The Peter Attia Drive - #223 - AMA #39: The Centenarian Decathlon, zone 2, VO2 max, and more
Episode Date: September 19, 2022View the Show Notes Page for This Episode Become a Member to Receive Exclusive Content Sign Up to Receive Peter’s Weekly Newsletter In this “Ask Me Anything” (AMA) episode, Peter describes wh...at it means to exercise with the goal of longevity in mind, including his personal goals, exercise framework, and how he is optimizing for what he refers to as the “Centenarian Decathlon.” He explains the various types of cardiovascular training and how to partition your time between intensity levels (i.e., zone 2 training vs. zone 5 training) to optimize cardiorespiratory benefit. Additionally, Peter dives deep into questions around VO2 max, such as why it’s critical for longevity, how to improve it, and the value in starting VO2 max optimization early in life. If you’re not a subscriber and are 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 #39 show notes page. If you are not a subscriber, you can learn more about the subscriber benefits here. We discuss: Exercise topics to be discussed [1:45]; Peter’s exercise goals, and the Centenarian Decathlon [4:00]; Peter’s exercise framework, and how he tracks his MET hours [8:30]; How to partition your time between low and high intensity exercise to optimize results [13:15]; Zone 2 exercise: ideal training methods and how to determine your zone 2 level [23:15]; Rucking as a versatile mode of exercise [31:45]; Zone 5 exercise: modalities of training, time per week, and other considerations [34:30]; The importance of knowing your VO2 max, and methods for estimating it [38:15]; Training methods for improving VO2 max, and realistic targets for improvement [46:00]; Relationship of VO2max with age and the required fitness levels for daily life activities and exercise [52:30]; The training necessary to maintain an elite VO2 max throughout life [58:45]; The value in starting early: the compounding nature of fitness [1:01:45]; and More. Connect With Peter on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube
Transcript
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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 peteratia-md.com forward slash subscribe.
So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the Ask Me Anything episode.
Welcome to another Ask Me Anything episode. Here we are at number 39 and I'm joined once
again by Nick Stenson.
In today's episode, we answer a lot of questions that have come in from subscribers based on all of
our recent exercise content. Given all those questions that we've been saving and coming off our
last AMA, which looked at the J-curve data and the question around if you can exercise too much,
we decided to do an AMA with more of our rapid fire style question follow up on those topics.
So in this discussion, I answer a lot of questions around the Centenary and
DeCathlon, which many of you have heard me discuss, and exercising with the
goal of longevity, including lengthening your life and improving your health
span, in addition to how I'm personally thinking about that. We talk a lot about
the follow-up questions around various types of cardiovascular
training. This gets into everything from partitioning to methods to comparing different ways in which
one might go about trying to get that cardio respiratory benefit. We then get into nuances around
VO2 max training versus zone 2 training, the ideal breakdown in terms of time and intensity for
each and specific follow up questions around VO2 max in general.
So if you're a subscriber and you want to watch the full video this podcast, you can find
it on the show notes page.
If you're not a Smith-Scriber, you can watch a sneak peak of the video on our YouTube
page.
So without further delay, I hope you enjoy AMA number 39.
Peter, welcome to another AMA.
How you doing?
Doing good, man. How's the heat out there?
I don't mean to sound like that guy who's just too cool for school, but it's just not
phasing me and people just can't stop complaining and I don't know why.
And it's interesting because I'm normally the, my nickname in one phase of my life,
maybe it was residency or medical school, my nickname was Bubble Boy. It was below 72 or above 76. It must have been med school. I was like, yeah,
it's just too cold or too hot. California does that to you though. Just getting those bubbles
and anything outside of that feels good. You mean, you saw in San Diego 60 degrees and people would
be in North Face's walking around. My thermostat's definitely clicked to the much higher end.
Again, we'll probably talk about rucking, but rucking, I always pick the hottest time of
day to do it.
Usually about somewhere between 4, 5 pm.
It's just moved my thermostat higher.
It's been 106, 107 every day for as far back as I can remember.
It's looking like it's going to be that as far forward as I can see. But I was in California three, four weeks ago, and I had dinner with a friend we ate outside.
I was in a t-shirt and I was freezing, and it was about 65.
I thought I was going to die.
It wasn't that bad, but I was amazed at how cold I felt.
So clearly, I've lost my comfort level at the extreme low end of temperature.
The Canadian in you is just sad to hear that, just the freezing cold at 65.
Well, so be it.
All right, so I think what we're going to do for this AMA is the last AMA, what we did
is we took a lot of questions and answered and looking at the various literature to understand
some of the confusion around if there's such a thing as too much exercise.
But what we weren't able to do is with all the exercise content we've been putting out lately, we've gotten so many just follow-up questions. And so coming off the last AMA, what we thought is
it'd be a good time to just do a little more rapid fire style of those questions,
not necessarily a heavy deep dive and just really look at answering
all these different questions around exercise. That's what we're going to do today. If all goes
well, we'll cover all four pillars of questions that have come in. And so it should be good, well-rounded
AMA on all things exercise or should be something for everybody. So before we get to the first question,
anything you want to add to that? No, I think that's a great framework.
Perfect.
So I think the first question is just to set the stage,
it may be again talking about what you view
as your goal with exercise,
which you mentioned before as training
for the Centenary into Catalan.
So maybe just give people a really brief rundown
of what that is and why you think it's so important
for you as you look at your longevity journey.
So the Centenary Indicathe Long, which I think many people listening will have heard
me talk about, is simply a mental model for how I think about training in all of my
years of training, which have basically been my entire life since I've been 12 or 13 years
old. A couple of things appear clear to me. And by the way, this is true of not just my own training,
but the training I've been involved with
for other people, athletes,
and this includes professional athletes,
Olympians, things like that.
Specificity matters.
And people confuse specificity with narrow.
That's not the case.
So I want to elaborate on these two things. You can be broadly trained and broadly conditioned, but with
specificity and focus. And as we'll see in a moment, that's really what the Centenary Indicathlon is all about. You can be
narrowly focused with great specificity. That's what certain types of athletes are doing. If you're a golfer, if you're the best golfer in the world,
there are some really, really specific things that you need to be doing.
By the way, they're highly asymmetric, depending if you're right or left-handed, and
your training is basically focused on
enhancing those very, very specific movements, and probably some training to counterbalance
the asymmetry there.
In my experience, it's very difficult to be successful in a physical endeavor if you
are not pursuing some sort of objective.
I'm just going to work out strategy, doesn't really produce great results over the long haul,
and it certainly doesn't,
when you're trying to solve a complicated problem.
So even if you could convince me that,
no, no, no, no, no, no,
the just workout for the sake of working out
is better than sitting on a couch.
I would say you're absolutely correct,
but now we're going after a really hard problem,
which is to be in the last decade of your life,
what we call the marginal decade,
and be incredibly
robust physically. What does that look like? Well, I think it means imagine a 90-year-old
who's functioning like a 70-year-old. I think that's attainable. So I'm not talking about 90-year-olds
functioning like 20-year-olds. I think that's science fiction, but I am talking about 90-year-olds
functioning like 70-year-olds, or 85-year-olds functioning like
65-year-olds. But that is going to require a lot of preparation, as we'll talk about later. When
you think about the inevitability of decline of muscle mass strength, cardio-respiratory fitness,
you have to be training for that with the same degree of focus and specificity that a person
is training for to be an exceptional athlete
in their 30s or 40s. So the Centenary and the Catholic basically forces us to be specific in what
our metrics are in that last decade of life and allows us to backcast from there because forecasting
from wherever you are today will almost without exception fail to get you where
you need to go because you'll end up missing the mark by slipping underneath it. Instead,
you want to start with where you need to be at the very end and work your way backwards.
And almost everybody, myself included, is unpleasantly surprised with how far they are today
from where they need to be to allow the decline
that's going to take place to take them
to their resting spot at the end.
That all makes sense,
and we'll look at some graphs later on
that I know you show patients,
which when I saw them, it did a really good job
of explaining why when you look at that rate of decline, where you start at, which when I saw him, it did a really good job of explaining why when
you look at that rated decline, where you start at, matters so much.
And it kind of reminds me of the recent bone density episode we did too, and we looked
at those graphs with, if you didn't reach your full potential compared to, if you did
reach your full potential and bone density, your fall off looks very different.
And we see the same with a lot of this exercise,
which I think is going to be really interesting when we get to it. But I think what
might be helpful is maybe just showing people how you're currently structuring your program to train
for the Centenary of the Catalan. So in the last AMA, we talked about met hours per week as a way
to standardize looking at different literature. So do you want to walk people
through your current structure and how you break that out to ensure you're not just focused on one
piece but focused on the broader picture? You know, my exercise is not really geared towards
the things that used to be geared towards. So if you look at how I exercise today and compare it
to how I exercised, call it eight years ago when I was very focused on one specific thing which was
time-trialing type of bike racing
If you compare it to where it was I don't know call it 15 years ago where it was really very very focused on marathon swimming
Again, pretty niche and specific thing the training that I was doing 15 years ago versus eight years ago
had zero overlap. Similarly, if you look at what I'm doing today, it would not produce a good
cyclist, it would not produce a good swimmer. It's just not the way it is. So it's really focused
on something different. I think my training kind of fits into four or five buckets. I have my
zone two, my zone five, strength stability, and I kind of lump them together, even though
they're very specific, and there are some very specific stability things I'm
doing, and they're not necessarily strength related in the moment. And then I
include rocking in there because it is so physical, although truthfully, what
drew me to rocking was actually more the psychological benefit of it, but as
anybody who's done it knows it's quite demanding. If you allow it to become
demanding, and we talked about this, you've joined me on a rock, you can see between the temperature,
the elevation change, and the weight, it's quite a lot of work. So that's how I kind of organize
myself, and as you said, you can identify how many mets are required for each activity, how much
time you spend in each the dot product of that gives you met hours per week, and then you can get a
sense of where your energy is going. That's probably the purest way to understand energy
expenditure across those domains. Peter, that makes sense. What I'm going to do is I'm going to share
a slide. We put together a table that you broke out of what your current met hours per week are.
If you want to walk people through what it is and then also how you're thinking about it.
Yeah, so this is back of the envelope,
but as I said, really straightforward,
zone two cycling and my zone two is somewhere between 220
and 235 watts.
So I took a slightly lower estimate
and just said, just let's average 225 watts.
You can use a calculator to tell you
how many Met's that is. So that's 11 Metets. And if I spend four hours a week there, 11 times
four, 44. So that's 44 Mets hours per week. Zone five, I do via cycling and
stair climbing. And that's about 16 Mets. So now I'm really pushing the intensity.
But I'm only spending half an hour a week at that intensity. So you can see that's only giving me eight met hours per week.
Lifting weights is about an average of five mets.
So some things are less, some things are more.
It also depends greatly on other things that go in there.
So all the time I'm on an air bike and doing more intense stuff in there would
be at a much higher met, whereas doing a bicep curl is at a lower met. We've looked at
a bunch of papers and I think our best estimate is I'm probably averaging about five mets,
which is really not that labor intensive, but you multiply that by six hours per week.
There's 30 mets. And then the best data I could find was looking at military personnel,
rucking, it says 50 pounds there.
I do use about 60 pounds or 55 to 60 pounds.
So you can get a sense of if you're at 0% grade,
it's 4.8 m, if you're at 5% grade, 7.5,
if you're at 10% grade, 10 m,
I kind of look at my heart rate data when I do it,
plus the elevation change.
I think I'm probably averaging 6.5 mts.
I do three usually closer to four hours per week.
So maybe that's a bit of a conservative estimate of call it 20 mts per week.
So directionally, you total that up and you can see, okay, it's about 100 mts per week
of activity.
There's the breakdown by percent where they are.
And we'll come to this in a minute, but I want people to notice the relative amount of
zone two to zone five.
My zone two is slightly more than five times the, not just the duration, but more importantly,
it's eight times the duration, but it's five times the met hour, the aggregate intensity,
the integral intensity.
And that's going to become an important point when we start to talk about how you would
partition your time between zone two and zone five.
That makes sense, and it kind of leads into a good question that we got, which is one of
the things we see a lot is what do we know about whether moderate intensity exercise is
as good as vigorous intensity exercise.
So we do see a lot of questions
that people are wondering how they should think about that moderate,
verse vigorous intensity as they look at their cardio work.
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