The Peter Attia Drive - #196 - AMA #32: Exercise, squats, deadlifts, BFR, and TRT
Episode Date: February 21, 2022Become a Member to Listen to the Full Episode View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Episode Description: In this “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) episode, Peter shares his current workout regimen and... how he incorporates blood flow restriction (BFR). He walks through the mechanics and fundamentals of some of his favorite lifts including squats, deadlifts, and hip thrusters and stresses the relative importance of each in the context of longevity. He touches on the relative importance of muscle size vs. muscle strength and discusses the impact of fasting on muscle mass and the potential tradeoffs during aging. Peter then dives into the topic of testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) for both men and women, starting with a clinical discussion around how he actually replaces testosterone in patients. He explains the targets of this therapy as well as the risks and benefits, and he gives his interpretation of current data on the association between TRT and heart disease. If you’re not a subscriber and listening on a podcast player, you’ll only be able to hear a preview of the AMA. If you’re a subscriber, you can now listen to this full episode on your private RSS feed or on our website at the AMA#32 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: Peter’s current exercise routine [2:25]; How Peter incorporates blood flow restriction (BFR) into his workouts [5:45]; Relative importance of muscle size vs. muscle strength [16:45]; Comparing squats to deadlifts and why both are important [22:00]; Squatting technique and fundamentals [31:15]; Important cues to look for while lifting weights [38:30]; Proper mechanics of a deadlift [42:00]; Hip thrusters as an alternative to the squat or deadlift [44:00]; Split-leg work for simulating activities of daily living [47:00]; The impact of fasting/calorie restriction on muscle mass and the potential tradeoffs to consider [49:45]; Testosterone replacement therapy: considerations when contemplating TRT and Peter’s approach with patents [54:30]; Data on the association between TRT and heart disease [1:04:15]; TRT for women—risks and benefits [1:06:45]; Impact of fasting on testosterone levels [1:13:45]; and More. Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook & YouTube
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek, ask me anything, or AMA episode of the Drive Podcast.
I'm your host, Peter Atia.
At the end of this short episode, I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full,
along with a ton of other membership benefits we've created. Or you can learn more now by going to PeterittiaMD.com forward slash subscribe.
So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the Ask Me Anything episode.
Hey everyone, welcome to Ask Me Anything episode number 32. I am joined today for the very first time
on this podcast by Nick Stenson,
who you'll get to know during this episode,
but basically Nick has been working with me
well, often on for 10 years,
but he's been working with me specifically around the podcast
since we decided to do this,
which is got me coming up on four years ago.
It was in the spring of 2018,
I think when we made that decision.
And Nick is gonna be taken over for Bob on the AMA.
It's a totally different vibe, but we had a field day.
I felt this was probably a little bit more conversational.
And the hope is that because Nick is quote unquote a lay person
and doesn't have the technical background that Bob does,
that maybe he'll be interrupting me more
and asking more questions.
And maybe that will provide a more valuable experience.
So in today's episode, we talk about a bunch of things.
We started off by doing some follow-up questions on blood flow restriction, which we had some great questions following
the podcast with Jeremy Linnike. I think we go from that then into talking about some of my favorite
lifts, so squats, dead lifts, and hip thrusters, though not through the lens of blood flow restriction,
but just more broadly talking about the importance of those lifts, how they fit into the overall ballpark of a
centenary and Olympic training program.
And after a pretty deep dive on all things related to lifting, we get into testosterone
replacement therapy, both for men and women.
So we double click on some of the things we discussed in the previous AMA on testosterone
replacement therapy, specifically around the risks of cardiovascular disease, but also
we do a little bit more of a clinical discussion around how we actually replace
testosterone, what are targets of therapy are, what are some of the dos and don'ts.
And then we actually get into some questions about females and testosterone replacement
therapy.
This is an area for which we have far less data, so there's a little bit more speculation,
but we also talk about that.
If you are a subscriber and you want to watch the full ready this podcast, which again,
I generally recommend you do because we go through a number of figures here, you can find it on the show notes
page. And if you're not a subscriber, well, I hope you become one, but you can certainly watch
the sneak peak of this video on our YouTube channel. So without further delay, I hope you enjoy
AMA number 32.
All right, well, here we go.
Another AMA, of course, I'm joined with a new co-host for this episode, Nick Stenson,
and Nick will save the intros till the end.
But you ready to jump into this?
Yeah, let's do it.
We compiled some good questions here.
I think it should be a fun one.
Yeah, you showed me the list that you were working on, and it's got me a little overwhelmed.
If we can get through it, I'll be super impressed. But you've got a good, great question. So just tell me where you want
to start. So we got a lot of good questions following the germinoliniki and some of the exercise
podcast. So I thought we'd kind of start there and there's some blood flow restriction questions.
But I thought it might be helpful for people before we get into some of those specifics. Just what does your current exercise routine look like
each week?
I know it's always changing,
but if you can give people a rough overview,
I think that will be helpful
as we get into some of these other questions.
Yeah, I mean the actual macro structure
of what I do has not changed much in the last year.
The microstructure has changed a lot,
meaning the exercises have changed a lot.
But the microstructure is that on,
let's see, Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday,
are cardio days.
So Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday are zone two.
Saturday is either a zone two, followed by a zone five,
that's kind of a separate workout. So each of those are 45 minute zone twos is either a zone two followed by a zone five,
it's kind of a separate workout. So each of those are 45 minute zone twos
and then kind of like a 30 minute zone five
as a separate workout that's done almost immediately after.
So basically getting out of bike clothes
and putting on stair climbing clothes.
Alternatively, I might just do a longer bike ride
on Saturday and make it more of an anaerobic workout.
Then from a lifting standpoint, it's Monday, Wednesday, Friday, Sunday is lifting and about, I don't know, nine months ago,
I switched to an upper body lower body split. I used to lift three days a week and do upper body
lower body every day, so each day I was doing kind of pushing, pulling and hip
hinging.
And now the lower body component, I think, is Monday, Friday.
The upper body is Wednesday, Sunday.
And I always lift after doing cardio because I think the reverse has been
demonstrated to a road strength training gains.
Peter, what happens if you miss a day?
Because I noticed you didn't say day one, day two, day three, you were very distinct on the days of the week.
I know you typically don't miss a day, but I was on the track the whole day
and I knew that in advance.
So I just ended up doing that lift on Saturday, but obviously was short-changed on the zone
too for yesterday.
So I will pretty much will never compromise a lift.
I will always get those four lifts in during the week, no matter what.
And sometimes it just means moving the days around or doubling up
on a different day. And what about timing? Do you have a preference morning, afternoon, evening?
Is that flexible as well within kind of your schedule? A little more flexible on weekends,
but Monday through Friday and pretty much no flexibility. Those lifts have to be done first thing
in the morning and not first thing in the morning. So morning routine is kind of more about the kids
and stuff like that. But once they're out the door to school, around 715, 730, that's one I'll typically lift.
Got it. I know from the German Lennike podcast, you were talking about how you were
starting to incorporate blood flow restriction.
So I think one of the main questions we saw from subscribers after that was, how are
you utilizing that into interior exercise program?
Is that something you do every day?
Is it days like you mentioned where you were just not really feeling it and it was injury
prevention or if you had an injury, you were trying to recover?
How do you utilize that throughout the week?
So I have really enjoyed blood flow restriction, especially since I got new cuffs.
So when I started, I was doing it purely ghetto style.
And I still, I enjoyed it, but I wasn't even coming close to tapping into sort of what
the potential of that was.
For the last, oh god, probably three months, I've been using the brand is actually called
Smart Cuff.
And it's a night and day difference.
So they're kind of absurdly expensive.
I don't remember how much they cost.
I want to say like $600 for the four cuffs,
two upper body, two lower body, plus the device,
which is what really makes it so essential,
meaning the device that is measuring
inclusive pressure and pumping each time.
But it makes such a difference
that in my mind, it's just totally worth it.
I do plan to try a couple of other devices out.
There's even more extreme versions of this
that apparently have better features,
like the Katzu one, but my guess is
there will be no bigger jump than the one I took
from going from basically $20 junky bands to these ones.
And so I do BFR every day that I lift
and I just do it at the end of the workout.
I'll typically do one to two exercises depending on the muscle.
So today, for example, at the end of a leg session, I did a BFR leg press set.
At the end of an upper body session, I'll probably do a biceps set and a triceps set.
And I'm always doing it in a way that we discussed on that podcast, but just for folks to remember, it's 30 reps,
rest 30 seconds, 15 reps, rest 30 seconds, 15 reps, rest 30 seconds, 15 reps.
That is the standard prescribed procedure for BFR. You're doing this at a weight that is
30 to 40% of your one rep max. So the easiest way to calculate that is to take the
weight that you can barely get 10 reps with. So what is your best 10 rep weight?
Divide that by 0.75. So your best 10 rep weight is about 75% of your 1 rep max.
And then you multiply the resulting figure by somewhere between 0.3 and 0.4 depending
on how strong you are. So use an example. If your best 10 rep of curls is 40 pounds, you would
divide 40 by 0.75, which what is that that takes you up to 57 or something I'm guessing. And then
you would multiply that by somewhere between 0.3 to 0.4. I typically tend to go closer to 0.4. That becomes the weight that you'll use for the BFR.
With these smart cuffs, you have a whole additional variable, which is it comes at three different
pressures. So it calculates the pressure. And again, just for the refresher for folks,
the purpose of blood flow restriction is to operate at about 30% of the occlusive
pressure, the arterial occlusive pressure, which when you're using kind of crap, you
know, just bands, you don't really have a sense of which your occlusive pressure is,
unless you're applying a Doppler signal to your distal extremities, which is very cumbersome.
Instead, when you use these cuffs that come with an inflation device, they're actually measuring the inclusive pressure.
So the first time you do it, it takes a little longer.
And then it says, okay, now I know what it is for your arms and your legs.
Do you want to go at the highest level of intensity, medium level intensity,
or a lower level of intensity, which basically just adjusts the pressure?
And you mentioned Doppler signal for your other bands.
Can you just remind people what that is in case they're using this with cuffs that don't
have kind of what yours have?
Yeah, the Doppler device.
You'd have to buy one.
And that's the reason I think like if you're going to go to the trouble to buy a Doppler
device, you might as well buy a smart cuff or something similar, but it's basically a medical
device that we use to use in the hospital all the time. When you can't feel a pulse, like if you put your hand on your radial artery here, you can feel the pulse,
hopefully, if you're healthy. But in people who have peripheral vascular disease, you can't,
because their pulse is too weak. So the Doppler is basically, it looks like a little pen, you put it
there with a little bit of jelly, so it has better sound conduction. And it's basically sending a sound signal to the artery
and it's recording that sound.
So when there's complete occlusion, you'll hear nothing.
And if there's only partial occlusion,
you'll hear like a woo, woo, woo, woo,
and it's sort of picking up that sound.
So what you would basically do is use this device
to figure out how tight to go, but of course, then you use this device to figure out how tight to go.
But of course, then you're trying to figure out how tight to make the band to get to that
occlusive pressure.
And then how do you even know how to back off it?
So you'd have to use a cuff that at least allows you to know how many millimeters of mercury
you're putting in to figure out what complete occlusion is and then backing it down.
In my opinion, it's just not worth doing that. No, that makes sense. One of the things I was surprised by because I was in your gym
another day and was just the difference between the two cuffs. And I think because of that,
I asked you to pull them out just so you can show people. Do you have them quick?
Yeah, yeah. So these are kind of what my cheap $20 cuffs were that I used for many months.
You have two of these and you would
gonna wrap them around your arm and your leg
and you sort of look like a bit of a heroin addict
because you're sort of like,
I'm trying to squeeze this thing.
Again, I would just york on them really hard until,
I would, my guide was once it hits seven out of 10 pain,
that was probably the right spot,
but I find that's very inaccurate.
The current cuffs, this is the arm cuff.
So it's obviously a much more rigorous cuff
and you apply this, slap it on,
then a little device hooks onto here
that hooks up to a little pump.
That's where I program this thing
and that will achieve the occlusive pressure.
The other thing I really appreciate now is like, look at how thick this thing is just will achieve the occlusive pressure. The other thing I really appreciate
now is like, look at how thick this thing is just for the arm, right? Look at the leg
one, like totally different, right? Because I could never get, I was never really doing
BFR for my legs when I had that little blue thing. Whereas with this thing, wow, you get
it, you really are getting the true
occlusive effect.
And what are you using to measure the difference there? Or how do you know, like, it's working?
How can you tell us it just feels?
Subjectively, yeah. It's not hurting where the band is compressing me. I'm feeling that
sensation of basically lactic acidosis throughout the entire leg, as opposed to just the pain
of being constricted
where the band is when it's a thin band.
It's interesting to note the pressure of occlusion
is much higher than systolic pressure
because it's a function of how wide the band is.
So I noticed today when I did my legs,
the occlusive pressure was 158 millimeters of mercury.
Well, that's way above my systolic pressure.
My systolic blood pressure is very low.
I tend to run super low in blood pressure
as evidenced by the fact that I face planted
in Brazil last month.
And my upper body occlusive pressure with those cuffs
is about 58 millimeters of mercury.
So you have one that's like,
or sorry, 94 millimeters of mercury. So you have one that's like, or sorry, 94 millimeters of mercury tends to be
a approximate occlusive on upper body, 154 or something, 158 on the lower body. But again,
it's also a function of the width of the cuff. So that's why I realize just knowing your blood pressure
isn't enough to do this. Yeah. And you mentioned you always do it at the end of the workout. I assume
that's purposeful. Have you ever played around with like prior to your actual workout?
Maybe others could speak to it. For me personally, I just think when I'm doing my heaviest, most
neurologically demanding component of exercise, I want to be a little fresher. And I don't
want to be as taxed, whereas I kind of like using this as sort of a finisher, or near the end.
Sometimes I'll do, I'll still do something after this, but you know, like I'll do a dead
hang is usually the very, very last thing I'll do.
So I kind of mixed up a bit.
You'll never do a dead hang with a BFR couple.
I tried.
It didn't, it didn't matter.
It didn't, it didn't impair the ability to do it at all, because the dead hang is
really about grip and that didn't seem to be impaired by the upper body BFR
But I have tried it once. What's your record for dead hang these days?
Like a little over three three ten
Cheers, but that's at the end of a workout and I think you know if you do these fresh
I think you can go a little more. Yeah, do you have a goal set in mind that you want to hit?
I was super happy to get over three.
I mean, most days when I do it,
I just want to go to two, two, 30 and not go to failure
and just kind of build strength without failing every time.
Lately, I've been doing a lot of finger pull ups.
I think I showed you that device.
Yeah, that thing is super painful.
Gives you a new respect for those climbers. Oh, that was thing I thought of because walk people through you're not doing all four fingers,
right? You only are doing three and you're just straight in the pull-up position.
I do both, so I'll usually start with four fingers, but that's very easy, relatively speaking.
The jump from four finger pull-ups to three finger pull-ups is so much harder than I would have ever
guessed. Oh, I can't imagine. And are you looking to do two finger and one finger?
Is that the goal? It's just to just lift yourself up. If I can do four sets of two
three finger pull-ups at the end of doing, you know, maybe three sets of four
four finger pull-ups, that's pretty good. For sure. One other question we had on the BFR was, do you ever do it in zone two training?
Like have you ever played around with that?
Thank you for listening to today's Sneak Peak AMA episode of the Drive. If you're
interested in hearing the complete version of this AMA, you'll want to become a member.
We created a membership program to bring you more in-depth,
exclusive content without relying on paid ads. Membership benefits are many, and beyond
the complete episodes of the AMA each month, they include the following.
Redeculously comprehensive podcast show notes that detail every topic, paper, person,
and thing we discuss on each episode of the drive. Access to our private podcast feed, the Qualies, which
were a super short podcast, typically less than five minutes,
released every Tuesday through Friday,
which highlight the best questions, topics, and tactics
discussed on previous episodes of the drive.
This particularly important for those of you who haven't
heard all of the back episodes becomes a great way
to go back and filter and decide
which ones you want to listen to in detail.
Really steep discount codes for products I use and believe in,
but for which I don't get paid to endorse,
and benefits that we continue to add over time.
If you want to learn more and access these member-only benefits,
head over to peteratia-md.com forward slash subscribe.
Lastly, if you're already a member, but you're hearing this,
it means you haven't downloaded our member-only podcast feed
where you can get the full access to the AMA
and you don't have to listen to this.
You can download that at peteratiaMD.com forward slash members.
You can find me on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook,
all with the ID PeteratiaMD. You can also leave us Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook, all with the ID, Peter Atia MD.
You can also leave us a review on Apple Podcasts or whatever podcast player you listen on.
This podcast is for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute the practice of
medicine, nursing, or other professional healthcare services, including the giving of medical advice.
No doctor-patient relationship is formed. The use of this information and the materials linked to this podcast is at the user's own risk.
The content on this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional
medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay
in obtaining medical advice from any medical condition they have and they
should seek the assistance of their healthcare professionals for any such conditions.
Finally, I take conflicts of interest very seriously.
For all of my disclosures and the companies I invest in or advise,-date and active list of such companies. you