasic levels of
the hormones are the same the whole way
through.
There's also something called triphasic where estrogen goes and then it goes
up and comes back down.
But the progesterone goes up and up and up.
They're trying to mimic the standard ventral cycle.
The triphasic of the two have the worst,
because again,
we talked about this progesterone tends to have very negative
effects that high dose week has been shown to cause fat gain over several months when i looked
at all the performance studies if there was one type that was absolutely the worst in terms of
either decreasing performance acutely or decreasing trainability in the long term making gains
it was the triphasic birth control so again
that's one that unless there's some really good reason to be on it if you're going to be on oral
birth control monophasic is the better choice for making gains yes in terms so so that so that's the
weight gain thing the triphasic tend to cause some fat gain the depoProvera is the worst of the lot. On average, there's a few pound,
which tends to be water, which again, it's easy to go, it's only water weight, but that doesn't
reflect the world that we live in. Performance athletes, again, they have to move against
gravity. Three pounds when you're climbing, if you're a cyclist and you're climbing a hill,
go put a three pound weight in your pocket and watch your power outputs
drop, right? Male climbers in the tour are like 120 pounds at five foot eight, right? The lighter,
the better. A few pounds makes a huge difference. So saying that it's only three pounds of water
is still missing the point. And usually when women go off it, that goes away.
And some of that depends on the
dose of estrogen and probably sodium there's probably ways to ameliorate that like i said
that drospironone tends to cause a little bit of weight loss but it has its own other set of issues
so by and large the effect seems to be on average minimal especially if you're controlling your
eating uh and activity levels.
Like I said, not saying any individual woman might not have a response to it.
Again, huge variability.
But that's the average.
Seems to be fairly minor, mostly water weight.
Goes away when you go off of it.
Except triphasic birth control, except for Depo.
Okay, performance and gains.
Here's where not only is there not a lot of data, but most of it's garbage.
Especially in endurance training, it's a little bit better.
In the strength training stuff, it's so badly done.
It's like we measured performance of the thumb muscle at different types of –
like there's a lot of that.
They do stuff that is just not measuring anything that's important.
And when I looked at this, I read a little booklet called Birth Control and Athletic Performance to try to get this
information out there. The studies on like strength and hypertrophy, the few that exist are just like
all over the map and don't make any sense to me. Some of them suggest that
the second generation progestins are better than the third. Another one suggests
that the third progestin is better. Some suggest that it's the estrogen level and there's no really
coherent picture. I will say that drosperinone, that fourth generation, is anti-androgenic,
right? We know that testosterone is important to responses. Yeah. Any, that one, there's not
any direct data on, but I would say that's going to be the worst from a trainability standpoint.
That's the biggest gains killer. Correct. The gen four. And what, what is that primarily?
You had mentioned this a couple of times that it's not in a long-term form or a, uh,
as far as I know, drosperidone is only in oral birth
control okay it's only being used in that one so that and it's yaz and yazmin are two of the primary
primary brands and it's always it's entertaining this is just a whole separate thing when you look
at how stuff is marketed to women versus all birth control they find these names that are
kind of like it's like yazmin it sounds like jasmine it's just like it are kind of like, it's like Yasmin. It sounds like Jasmine.
It's just like, it's, it's pink and it's fluffy. And it's just like marketing teams are amazing.
Anyway, off topic. So that's probably going to be the worst of the others and realize when they've
done these studies, the differences in gains are not staggering. Right. One of the first papers I
came across was like, okay, over eight weeks, on average, birth control inhibited gains compared to control.
But we're talking about a kilo here.
We're talking about a couple pounds.
Then when they divided it up, they found that one form of birth control allowed – the difference in gains, it was like half the kilos, like a pound over eight weeks.
it was like half the kilos, like a pound over eight weeks, right?
So if we're talking about recreational female athletes,
we're talking about non-competitive, non-high-performance athletes.
This may not matter to you, right?
The potential benefits of birth control may far outweigh the disadvantage. Now, there's a couple other I want to mention before I sum this up.
You may gain a little bit less muscle,
but if you're not
trying to get as jacked as humanly possible and set powerlifting records, you may not get it down,
right? That you're 5% down. Now there is an effect that should, that is not talked about
nearly enough. And that is because of these hormonal differences, all forms of birth control
lower women's testosterone levels by anywhere from 30 to about 50%.
You can cut it in half.
Wow.
Now, there's kind of an idea floating around that, oh, testosterone isn't important in women.
It's not true.
Even small differences in the normal range make a huge difference.
And some forms of birth control due to the synthetic estrogen decrease what's called free testosterone significantly. So in, in many women, some percentage of women experience a loss of sex
drive and a loss of sexual function probably due to this. Now, I don't know what, why it's
somewhat, I suspect it's right. Women's testosterone ranges from 30 to 70 nanograms per deciliter.
If you're a woman at 70 and you cut that in half, you're still in the middle range. If you're a woman at 30 and you cut that in half, you're the equivalent of a dude
with very low testosterone. Of course, things are going to get impaired. That can't help performance.
And that is a consideration. And all forms of it do it to one degree. There's slight differences,
but they're just not that big.
And others have proposed, remember we talked about the whole spike in testosterone at ovulation?
Some researchers have theorized that, well, that may be part of adaptation too.
We're going to eliminate that.
So there is a consideration there. I know very anecdotally, I know one female power lifter who came off of birth control,
her testosterone levels tripled in several months.
What's going on, guys?
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which is a female bodybuilding-focused program where you can train at the gym with equipments
designed specifically to help you develop strength, as well as the glutes, hamstrings,
quads, and back. I have more teams coming planned for a variety of different fitness levels.
But what's cool about this is when you join these programs, you get programming that's updated every single week, the sets to do, the reps to do,
exercise tutorials filmed by me with me and my team. So you'll get my exact coaching expertise
as to how to perform the movement, whether you're training at home or you're training in the gym.
And again, these teams are somewhat specific. So you'll find other members of those
communities looking to pursue similar goals at similar fitness levels. You can chat, ask questions,
upload form for form review, ask for substitutions. It's a really cool training community and you can
try it completely free for seven days. Just click the link in the podcast description below.
Can't wait to see you in the Core Coaching Collective, my app-based training community. Back to the show.
And she had been stagnant for years and she put like 25 kilos on her total in a year,
which doesn't sound like much, but for a small female at the top, that's a lot.
Another female powerlifter, one of the best, her OB-GYN put her on depo pervera and told her it will not
hurt your performance and she lost a year of training because depo takes months to clear
because it's so long it's like anabolic steroids it will stay in the body in four months and
really messed her up so these are anecdotes but at the, so now we've got a problem. Let's say you're a high performance
female athlete. You see these huge performance differences, right? Because we could also look
at it. If a woman loses a week per month of effective training, that's 52 weeks a year.
That's a lot. Now, yeah, you can plan that as a deload and et cetera, et cetera, but that is a
big impact. What if she knows she's got a competition showing up on one of her poor performance weeks? What do you go? Too bad? That's
not really reasonable when you've spent your career, your life chasing a goal. But then we
have the potential of birth control to impair your gains during training. Some women have to
be on it. Many women can become anemic due to heavy blood flow from menstruation. They use it for that. What if you have such severe pain you can't
even train for a week? And there may be a medical reason. Here's a potential compromise depending on
what kind of sport you're in. Most competitive athletes have a competitive season, right? That's
three to four months long where the main goal is competing, right? Runners,
cyclists, strength athletes is a little bit harder, powerlifters compete every 12 to 16 weeks or
whatever. But if you're sort of a traditional performance athlete, well, you stay off birth
control during your primary training phases. So you get the most trainability. And then you go on
during the three months where you have to, you want to control or regulate your menstrual cycle for performance.
That would be a contradiction or you find the one, you know, like I said,
the hormonal IUD, well, it won't affect performance,
won't affect like trainability because it's local,
but it also won't take away the monthly fluctuations.
So it's like, there's a lot of pros and cons.
Again, I look at this in this little booklet.
And someone, one podcaster finally said, okay, this is great.
You have a female athlete or you have a daughter.
What would you recommend?
Like what would you recommend?
Yeah, I was about to ask the same question.
Just get to the point, Lyle.
What would you choose assuming you had to be on birth control?
And I would pick oral birth control that had a low-dose estrogen.
Actually, I'd pick bioidentical if possible.
Bioidentical estrogen doesn't have quite the same effects on like free testosterone and stuff.
And based on what I think is the case,
which one?
I think it's a third generation progestin.
They have the least binding of the antireceptor,
least likely chance of impacting on testosterone levels.
It would be that.
So it would be a oral birth control used continuously with a low dose of
ideally bioidentical estrogen and a third generation progestin.
And you can look those up.
The final thing I will mention, and I just forgot what it was going to be.
What was I going to say?
You were talking about selecting the best birth control.
Sure.
But I was going to say some, and I now have forgotten.
Oh, yes.
One thing that has been studied with regards to this,
DHEA, dihydroepiandrosterone, right,
is a primary androgen in women.
In men, it's pointless.
Women produce androgens in their adrenal cortex, and this is a problem.
It is converted to testosterone within muscle cells.
Two or three studies have shown that DHEA supplementation will return testosterone levels
to normal for women on birth control.
Wow, that's pretty good.
25 to 50 milligrams now can have androgenic side effects.
Of course.
Start low.
It is a banned substance, so be aware of this.
But that is a way to potentially reverse this if that is an option.
No, that's actually really interesting, particularly because DHEA is a testosterone
precursor, primarily, correct? Yes. And so, much more effective in women whose testosterone
production has been impacted than men whose has not. Yes. Well, and also, just in men,
DHEA just isn't that big of a deal, and the difference is very, very tiny. I've got one paper,
and in women, DHEA levels show like a linear relationship with leg strength that in men,
it doesn't have any effect whatsoever. So yeah, so DHEA does stuff, good stuff for women. But again,
can have side effects. Start with a smaller dose, assess your talent. Again, if you go that route.
Yeah. If you live in Australia, you're out of luck because you can't get any of the cool stuff.
I think it's actually a perfect segue talking about testosterone to lead us into PCOS, which I'll let Lyle explain what PCOS is.
But just from my standpoint as a coach, when I first started working in the industry seven, eight years ago, I didn't know what PCOS was.
And not a lot of people talked about it.
people talked about it. And, you know, year after year, the murmurs started to become whispers and the whispers started to become now what I would call a dull roar. And it seems like it's become
exponentially more common. People are aware of it. And I've heard upwards of 10 to 20% of women
might be dealing with PCOS. So talk a little bit about what it is, how it impacts female physiology, and maybe even
if there are pathways for women to find out if this is something they're dealing with
and therapies for it. Yeah. All right. So PCOS stands for polycystic ovary syndrome,
which is becoming a rapidly less than accurate name, and I'll explain why. So PCOS is, it's one of the most common
reproductive dysfunctions. Like when women go to fertility clinics, PCOS, I believe, is the most
singular, most common cause of infertility in women. Don't swear me to that. It's been a while
since I looked at that statistic. Oh, here's what I've got. In fact, roughly 15 to 20% of all women
who are found to be infertile suffer from PCOS.
It's extremely common and often goes undiagnosed.
Now, PCOS is diagnosed according to what's called the Rotterdam criteria, because I think Rotterdam was where they got together and decided to work all this out.
There are three primary symptoms that can define PCOS.
And if you have two of those three, you are considered to have PCOS.
Now, one of them is having multiple cysts on the ovaries, polycystic ovary syndrome.
One is hyperandrogenism, elevated androgen levels, and this includes testosterone,
DHEA. There's a couple of smaller ones that nobody, androstenedione, that I'm just going to refer to them as androgens.
And this can be measured either clinically, like blood work.
So I mentioned that the average testosterone range for women
is 30 to 70 nanograms per deciliter.
At the extremes of PCOS, you can see double those levels.
You may see as high as 150.
Now to put that in perspective,
the low normal range for men is 300 nanograms per deciliter. Excuse me. So at the extremes, a PCOS woman will not approach
men's testosterone levels, but they can be double. And I'll talk about why this can be both good and
bad. It can also be indicated by there's elevated androgen levels tend to cause very
characteristic physical changes, and it is masculinization. You frequently will see
increased body hair, oily skin, acne. Very common is women will have more of a male pattern,
male body fat pattern. It's called central fat patterning, where they store more around the gut visceral fat. So it can be determined by either blood work or by sort of
clinical presentation. And then the other end is menstrual cycle dysfunction, one of which is
called oligomenorrhea, right? So the standard menstrual cycle, 24 to 32 days. Algomenorrhea means one menstrual cycle every 35 to 90 days.
And then you may also see amenorrhea, or anovulation or amenorrhea,
which is a loss of the menstrual cycle.
So those would also, but remember what I said,
you only have to have two or three of those.
So you can technically have PCOS without having multiple cysts.
It's quite a shit name when you
really think about it isn't it well and i think and what happened is i think the original term
from decades ago was they saw this first clinical manifestation and there's sort of a push now
because what you can get is you can get four different types type one you have all three
multiple cysts hyperandrogenism menstrual cycle dysfunction type two no cysts hyperandrogenism, menstrual cycle dysfunction. Type 2, no cysts, hyperandrogenism, menstrual cycle dysfunction.
Type 3, multiple cysts, hyperandrogenism, androgenism, no menstrual cycle dysfunction.
Type 4, multiple cysts, no hyperandrogenism, and menstrual cycle dysfunction.
Right.
These are all different types.
And I suspect within many years, they're going to come up with different,
now they're just like different types.
And the fourth type is the least common.
And roughly 60% of women with PCOS will have elevated testosterone.
So that is, I mean, it's in three of the four.
That is the most common.
So typically, if you're seeing a pcos client or pcos
woman but you'll know you'll see there are these telltale telltale physical characteristics
so they're probably going to change some of the names to distinguish the but right now they're
just different subtypes okay so pcos has a number of consequences, right? One of them is obviously infertility because you've got this either complete law,
either the egg's not being released, you lose the menstrual cycle completely,
or there's just this infrequent cycle.
So that's very common.
Vibrandonism does cause a bunch of negative side effects.
However, for athletes, female high-performance athletes, it's awesome.
Yeah, I was about to say, that elevated testosterone.
Correct.
And so we go back a little bit.
So early days of women in sport, they started seeing menstrual cycle dysfunction
and a couple other things.
It's called the female athlete triad.
And they kept seeing oligomenorrhea, this irregular menstrual cycle,
and they thought, oh, it's all related. And they started looking more and more and more, and they were seeing oligomenorrhea, this irregular menstrual cycle, and they thought, oh, it's all related.
They started looking more and more and more, and they were like, wait,
a majority of the women with oligomenorrhea in sport have elevated testosterone.
Now, originally, they reversed cause and effect.
They were like, ah, something about heavy training is raising.
No, no, no, no, no.
The heavy testosterone, elevated testosterone was already there.
Women with PCOS are seen at a significantly increased number
in high-level sport because they have an inherent athletic advantage,
which has to be weighed against the negatives.
And I will say, at least initially,
I think they tended to be found more in the strength sports.
There is often, and again, I'm going to tread very, very carefully in
my words here, personality is determined to a degree by hormone levels, right? And I'm going
to use the terms masculinity and femininity in a way that's just descriptive. We know what they
mean. I'm not using them to say there's these little bitty boxes. I understand that sex and
gender are different. I wish I didn't have to make these kinds of qualifications, but this is the world
we live in. So I'm going to use these terms not as good, just descriptively. When I have
trained PCOS women, there tends to be more of a masculine personality type in terms of there is
an aggression there. They are the ones that want
to push heavy triples in the squat. They are the ones that want to be involved in more combat type
sports because the traditional, and again, descriptive only, the traditional girly girl
woman, probably not physically built for that, but probably not psychologically wired for that.
They're not the ones that want to go see how much they can put overhead. They may very well be the
ones that want to go do a figure contest and wear sparkles. And again, I know this sounds
not trying to say what people may be hearing. This is changing. I said this in a podcast one time,
and someone was like, yeah, that was true 10 or 15 years ago. However, now women of all
shape, sizes, demeanors, and hormone levels are going into all sports. This has really changed.
If you look at powerlifting in the 90s and the early 2000s, it was only women of a very certain
type that wanted to go to powerlifting. So realize I'm an old fart,
and I'm very much gauging by what I grew up during. This is very much different in the modern
era. So the generalities I'm talking about are not going to be as true. As another funny bit of
trivia, the Russians did this really terrible study years ago. There's something called the BEM sex identity scale. And basically it's a bunch of really gender norm questions to determine if you're more masculine, more feminine, or ambivalent.
And what they supposedly found was that women who scored lower, more on the feminine scale, were found more in, quote unquote, feminine figure skating,
ballet,
gymnastics.
It was women on the more math throwers,
Olympic lifters. And they also found that in general,
they could train the masculine,
the more higher male scale women,
more like men.
Because when you insert testosterone into this,
you stop seeing the big fluctuations across, because there is no really discrete menstrual cycle. Either it's gone completely, or it's essentially random. When you look at PCOS hormone levels, some days look exactly like a standard menstrual cycle, and the others look like static noise.
Yeah.
cycle and the others look like static noise. And vice versa, the women that were on the more feminine scale had to be, you had to take into more, and again, there's huge variability.
Speaking generalities, this is 40-year-old Russell research. Don't read too much into this.
But that is a consideration. Women that are hyperandrogenic, you can very much tend to
train more like men, both in terms of training structure,
as well as, God, how do I put this?
Like I said, there is often an attitudinal difference in that,
and this gets into the whole issue again of coaching women.
If you're a male coach and you want to fire up a male athlete,
what do you traditionally do?
Call them a girl.
You ask them, you know, if they left their purse at home,
you challenge their manhood.
By and large, this doesn't work with female athletes.
I mean, it shouldn't be done like this is a leftover of a different time,
but by and large, doesn't work well with female.
Now, I have had female athletes.
One of them had been a boxer.
And I don't mean that bullshit foxy boxing. I mean, go beat the shit out of another human boxing. One of the had been a boxer and I don't mean that bullshit Foxy boxing.
I mean,
go beat the shit out of another human boxing.
One of the fiercest athletes I've ever known.
Great power lifter.
She's now an Olympic lifter.
Here's how I could get her.
I'd be like,
I bet you can't do that.
I wouldn't challenge her on a sex or gender basis. I would just challenge her personality wise.
Like,
I bet you can't lift that.
She'd be like,
F you.
Her training partner had a completely different psychology.
Yeah.
And I couldn't train her.
So there's another, with most men, if they're, that'll work.
Not all men, but most men, that'll work.
And most women, some women may respond to that type of, that's a whole separate issue.
All right, so back to PCOS.
Hyperandrogenism is common, tends to be very beneficial for sport, but can cause health issues, may cause infertility,
which if you're a high-level athlete, that may be a feature and not a bug, right? Because for
female athletes, pregnancy can be one of the most impactful life experiences they undergo. Not only
do they lose a year of training that they
have to get back, now they're having to address the issue of having a young child.
Something else that's not really taken into consideration with female athletes or in the
workplace. I mean, it's just like, ah, you got pregnant, you're on your own. It's like,
it is an, it's changing. So women who get hyperandrogenetic, hypo and elevated testosterone levels that cause
infertility, that may be a good thing if they're a high performance athlete. Now, if you're a woman
with PCOS that wants to get pregnant, this is a terrible thing. And finding ways to fit or the
health issues that causes severe insulin resistance, causes increased central fat deposition.
causes severe insulin resistance, causes increased central fat deposition.
Interestingly, one of the most common approaches to treating PCOS is oral birth control.
Yeah.
Because they deliberately want to cut testosterone in half.
So what is, and this is why I don't like to talk in good or bad.
Yeah. What may be detrimental to a performance athlete may be absolutely the best.
Now, that won't help her become pregnant, but it will definitely increase her health
parameters.
Other first-line treatments, metformin, which is an insulin sensitizer, is very commonly
used because there's a weirdness where the elevated testosterone causes insulin resistance,
then the elevated insulin increases testosterone
levels and becomes so if you can break that loop in the brain that can help sort of get things
weight loss tends to improve this regular activity improves insulin sensitivity even small amounts
of central fat loss you know visceral fat loss improves things so with a pcos female whether it's good or bad depends on the context and that will somewhat
go how you treat it right because there are considerations i already mentioned one you may
not have to make those weekly variations in training they may not be there yeah they might
but they may not be but from the standpoint of improving like insulin sensitivity, improving those things,
there are dietary and training approaches that can be very effective for PCOS women.
In general, when you're insulin resistant, training more frequently will be better,
right? Exercise improves insulin sensitivity, both directly and indirectly, both resistance
training and aerobic activity. So whereas someone without pcos might be fine doing weights and then followed by cardio
with a pcos woman i would prefer they alternate and do something every day the effect is very
short-lived yeah to make to improve this will improve health is to prove all parameters
generally low in carbohydrates tends to be just like in the second half of the menstrual cycle.
Lower or moderate carbohydrate diets may have benefits.
Now, if you look at the research, the studies go, they both work.
High carb, and this is true of most of the work.
However, when you look at those studies, the high carb diets invariably have people,
dieters or PCOS women included, eating high fiber unrefined
carbohydrates, the stuff that nobody likes to eat. I mean, let's just cut, let's just brass tax it.
You can get the same effect by just moderating carbohydrate intake completely, cutting it to
possibly 40% of your, like I don't like percentages, but you might be looking at,
you know, one to one and a
half grams per pound of body weight, right? So, I mean, it's still 180 to 200 grams. That's more
than enough to sustain anything but the highest intensity activity. Increase your dietary protein,
moderate amounts of dietary fat. You might be up at one gram per kilo, about half a gram per pound,
you know, divided across your meals. Some studies have used full-blown
ketogenic, very low-carb diets. That can be very beneficial because you're helping to basically
break that insulin resistance. As you lose body fat, all that gets better. As you lean out,
all that gets better. That can help with all, again, for the health effects. There are also
a tremendous number of supplements that PCOS women can consider. There's a bunch of
chromium. There's a bunch of generic insulin sensitizers. The big two are what are called
the inositols. And there's myo-inositol and chiro-inositol, which they impact some pathway
involved in insulin sensitivity down with like within tissue.
I don't know what it is.
At that point, even my eyes glaze over.
Yeah.
But those supplements have been studied extensively as a way to improve insulin sensitivity.
That will ultimately lower androgen levels.
That can improve fertility if such is the goal.
Now, those might not be the best thing for women who, again, who are high-level athletes.
But that is so in general for PCOS women, the goal should be almost daily activity of some sort,
losing body fat or body weight.
And note that not all PCOS women carry excess body fat and or are insulin resistant,
but the majority of them are.
Something like 70%, even lean PCOS women can be insulin resistant.
And if they're carrying excess body fat, it's like 95%. It's almost universal.
And honestly, the way I set diets up, which is fairly high protein
and moderate fat, carbs are going to come down to that level
almost invariably.
Unless you're a cyclist doing 30 hours a week on the bike,
your carbs are going to come down no matter what to about that range.
But for someone with PCOS, it may be beneficial to go on a short-term,
full-blown ketogenic diet to get fat loss moving,
to get those issues, to adjust taste buds.
Other things, PCOS is associated with eating disorders
for reasons I'm not entirely clear on.
Testosterone can increase hunger and
appetite so that can be dysregulated um one paper suggests the pcos women had lower metabolic rate
two others didn't so i don't think there's much to that all the studies have shown that on a
controlled diet pcs women can lose weight um because occasionally you hear women go i've got
pcos and I can't.
Usually when folks are having trouble,
it's they're not tracking their calories.
Again, not trying to dismiss your experience.
This is traditionally what I've seen.
Can there be exceptions?
Always.
There can be other things going on.
As a generality, it's usually mistracking food, which is something we all do.
Lean, overweight, athletic, sedentary, dietitians.
We all suck at tracking
our calories correctly but that's usually where the problem was but those are all sort of ways
to again address that um again depending on the goal and if you're a high performance athlete
you won you won the lottery you won the hormonal lottery because with even even a 30 and there's
also there's a subcategory of women that they call
subclinically hyperandrogenic their testosterone is only 30 above normal but you still it makes
them more anabolic their muscles recover better they have more muscle more strength higher bone
mineral density like these are all benefits from an athletic standpoint especially in certain sports
yeah now you may not make the best ballet dancer with all
of that. Those may not be physiological characteristics for that sport specifically.
But for anything that's predicated, even swimming, which is very much a power sport,
they identified a subpopulation of high-level swimmers that had elevated testosterone levels.
And it is sort of a hidden, and that happened to be oligomenorrheic.
And it was the testosterone causing that menstrual cycle dysfunction,
rather than the other way around. So there's just a tremendous amount of nuance,
no matter how you slice it in female physiology, whether you're on birth control or not, you have a
disproportionate number of women that are impacted by pathologies
or things like PCOS. And there's just a lot for anybody who's made it this far. They're probably
like, wow, you know, this is empowering on one front because I understand that I'm not just a
little man. You know, I don't just need to buck up and train harder. I need to learn how to work
with kind of the machinery that I've got. Yes.
But perhaps, and I'm sure there will be additional questions, women who want to learn more,
what are some resources or places that you would recommend they go to kind of expand into this space of having more control and ownership of their physiology?
Well, I mean, I'm seeing more and more articles. And as I read them, I'm like, well, they got some of it right anyway. And I'm seeing a lot of, you know, some nonsense and
somewhere in between. I mean, I researched, I spent three and a half years writing a book that
nearly broke me. And it was because like you said, you'd never heard of PCOS. I'd never considered
the menstrual cycle because I was a male athlete. Why did I have to think about it?
I was starting from page one.
I had to wrap my head around just menstrual cycle before I could.
And so I wrote this book, which is extremely long, and it is somewhat technical, and it's very dense.
And it's volume one of a supposed – it only deals with diet and nutrition.
I haven't even gotten to training yet.
Yeah.
Because it got so long, I just split it into two volumes.
It will tell you
everything you need to know about all I address. I don't address pre-pubertal. It's not aimed at
younger girls because that's just not a topic I want to get into. I address the standard menstrual
cycle, menstrual cycle dysfunction, birth control, PCOS. I also talk about the change with aging,
which is something we didn't have time for. Right. Because again, men's physiology from puberty to death is not that different.
Right.
Testosterone goes down a little bit.
When women, the change to puberty is profound.
Birth control through some part PCOS.
And then when they hit menopausal age, which can be as early as the 40s, but maybe in the
late 40s to early 50s, perimont menopause, which is what
happens right before, has an early and late phase, which are all a little bit different.
Menopause occurs over a year, and that's when her basically reproductive system shuts down
completely. So she goes from having this standard menstrual cycle or whatever prior to that to
producing essentially no estrogen or progesterone, No eggs, menstrual cycle goes away completely,
but low estrogen is very bad for a woman.
Now you have to consider,
do I go on hormone replacement therapy?
Talk about that in my book.
There are supplements that can be chosen.
Some women don't want to go on hormone replacement
or can't,
and that's something that there is some controversy,
and I address that in this,
but that's a whole separate issue.
What considerations did they have? Because there are changes in metabolic rate, I addressed that in this, but that's a whole separate issue. What considerations do they have?
Because there are changes in metabolic rate.
There are changes in metabolism that often make things harder.
Now, a lot of this is age, but there are physical.
It becomes harder to mobilize fat from fat cells.
Women tend to shift from lower body fat to central body fat, tend to lose muscle.
Estrogen can affect mood, brain function. There can be very
negative effects, both in terms of sexual interest, but also sexual function. There can be a loss of
lubrication during sex, vaginal lubrication. There can be genital atrophy due to a lack of estrogen.
And this all leads, let's face it, you you know and as when you're younger you just go
ew and as we get old like the reality is sex is part of the human experience throughout the
lifespan and i read this paper that will just offend and should every woman listening to this
because it's so typical they asked men they asked men what their biggest concern was about their partners going through menopause.
And it wasn't health and it wasn't bone mineral density and it wasn't muscle mass.
And you can guess what I'm going to say it was. What is our sex life going to be like?
Because no matter what age you are, all the dude cares about the big picture on the average is am i still going to get be able to get
laid these are all a huge factor for women to consider whether it's hormone replacement whether
it's and i talk about you know soy protein and phytoestrogen and all these supplements
so all of that is in my book it is like i said it's not an easy book to read but i've had so
many women tell me this is stuff like I didn't know it starting out.
They're like, I didn't, women are like, I don't, I didn't know any of this either because it's not taught, especially in America.
I've got some stuff on my website.
If you only care about birth control and athletic performance, I wrote a little booklet on that available at my store.
My, just because you're going to ask my website, bodyrecomposition.com, so I have like 550 articles on everything. Uh,
many of them don't address women's issues cause they were written years ago.
I'm updating that slowly. Uh, my store, store.bodyrecomposition.com.
I'm very active on Facebook. That's the name of the group. Uh,
I'm there daily. I also have a number of experts,
including a top notch OBGYN who can address questions that are outside of my area, usually medical stuff.
So if you've got those issues.
I mean, even there, women's reproductive systems can get impacted by so much.
Mental stress, physical stress, diet.
Dudes just don't.
We are truly simple from head to toe, from start to finish.
Women can, and this is part of why a lot of this
doesn't turn up. A, you have male physicians and their women come in and they look, their blood's
good. Your bloods are fine. It's on your head. That's still very common. The old, you're histrionic.
Can you maybe not be crazy for a while approach to women's medicine, which women physicians by
and large don't have. It's funny how that works, that women who've experienced this tend to not be quite like that.
But some of this becomes a diagnosis of exclusion.
It's like, well, we ran all this stuff and you're still don't have it.
We don't really know.
So maybe it's this,
there's so many possible things that can go wrong.
To finish up, a good friend of mine, she's in her fifties now.
She had undiagnosed PCOS her entire life,
partly because they put her on birth control at 15 and birth control mascot.
She came off that she went through menopause and everything went wrong.
Yeah.
And she had no,
and she finally in the first doctor she went to was like,
you're old.
And the next doctor whose woman did the right testing was like, ah, you have PCOS.
And she's on metformin.
And she's in a regular exercise program and getting everything back to health.
So women have so many more things that can go wrong and so much variability.
And women respond differently to birth control.
What works for one woman may make another woman.
Women are listening to this going, yeah, birth control. What works for one woman may make another woman, it may, women are listening
to this going, yeah, birth control makes me crazy. Frequently because of the high dose estrogen or
what it's doing hormonally can be very, very negative and a different kind may be fine,
but you have to be able to willing to find a doctor that will treat the patient rather than
the numbers. And that can be very difficult sometimes. No, I quite like this. I thought this conversation was fantastic, particularly in just
moving the dialogue forward. And I would love to have a second episode where we talk more about
menopause or hormonal changes later in life. Because again, being in a position where you
can either positively or negatively impact the way women train,
look at themselves in such a way, it's important to move the discussion in the right direction
rather than perpetuate where we've been for oh so many decades.
So Lyle, thank you so much for coming on today.
Thank you for having me.
Again, bodyrecomposition.com.
Check the store, buy the books, join the Facebook group.
You'll be happy you did.
I've been in it for years. It's a good resource. Absolutely. Have a good one, Lyle.
Thanks. You too. All right. So there you have it. That was me and Lyle McDonald talking all
things women's physiology. Lyle is going to come back in the next four to six weeks, hopefully,
so we can bridge the gap and continue down this road talking about things like aging and menopause.
We'll stick with women's physiology for a while because it's hot on both of our minds,
but there's really no shortage of things Lyle can talk about, and I hope to have him on
fairly regularly. Thanks again so much for listening, guys. If you could do us both a favor,
screenshot this episode, share it, and tag us. I would love if more people could hear this.
It's incredibly important that we continue to move the conversation forward in regards
to women's health and women's training.
The more women that are working out, the more women that understand their physiology and
the more coaches, whether they be male or female, that understand that nuance, the better.
So please share.
Thanks so much for listening and have a great day.