Transcript for:
Exploring Cold and Heat for Metabolism

welcome to the huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life I'm Andrew huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine today my guest is Dr Susanna soberg Dr Susanna soberg completed her doctoral thesis work at the center of inflammation and metabolism and the center for physical activity research at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark her research has focused on how deliberate cold exposure and deliberate heat exposure can be used to enhance human metabolism she is the first author of a seminal study which discovered the minimum thresholds for deliberate heat and deliberate cold exposure for increasing Brown fat thermogenesis which is essentially a mode of increasing heat production and Metabolism in the body and for establishing actionable protocols that can be used outside of the laboratory to improve metabolism and human health Dr sober's research was published in the journal cell reports metabolism in 2021 adding to a long and important history of research focusing on the role of cold and the role of heat in altering various aspects of the body's physiology including Hormone Health metabolism and changes in neurotransmitters such as dopamine and epinephrine in fact today's discussion with Dr soberg focuses on the role of deliberate heat and deliberate cold exposure on metabolism but it also includes discussion of the effects of cold and heat on things like neurotransmitter production namely dopamine and epinephrine and norepinephrine the so-called catecholamines which strongly impact mood and Metabolism in addition Dr soberg answers many common questions about deliberate cold and deliberate heat exposure including for instance the difference between cold showers versus cold immersion up to the neck versus total body cold immersion including whether or not going back and forth between heat and cold changes fundamentally the way that heat and cold impact the metabolism hormones and neurotransmitter production and we talk about almost every single nuance and variation on deliberate cold and deliberate heat exposure protocols as it relates to the underlying science in particular how cold receptors at the level of the skin are impacted versus cold reception and perception at the level of the brain and how all of that impacts systems of the brain and body relating to mental health physical health and Performance Based on her scientific research and academic training as well as her understanding and use of deliberate heat and deliberate cold exposure protocols Dr soberg is considered one of the world's leading experts on these topics in fact she is the author of a recent book entitled winter swimming which is I have to say a terrific book because it breaks down chapter by chapter the different aspects of deliberate heat and deliberate cold into its various constituent Parts including cold acclimation the cold shock response dangers and safeties of cold water the impact of cold and impact of heat on various aspects of human health as well as specifics relating to sauna versus Ice versus cold swimming showers Etc it's a very thorough read and a very easy and accessible read that if you are interested in deliberate cold or deliberate heat exposure or both will allow you to embrace those protocols with the greatest degree of confidence that you're going to obtain the specific endpoints that you're interested in and to do so safely before we begin I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford it is however part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost and consumer information about science and science related tools to the general public in keeping with that theme I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast our first sponsor is Plunge plunge makes what I believe is the most versatile at-home self-cooling cold plunge for deliberate cold exposure talk numerous times on this podcast about the many benefits of deliberate cold exposure and indeed today's episode is focused entirely on the benefits and the science of deliberate cold exposure plunge uses a powerful cooling filtration and sanitation unit to give you access to deliberate cold exposure in clean water whenever you want as we'll discuss during today's episode with Dr Susanna soberg deliberate cold exposure especially deliberate cold exposure done up to the neck in water can be used to achieve a number of important endpoints related to mental health physical health and performance I've been using a plunge for more than two years now I can tell you that it makes it very easy to get your deliberate cold exposure at home it doesn't require much cleaning in fact it's very easy to keep clean which is essential you don't want bacteria and other things growing in your cold plunge basically everything about the plunge is made easy so that anyone including myself can gather deliberate cold exposure on a 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these events please go to hubermanlab.com tour and enter the code huberman to get early access to tickets once again that's hubermanlab.com tour and use the code huberman to access tickets I hope to see you there and now for my discussion with Dr Susanna soberg Dr Susanna soberg welcome thank you so great to have you here I feel like I should give a little bit of the back story of how we got connected which was that for many years I've been interested in cold thermogenesis it was the topic of my seniors thesis in college and I've of course followed the popularity of Wim Hof and we've had Dr Craig Heller my colleague from biology department at Stanford who works on cold and its impact on physiology and sports performance so for a long time I've been interested in this area but there's been a real uh lack of new let's say high profile quality scientific information in terms of how for instance cold plunges and sauna how that impacts human physiology I know there's been some information out there but it's been sort of scattered and then a little over a year ago I see this paper in cell reports medicine and was immediately struck the first of all the fact that it was in cell reports medicine I've been on the cell press editorial board for a long time now so press journals are of course phenomenal journals and the title and the content of the paper was directly in line with the sorts of practices that people are very curious about and then are starting to emerge things like sauna cold plunges and there was your name first on the author list and I reached out to you through social media and we've done a little bit of live content there together and I've been tracking what you've been doing in the world in terms of your book and talking about the results in your manuscript and talking about the science and impact of deliberate cold exposure and sauna and I have to say that it's been a wonderful and remarkable thing to see and you're bringing so much quality information about this area that for a long time I think was kind of Niche and is now becoming more and more mainstream so I'm going to start off with a thank you for being here and a thank you for the work that you've done and I'm looking forward to talking to you about it today so my first question to get things started is what is happening when we get into an uncomfortably cold environment so for instance if I'm really hot on a hot day jumping into a cold pool feels really good but if I'm already kind of at room temperature I'm a little bit chilly getting into that same temperature of water doesn't feel so good right there's a shock there so if you could just walk us through what happens when we get into uncomfortably cold water whether or not it's by way of shower or cold Plunge at the level of our physiology and if you'd like our psychology I think that's a good place for us to start because I think it will Orient people to their own experience if they do that yeah and for those that haven't done it might start to peel back some of the the layers as to what the underlying mechanisms of cold are yeah thank you for that question it's really good to just address what actually happens in our physiology when we get cold and you can get cold in many ways so you can just head out for the one that gives you the most potent stressor which is submerging into cold water and but you could also go in outside in the cold wind that's also going to activate your um your sympathetic nervous system so get all these neurotransmitter going in your body and so your your catecholamines um let's just address that we are taking a cold plunge for example so if you are very hot for example um before you go into the cold water it's going to feel less it's going to feel less stressful but the the temperature difference from your skin to the cold is definitely it's going to give you a shock but your core temperature is warmer and that's going to feel a little bit better so that's why when people go into a sauna for example and go out in into the cold water they they they can do it easily easier them if they were called beforehand could I just um ask you a few questions so you you mentioned the sympathetic nervous system which for um people listening who aren't familiar with that is that the branch of our nervous system that's responsible for creating accelerations and heart rate um feelings of alertness it's accompanied with stress and the stress response but it's accompanied with waking up in the morning for that matter so it's not always about stress and then you mentioned the catecholamines which um are dopamine epinephrine and norepinephrine so maybe a little bit later we'll talk about those individual neurotransmitters but you raise a really important point which is something I get asked about a lot for people that are curious about using deliberate cold exposure which is how cold should the water be and I know it's very hard to give a straight prescription for that because I think it boils down to what you just said which is it's really the difference between your current temperature and really the temperature of the surface of your skin and the temperature of the water so if you're very warm getting into cold feels good if you're already cold getting into more cold feels stressful um is there any way that we can start to gauge what is the best way to approach a deliberate cold exposure protocol I mean should it feel uncomfortable and that leads into the question of how do we balance the discomfort with the amount of time that we spend in so for instance if it's just a little bit uncomfortable we'll spending more time in the cold get us the same benefit as getting into very uncomfortably cold water for a very short period of time yeah it's really good question and I definitely think that this could be future studies on this as well to really unravel uh what kind of Protocols are the are the best way or also for which outcomes of course so if the temperature is very cold and you feel that you also feel very cold then you should stay in the water a little bit longer so I think it's just you should get uncomfortable cold so as long as you get uncomfortable cold it's cold enough and you get this what we call the code shark so the code stock is activation of your sympathetic nervous system and these activation of the the catecholamines which you just mentioned before does the shock mean that I'm having trouble controlling my breathing is that a good gauge uh yeah you can say so because that's kind of like how we Define it so you hyperventilate so you have a faster um breathing rate um so that increases also because you activate your gasping reflex if you are new to this um but if you are adapted it it kind of subsides with time with the adaptation so what you can do is that you can train this cold exposure and you can kind of like Get adapted to it so you don't have this hypertension ventilating response every time you go out in the cold water so this is like building up your resilience building building up your adaptation is gonna make this short like subside a bit so it's it's always harder in the beginning but you should do hard things right it's not something that we you shouldn't think about cold water and cold water immersion as something that is comfortable it should be hard because that's the point of it right if you enjoy it then yeah then I'm I'm thinking something is wrong it's not right you should not enjoy it well this is an important point that you're making because I think that many people shy away from deliberate cold exposure because it's uncomfortable in a way that at least from my experience is very different than the discomfort of exercise because with exercise for instance um if running hard you know running fast and breathing hard is uncomfortable you can slow down or walk if um you know lifting weights is uncomfortable you can remove some weight or reduce the number of repetitions or stop with deliberate cold exposure I suppose you can be sort of halfway in halfway out of the water or partially underneath the cold shower but it's very hard to titrate and adjust the level it's kind of all or none and I've seen um I should just I can tell this by anecdote I've done some work with military Special Operations I won't say which country this was outside the U.S um and these are very tough individuals they're used to going without sleep and doing hard high consequence higher risk kind of work and they were asked to do some cold water exposure training and I was there that day and it was remarkable about a third of them just went straight in and just kind of grinded through it you know like they looked stoic anyway to me um there were a few whimpers no cries about a third um talked a lot and got really you could tell that they were agitated and anxious but they made it through and then about a third of them just simply would not get in past their knees or thighs we're just it seemed like they were just dreading the whole experience someone actually didn't actually go in completely um which was really surprising to me and that you couldn't tell based on their physical appearance or anything else about them they're all high performers as to who would have this response so it seems like people vary tremendously in terms of their ability to embrace the discomfort of the cold is that from your studies is that your experience as well or or are there these weird mutants who seem to just love going into the cold for the first time so some people just feel better in the cold and some people uh dread the code even more and you can say the more people are pushing the cold away they might feel the co-pain even more so they they they would definitely people who are maybe the soldiers you just talked about they some of them might be already adapted to the gold cold so if they are not scared of the cold they go out and they embrace the COPE in a better way it could also be that some people have a more sensitive nervous system and when you are a bit sensitive to the cold you will of course try to get away from it right and you also have the co-pain more um feel the co-pay more if they're if if you avoid it so the more you avoid the cold the the more pain painful it will feel when you go into it so yeah you mentioned being outside in a t-shirt versus cold immersion up to the neck versus shower I think um this is something a lot of people wonder about what are the differences in terms of impact short term and perhaps even long term between cold showers cold plunge to the neck so that could be in ice water or just very cold water immersion with dunking one's head and then coming up because obviously people have to come up for air at some point and then simply being outside on a cold day in shorts and a t-shirt or something of that sort so there it comes because they're they are very different exposures of the cold to your co-receptors in your skin so the more you can say you cover your body in the cold which you would do in cold water because there are of course covered totally and then and the molecules are closer to your skin you have a more potent um activation of all your code receptors in the skin so that one will definitely activate your other enormous nervous system more and Rapid compared to going out in a t-shirt in the cold wind just go for a walk um but that is also something that's going to activate your sympathetic nervous system meaning then that you have an increase in norepinephrine and you will activate something called the the brown fat so this is a healthy kind of fat tissue that we have in our body and when you activate that that's gonna increase your metabolism before we talk about Brown fat and I'm so glad you brought it up um because it's so much to talk about there uh what about cold shower I mean obviously cold showers somewhere in between yeah um being out outside in the Air Cold Air versus uh being immersed up to the neck it if we had more studies on on cold showers we would learn more about how does that activate our metabolism how does that increase our neurotransmitters in the brain which could also have an impact our on our mental balance so I think that would be interesting for the future um but what we do know is from from from activating Brown fat and both from rodent studies but also in humans is that as soon as we get cold on our skin we will activate our Brown fat so it is kind of like our first responder in in the body to keep our um temperature up so our muscles is like the second tissue in our body we have two tissues which can increase our thermogenesis so the brown fat which is like always like temperature regulating our body and then we have uh the the muscles which will secondarily start to shiver and that's going to increase our um temperature in the body but as soon as you go into a cold shower you activate your brown fat also immediately so it could be good also for increasing metabolism in theory because we haven't really any studies showing how much this actually activate the brown fat so if someone out there wants to do a study I think I've thought about why there are fewer studies of cold showers than cold immersion and I think the answer to my mind is that from a methodological standpoint it's just harder to do because if people are getting into cold water up to the neck they're getting into cold water up to the neck whereas if people are getting into a cold shower some people are larger or smaller some people are going to stand under the shower with it hitting their head some people the back of the neck you could direct people to do it yeah but it's a little bit um more difficult also I think uh for you and I are both research scientists there's a little bit of a um methodological challenge that might seem silly to people but it's a real one which is if people are in a cold shower also the water is going to be I'm kind of pushing their clothing against their skin there's a certain vulnerability and for most people coming to a laboratory in the first place let alone being observed while they shower whereas when you get into cold immersion cold immersion you're getting under the water and you know some people might roll their eyes and say okay really is that the barrier but you know science exists in these real world contexts and this will vary by culture and things of that sort but we run human subjects in my lab and I'll tell you just um the process of getting people to the laboratory and having them Park and find the lab and you know it's a whole new environment government with people in lab coats and people moving around and Where's the restroom I mean there's there's a certain amount of stress just associated with taking part in a study for most human subjects so um I uh totally agree however we need more studies of cold showers it's just a harder environment to control in my in my mind so it sounds like any form of cold to the skin that people register as what you call the cold shock or uncomfortable like oh like this is kind of jarring activates the brown fat do we know what the pathway is from cold receptors on the skin to the brown fat I mean how does the brown fat know that we're cold yeah really good question and this seems that I I think that of course in the future we will know much more about these Pathways but what we do know is that the co-receptors will send a signal to our temperature regulating Center in in the brain so hypothalamus um and that's gonna be um taking in this message and we have so many Coke receptors in the skin so it's going to be very fast as you can say if you immerse the body into cold water this is going to be so rapid so it will have a rapid increase in neurotransmitters in the brain so no adrenaline adrenaline and cortisol and which is not that much but it's but it's still there so you have this increase in no adrenaline which will then immediately activate the the brown fat because the you can say the activator is the most potent one cold and no adrenaline and that's going to activate the brow fat but there's also a direct pathway from the cold receptors in the skin to the to the brown fat which really shows that if because of these different Pathways it shows that that it could be that this tissue to keep us warm was was developed in in our evolvement as humans to keep us warm and to save us whenever the temperature now on our skin berries just a little bit to keep us in that right homeostatic balance so we don't get hypothermic um but also so we don't get hyperthermic but because it seems that the brown fat is also activated when we get warmer on our skin so it's also um maybe a temperature regulator in our in our body but the pathways is different I think it's also a third pathway from directly from the muscles so the brown fat is also at um even though the muscles are starting to shiver so there's an extra pathway that way to keep our our temperature up so muscles and brown fat are working together to to keep us warm so we don't suffer too much in the in the cold water it's super interesting and what I here are you pointing to is the existence of three parallel Pathways and this notion of parallel Pathways comes up over and over again in biology as you and I know and I mean I think it's important for people to know about because um as you uh said so so eloquently the when something is very important to our survival or and or evolution the brain and body uh install multiple mechanisms for it not just one and um and so it sounds like it's cold skin cold on the skin triggers a response in the hypothalamus which then activates Brown fat cold receptors in the skin directly to the brown fat and then shivering in the muscle to the brown fat um I want to talk about Brown fat in depth and learn from you more about Brown fat um before that however I want to ask about shiver um I've heard that shiver causes the release of succinate um which then activates the brown fat is it known whether or not inducing shiver is important and when should P people Shiver I mean I've gotten into cold plunges and shivered while I was in there and then I've also had the experience of getting into a coal plunger a cold shower then getting out or even standing outside on a warm day after swimming in a pool and then starting to shiver so the shiver comes later so how important is shiver and does it matter when shiver happens yeah it was shivering is good because that increases your metabolism and that's going to burn some calories in your body you shouldn't be so afraid of shivering I think because the Shivering as long as you don't get too hypothermic so if you don't if you don't sit in the cold water for too long um and what you just said by shivering after you get up that is because of the after drop something called the after drop is when your core temperature decreases even after you get out of the cold water and it always does that um your body because it as soon as you get into the cold water all the your blood vessels is gonna constrict because you need to keep your blood in your core and and keep your vital organ swarm so as soon as you get up that those blood vessels will open again and the warm blood will flow out and get colder and then flow back again into the core and that's going to decrease the temperature in your core of course so that's the drop so that's the drop yeah I'm so glad you explained that I've heard years ago go Wim Hof I heard him talk about the drop and I've heard colleagues of mine talk about the drop but that's the first time I've ever heard it explained clearly let me make sure I understand this so um I get into cold water obviously I'm cold vessels constrict to keep blood near the center of my body keep me alive I get out the warming up of my body allows those vessels and capillaries to dilate again the blood goes out to the surface but the surface is still cold and so that blood is cooled and then my core body temperature drops and that's what you're referring to as the drop and that's what induces shiver exactly right and then am I right in thinking that then the shiver activates Brown fat which then warms me up again yes that's why you should end on the cold but we can get back to that yeah let's talk about yes ending on cold is um you know it's what I refer to as and what has now become known as the soberg principle which is um a really important principle about the importance of ending on cold um and not doing what I do which is to get into a hot shower or back in the sunroom we'll get back to that in a few minutes so um that's wonderful um that you can explain that so clearly because I think that shiver is something that a lot of people do avoid people think oh I don't want to you know the chattering of the teeth and um and it feels like a loss of bodily control which really it is it's it's an autonomic response yeah but I don't think that people should should avoid it that much it's just like seeing shivering as a way of your body in in a like it's training it's training for your for all yourselves it's training for your muscles it's training up your metabolism and that's going to increase your What's called the insulin sensitivity so if you can like in your mind get used to the thought of shivering is just like when you go exercising in the training center and get that feeling of like oh this is tough now it hurts a little bit yeah it's gonna hurt because that's what shivering also does but it's just a different way of training your cells and your body it's going to create what is healthy stress it's called homiesis in the cells and the more you expose your your muscle cells or your brown fat cells to these kind of like healthy stresses exercise cold and heat exposure it's gonna make them better at like activate trading and also um at keeping you healthy so as long as the cells get exposed to this it's going to keep them on its toes you can say because it becomes more robust and increasing these heat shock proteins and kosher proteins in the cells to make you more robust for the next time and that is also what happens when you go to the training center and I keep like drawing that parallel because people today know more about we know more about exercise and what that is is going to do to your muscle cells and and but the same kind of like training is also what you do when you go out and and into the cold water and submerge into cold water because that is just your code training center you can say that and and also your heat Training Center going into the sauna because the cells are getting stronger with hermetic stress so it's the same process just different practices I'm so glad that you brought up the fact that the discomfort or the embarrassment or both of shiver is still crucial to uh actually to reach for and try and experience the same way that with exercise um I think a lot of people don't realize this but when we did our series with Dr Andy Galpin it became clear to me what should have already been clear to me and I think that most people don't realize which is that if we were to measure heart rate blood pressure stress hormones and inflammation in a human being during exercise it would look as if they were ready to die blood pressure would be high inflammation is through the roof but all of that is setting in motion and adaptation or set of adaptations that allow blood pressure to be lower at rest that allow inflammation markers to be lower at rest all the things that everybody is seeking with exercise in addition to of course the aesthetic changes that people are seeking with exercise sounds like the exact same things are happening with the cold so the Redundant message here seems to be that the more discomfort provided it's done safely just like with exercise the more shivering the um the more cold shock provided it's not to the extreme and stop somebody's heart right we can talk about thresholds for that a little bit later it sounds like all of that is going to set in motion some long-term changes that will make people feel better and will improve health could you just touch on a few of the longer term changes that are known to occur I mean I'm well aware of the study showing that uh I think it was European Journal physiology it was uh the European Journal physiology showing long lasting increases in catecholamines dopamine norepinephrine and epinephrine for many hours after deliberate cold exposure what are some of the other things that happen at the level of metabolism and brown fat in let's say the hours and day after a deliberate cold exposure as soon as you go in of course there's an activation but it seems like no you're asking for the the later outcomes like blood pressure and stuff like that is that what you mean yeah blood pressure but also in terms of metabolism I know that you know in your study you should and we'll talk about Brown fat in depth here in a moment but that there were changes to the brown fat that equate to changes in for instance people's ability to be comfortable in colder environments when they're not doing deliberate cold exposure or in the same way that I can um exercise on an exercise bike or go for a hard run but then if I go hiking uh with the family on Sunday and it's a steep climb I could do that steep climb more easily because I'm quote unquote fit as a consequence of the of the exercise what are what are some of the fitness adaptations of deliberate cold exposure yeah so what happens is that you you get adapted a little bit every time you go so you will like exercise get a Little Bit Stronger so every time you go into the cold water for every time you will be more exposed to it you will you feel more comfortable in the code so you're gonna you're gonna build your adaptation which happens on a metabolic level which is going to be the brown fat so you'll have more activation of your brown fat the mitochondria in the the brown fat cells are going to be um you have more of those and they will be more efficient at heating you up because it expects the body expects you to to do this again so you are prepared in a way the capillaries in your skin is also it will also become better at like constricting so you will have a better Shield of your body to prepare you for the next time so you will be become better at going into the cold water in that way so the body makes this mechanism and changes your body in a way so you can expose yourself to the next time right and and also you will have um also um your um stress response will also be subside a bit so you have a less increase of your catecholamines um with time with time also you have because of this activation of your brown fat or your muscles you have an increase in them in in your metabolism which will then make your insulin sensitivity better and this is shown in in studies for example um there's this interesting study I found just before I I started my PhD which was from um keeper stoma um at L from 2016 where they measured um metabolism and not in not on Brown fat but they measured insulin sensitivity in middle-aged men and women during one winter swimming season so they were not very young like they were in my study but they were they were middle aged and I think this is very interesting so they during these four or five months they were winter swimming they saw that they had a lower blood pressure after the season and they had a lower heart rate and they also so that they have a better insulin sensitivity and I think that is very interesting because if you can have a better insulin sensitivity you can prevent lifestyle diseases so and with lower blood pressure which is a very strong outcome also for selling how much inflammation you have in the body and because it didn't measure Brown fat I figured that it could be that was the missing link that was the one of the explanations to why we see this um less inflammation in the body so um the longer outcomes the long-term outcomes could be that you lower your blood pressure and have a lower heart rate and you also um have a better insulin sensitivity and better glucose balance but that was shown it that is shown in my study I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors athletic greens athletic greens now called ag-1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink that covers all of your foundational nutritional needs I've been taking athletic greens since 2012 so I'm delighted that they're sponsoring the podcast the reason I started taking athletic greens and the reason I still take athletic greens once are usually twice a day is that it gets to be the probiotics that I need for gut health our gut is very important it's populated by gut microbiota that communicate with the brain the immune system and basically all the biological systems of our body to strongly impact our immediate and long-term health and those probiotics and athletic greens are optimal and vital for microbiotic health in addition athletic greens contains a number of adaptogens vitamins and minerals that make sure that all of my foundational nutritional needs are met and it tastes great if you'd like to try athletic greens you can go to athleticgreens.com huberman and they'll give you five free travel packs that make it really easy to mix up athletic greens while you're on the road in the car on the plane Etc and they'll give you a year's supply of vitamin d3k2 again that's athleticgreens.com huberman to get the five free travel packs and the year supply of vitamin D3 K2 and we'll get back to the insulin sensitivity and glucose balance that's a in an impressive list of benefits um you know blood pressure of course most people are aware of blood pressure and what it is it's what they measure when we go to the doctor and it's not very sexy nowadays you know blood pressure people oh you know blood pressure it's not you know people want to hear about the inflammatorium and the microbiome and all of that stuff is really interesting but um I think that blood pressure doesn't get enough attention and we have spoken to on this podcast to Dr Peter attia who um is an expert in longevity and health span and things of that sort and and I was surprised to learn again I shouldn't have been surprised that the number one reason people die worldwide is cerebral vascular disease and cardiovascular disease and there are basically three things on the list of things to address one is not smoking or vaping by the way uh not to get there are a few other things related to blood markers apob and things of that sort but then the big one is blood pressure and so it's it's interesting because we don't think about blood pressure that much anymore um as a as the kind of people interested in health optimization and health but blood pressure is so vital to control so it's wonderful to hear that deliberate cold exposure is one way to control blood pressure I'm guessing in concert with other forms of exercise yeah um let's talk about Brown fat and um if you if you're willing I'd love to drill into Brown fat at a deep level um again my understanding of this is is far more Elementary than yours obviously you're the expert my understanding about Brown fat is that it's located in specific areas of our body uh maybe more widespread than when I learned in school I thought it was I was taught it was just at the clavicles in the back of the neck and upper back but who knows I learned that there's more of it when we're children maybe more distributed throughout our body and that it's rich in mitochondria but what is so special about the brown fat like if we could just go into the biology of brown fat a little bit what does it look like you've measured it in human subjects where is it distributed really can it expand its distribution can we activate and expand the amount of brown fat as adults and um for those of you that are cringing already thinking we're talking about getting fatter it's quite the opposite we're talking about not subcutaneous fat but fat located around the the organs but please educate me um tell me where I'm wrong and expand my knowledge on Brown fat okay yeah you're not wrong but um it's definitely it's true that there are more locations of the brown fat than we previously thought um there's this very nice study from 2017 by Leitner L where they had made these opacities uh overlays of um their subjects but you can see where in the body do we have brown fat and where can we grow more Brown fat um so to say um so the brown fat is is very plastic so it means that it can it can grow and they can decrease and this is proven in in studies where we have seen um um people with a fair cryocytoma it's like a very specific cancer type where people where from the 70s where we can see that if they have this specific kind of a cancer type um they have a they have this tumor on the adrenal gland so they have like a huge increase in NOAA adrenaline and because of that you don't have this continuous activation of the brown fat and they have grown a lot of brown fat in the whole body or abdominal where it's located in these six different places but it is just like very much compared to like normal people um and what they then see what we learned from this study is that brown fat can apparently grow if you have an increase in no adrenaline in the body it's not like you want that because when that happens you have a high blood pressure you don't want it chronically right you just want it on like a short amount of time and then it can grow for a bit but you don't want it chronically of course not but because it it activates also your sympathetic nervous system so they have also showed they have high blood pressure they had they lost a lot of weight of course because this is activating your metabolism so they they found luckily that when they removed this benign a tumor uh that uh the brown fat um decreases again to normal size and they gain weight again and they had normal blood pressure so the story ends well but it's kind of like proof of concept of the brown fat can actually grow so it's plastic in its in its way of like it can grow and it can decrease again so that's very good good studies to to see what what the body is capable of but we don't of course want all that brown fat we just want it to be um we just want to keep it actually and keep it activated because what we see in studies is also that after the age of 40 and people um Studies have shown that there is an association with having less brown fat but increased obesity so of course we we don't know yet whether a brown fat decreases with A's and therefore before we get obese or we get obese and therefore we have less brown fat but as brown fat is an insulin sensitive organ in our body and we get obese just like the muscles get less sensitive insulin sensitive the brown fat does as well and therefore it maybe decreases it could be a theory that I think could be one of the reasons why we don't see that much Brown fat in in elderly people some have a lot especially people working outside there are studies showing this who people who work outside do physical work outside farmers and um yeah interesting yeah yeah thanks post themselves to it so they'll just keep it in that way it's um and I suppose we should um clarify for people in case they don't know that insulin sensitivity is a very good thing you want that you want your cells to be sensitive to insulin insulin insensitivity is type 2 diabetes and is associated with obesity um so just a point of clarification there uh yeah it's interesting to me I I I usually work out at home but I go to a gym once or twice a week if I can because it's good if I see uh the outside world um and there are a few individuals at the the gym who are they're not particularly large or muscular um but they are incredibly um lean and their posture is great presumably from the musculoskeletal work um and they they're in their 70s and 80s I mean it's remarkable right and um and I know all the telltale signs of hormone augmentation I'm very good at spotting that there are a few telltale signs I've talked about this on other podcasts and they're not that's not why they're they're they're they're um they're fit they're they're clearly of that look and you see this written outside the gym too of course for people that look like they've done a lot of physical labor their whole life yeah they're just moving a lot they have strong hands and features and they're um and they're not necessarily except aggressively lean but you can tell that they've been using their musculoskeletal system and I like to talk to these people and ask them like not what are you doing now for your workout but what what did you grow up doing you know and I would say and obviously I haven't run statistics on this but more than 75 percent of them respond that they grew up on a farm or that they did some sort of manual labor or were a postman or a postwoman or doing something where they moved a lot for their early years and throughout middle age and most of them are now in retirement but some of them are still working and they all still moving a lot so the relationship between shiver and brown fat makes sense to me but is it the case that as we're just moving around I've heard of neat non-exercise induced thermogenesis so if we're just moving around that we are activating Brown fat or does there need to be this stressor does there need to be shiver and a cold stimulus or a heat stimulus to activate the brown fat in other words is just staying active enough or do we need to do some sort of temperature uh shock type thing like deliberate cold exposure yeah I think that is a really good question because how how also why do we have this tissue then if it's if it has to be extreme then you can question what what do we need this tissue for but it seems that you can activate the brown fat with just a little bit of exposure to to cold so cold is the most potent stress or activator of our Brown fat because it's our temperature regulating organ in our body so first responder to that so the muscles will be a little bit too late and therefore we have maybe these two kind of tissues so actually just exposing yourself or a hand actually just to cold water so Studies have shown um that if you just put your hand in cold water not that you're going to going to do that all day or or every day or anything it's not it's it's not something you have to do but it just shows that you can activate your brown fat just by getting a temperature change on your skin so you can go outside and t-shirts that's why also we were just talking about well people who works outside or move a lot or get out in and out of it like changing the temperature of the body all the time they will have more Brown fat and activating that is going to keep your metabolism higher and your insulin sensitivity is that it has also shown this so the brown fat can be activated as soon as you just change your temperature in the skin so going outside in a t-shirt wearing cooling vests also Studies have shown this for 10 days it's gonna also grow your your brown fat so you can get more Brown fat if you expose yourself to the cold you don't have to start in a cold shower you don't have to start in a cold plunge if you're not really ready for that yet but just exposing yourself to a wind has also shown to activate your brown fat or if you don't want to be like in this awake state then you can also just sleep in the cold and you won't notice it that much maybe but Studies have shown that if you sleep in 19 degrees Celsius and then you will activate your brown fat and you will grow your ground fat so you have more of it so this is in very nice studies um from Hansen Adele from 2017 showed that a group of subjects who slept in a room at 24 degrees and then they made this Pet City scannings to see how much Brown fat do they have from the beginning so what we call Baseline then they measured again after a month of sleeping in 19 degrees and they saw I think it's remarkable just one month at 19 degrees sleeping there they had a duet on and they were still had clothes on when they were sleeping so they're under a covered yeah yeah the subjects were sleeping one month had increased is insulin sensitivity the next month they stepped at 24 degrees they measured this again and then they had decreased actually a little bit and then they slept at 27 degrees so quite warm room actually for for the fourth month um and they saw a even less activation of the brown fat and also insulin sensitivity so it seems that you can expose yourself and pretty rapidly the brown fat will respond to this because it's so sensitive to no adrenaline right so if you keep exposing yourself to a little bit of coal you also get a little bit adapted to it but that's because the brown fat um has grown these more mitochondria in the cells so these small energy Fabrics that's going to activate the cells and that's going to take up glucose and fat from the fatty acids from the bloodstream to keep the thermogenesis up and that's going to clear up some sugar and it's going to click so in the in the bloodstream and some some fat as well so the brown fat can in that way decrease our unhealthy fat which is the white fat and the white fat is what we don't want too much of but we still need some of course and it's our energy storage so it's very important that it's there we just don't need a lot of it so on our thighs and also around our inner organs that's where it's it's located so if we can have activation of the brown fat just by going out in the cold and just by sleeping in a cold room or if you are have courage for it you can go out and expose yourself in a coat plunge um cold showers is also going to do the trick so you can do different variations of this just exposing yourself to various temperatures it's going to activate the brown fat because it was involved to keep us in a perfect homeostatic balance regarding temperature so to Keep Us Alive incredible uh I want to just get a clarification around this 19 degrees Celsius room that they're sleeping in so they're under a comforter a duvet and um and you mentioned they had clothes on the room is 19 degrees Celsius but the temperature underneath their blanket might not be 19 degrees Celsius so presumably it's the cold on their face that's activating uh the the increase in brown fat that was observed is that is that a reasonable expectation I I think so yeah because it's you have so many co-receptors in your face so it's actually it's enough and I think it corresponds very well with the studies showing that you can activate the brown fat just by putting a hand into a bucket of cold water and I did this experiment myself in in my studies just to see how well did they respond to cold water so it was a four degrees Celsius cold water for four minutes and then I just met your blood pressure on heart rate to see do they have like an activation of this I actually also measured the brown fat during this cold exposure for four minutes with an infrared thermography camera to see can I see that the brown fat is activated and just just to go back to the location of the brown fat so usually you cannot really see activation of your brown fat because it's located centrally in your around your central nervous system um and and the biggest Depot as you mentioned before is up here under the clavicular bones so um and very close to the skin surface and because it's so close to the skin surface I could measure it with this very expensive camera here and it's not very feasible for people to go home and do this don't because it takes a lot of practice I can tell um but we measured the brown fat with this um and and I could see that after a few minutes that the activation was there an increase in temperature arose from that activation just four minutes so it's very rapid and I'm also measured in my study how deep was the brown fat under your skin so it's very close to the surface which also shows that it it needs to be there to heat you up and heat your inner organs well I'm delighted to hear all of this and I'll tell you why one is by way of anecdote I mentioned a little bit earlier that as an undergraduate I worked in a lab that studied thermogenesis and we were doing that in animals but we had this room that was very cold the whole room was called the guy who I worked for at the time and I'm Harry Carlyle is a very accomplished physiologist he came from this lineage I don't know if this literature is still um discussed much but it's a beautiful literature um from Rothwell and stock they were the ones who discovered um non-exercise induced thermogenesis the fact that people bounce who bounce their legs a lot and move around a lot and have a lot of kind of um stochastic movement um burn up to 18 00 calories more per day than people who sit more still fascinating incredible and just incredible um I don't think that work does gets as much attention as it deserves publishing journals like nature so very uh fine journals but in any event uh one of the things that I noticed when I started working in that laboratory was that I was cold because the room was cold and um Dr Carlisle Harry um said well the key is to wear a t-shirt in here for about two or three days and then you will cold adapt I thought well wouldn't I want to put on a hoodie and get warm in there so I was comfortable and he said no actually what you want to do is get yourself uncomfortably cold activate your brown fat and indeed when I did that I think it was just two days of being in that cold environment then I could come back on the third day and be perfectly comfortable yeah because the brown fat had expanded um or or added mitochondria or both and I was perfectly comfortable in that environment I also got very very lean in those um in those days and weeks now I've never been somebody who's very lean nor am I somebody who carries a lot of excess adipose tissue I'm kind of somewhere in the middle I'm sure I could adjust that with feeding if I want to but it was it was striking uh what a powerful effect it had on my entire system of thermal regulation and one of the things that I uh also delighted in when cell reports um medicine published your study is they had in an accompanying um press release that went out to to those of us that received press releases and it described a um a saying in Scandinavia which is um essentially I'm not going to attempt to uh speak uh Danish even though I have much of my family is in Denmark I believe or not from Denmark um we have a lot of Danes in my family um I won't embarrass myself by trying to speak Danish as I did before the the microphones were rolling but um that there's a saying that I think essentially translates to in the fall when when you're approaching winter you want to actually wear fewer layers not bundle up when you go outside so that you can prepare yourself for the cold of winter and be able to heat yourself up using your brown fat and that in the spring as the temperatures are warming rather than removing layers you want to wear more layers in order to be a little bit uncomfortably warm so that In the Heat of the summer you're better at cooling your body do I have that right and maybe do you know the saying and would you be willing to share it only the swedes and um uh and Danes will be able to understand um maybe the Norwegians too if you don't know it that's okay yeah so I know that I know the the concept of it because we say it you should you should wear a less before winter and and more before summer so there it is in English so it doesn't have to be esoteric but okay yeah and and you're completely right and I think this is the this is just something that we know in the Scandinavian countries I think that we we intuitively know this but if we just go back a little bit in history I think that um around the 1950s the the Russian government went out and said well we should do something about the tuberculosis pandemic or epidemic make the worse at the this time so that they wanted to have the the people um be more resilient to the cold and also increase our immune system so in Scandinavia and actually also in Russia we put our babies outside to sleep in the prom and that is like to uh also to to get more resistance to the coal but also to increase our immune system and we still do that in Denmark so we we really yeah we do babies are taken out in the cold in the snow in Frosty rain everything my two boys have been sleeping out in winter or at least the their first many three four five years because it's like very good for them and they get a better immune system and get resilient to the cold so they will have less colds and also they run around in a t-shirt when it's super cool because they have activated all the brown fat I didn't understand at that time I must I must say but I kind of like intuitively also knew because we have inherited this way of doing things with our culture so and I have heard people coming from the U.S saying things are crazy they put the babies outside and problems and leave them there and then they go inside and drink coffee on the cafe well I don't think Danes are crazy I I I I Adore the date they're amazing uh culture and people I'm so fortunate to have family members uh from Denmark but I did notice so when when we were in Copenhagen and I know um we we saw you there uh not long ago that was June um the water in the harbor was was cold for even though the Pacific is close to here which is very cold I was felt pretty cold but I it was summertime ish um so people were in summertime mode right t-shirts and shorts and things that that sort but it did strike me that people in Copenhagen are dramatically fitter than they are in the United States I mean first of all everyone's bicycling everywhere yeah um not many people wearing sunglasses so trying to extract as much Photon energy from the Sun as possible which I support uh as everyone knows that's I'm a big fan of getting Sun but also um when we did see swimmers um they were swimming in this cold water and like it was nothing and their the range in age of the swimmers was what was remarkable you saw the kind of fit triathlete looking types but also young kids like really young kids and then people probably in there again they're they're 70s 80s maybe even 90s really uh remarkable uh vastly different than what you see if you go to the ocean here in Los Angeles or or elsewhere so um yeah you Scandinavians are on to something with this I'd like to take a quick break and thank our sponsor inside tracker inside tracker is a personalized nutrition platform that analyzes data from your blood and DNA to help you better understand your body and help you reach your 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insidetracker.com huberman to get 20 off any of inside trackers plans again that's inside tracker.com huberman to get 20 off I'd like to talk about your study if you could give us a little bit of the backdrop about what motivated that study and then um and then walk us through what you did you know who the subjects were um what you had them do what you measured um in as much detail as you would like to share because I think it's such an important you know even fair to say landmark study because it also explored not just cold but sauna and the the co-use of cold and sauna as a way to probe metabolism and brown fat and other markers as well and as you do this uh I'm hoping at some point that you might tell us some of the observations that you might have made that interested you that perhaps were not in the paper because that's one of the great benefits of sitting across from somebody who who did the work in detail so um yeah if you could tell us about your study um and uh what you did and what you discovered thank you for the question Andrew I I'd love to like also explain a little bit what did we do because when people read this kind of paper they just see the numbers they don't see what what happened before that and human studies are very different from from my study my studies you can do a knockout of something and then everything is like perfectly matched and controlled doing humans studies is very far different from that because people are different even in the groups so yeah but what we um when I started this research in 2016 I did not really know what the brown fat was so I started reading up on all this and I was very interested in preventive medicine and also the studies that I did before Brown fat was also like very much in the preventive side like how can we that was about something else but the Sweet Tooth and how can we lower our sweet tooth and stuff like that so but after that I wanted to to do something new so I looked into the brown fat got hired in this fantastic research group where they it's a cell group so they mostly did cell studies and they didn't have anyone to do a human study yet um and um but they really wanted me to to do that so I read upon a lot of research about how does the brown fat get activated what have been done already and I mentioned the paper before with sleeping in the cold I found that particular paper very fascinating and that was also where um at that time I was like okay so cold exposure sure as an intervention of sleeping in the cold could be a good thing to go out and say well people do this but on the other hand is first of all it was already done that was one thing but the other thing was like well I wanted to to see if we can do it like some kind of activity so we can have people move also go and do something do something together or whatever and and the code made us think about well what about winter swimming and it was kind of like a bit of a joke in the beginning it's like winter swimming yeah it's going to activate the brown fat right but but when we read the literature we couldn't really find anything about activation of the brown fat with cold water besides hand in a bucket of cold water that really that was already there so we were just thinking okay so it should be very potent um activation of the brown fat if it's cold water but very different from cold air so it was kind of also a new thing we were going into and we knew that we were going to do like a more of a proof of concept study at the beginning of it because it was like winter swimmers um most in theory activate the brown fat right but we kind of didn't really know with was this kind of stressor too much too little or what will happen actually but we had this idea about well we always say that cold water and winter swimming will activate your metabolism but do but do we know if it does that no we don't so um and while this idea was a little bit fun fun at the beginning and we kind of accepted it it was like okay let's just try this out but because we didn't have the funding for it we was like okay let's do a proof of concept study um let's go with a small number but enough to see um a difference between the groups so the power calculation of that study is done on what we know from Pet City scannings of the brown fat so that's the main outcome of that of course so um and we wanted to go a little bit smaller on the numbers of participants because we wanted to dig a little bit deeper into the different mechanisms and also redo some of the the days so I really wanted to do that to see if I can replicate also the findings and that's going to take a lot of a lot of funding but it's also going to take a lot of time to do it um so the proof of concept was just going small but looking at different mechanisms we also took um fat biopsies for example and looked at the white fat to see if there was any differences between the groups before and after and stuff like that so that's kind of like how it started and and the first year was like a field study for me so I was not a winter swimmer when I started this it was just oh really no I wasn't um at all and I would say I was a bit afraid of the cold myself a bit of a cold uh always cold having big socks on and sweaters and stuff like that so I was like I am so comfortable I'm just like everybody else very comfortable I like being income completely temperature neutral and but I started like playing with this thought like well if this is so healthy in theory I should not pack myself up I should start not doing that yeah but the first year observation of winter swimmers under Jetty they kind of joked about is they come on you need to try this you cannot study this um unless you have tried it and I was like haha very funny of course I can do that but I couldn't I I read the literature I understood in theory what happens when you go into cold water but I completely understood it when I first tried it the first few times not so funny it felt painful it was just like running too long after a long break and you and your muscles hurt the day after right you you completely regret that you took that extra mile what about when you say uncomfortable you mean uncomfortable when you got in and when you were in or uncomfortable afterwards because I find that um on rare occasions well I should just a full disclosure I I do deliberate cold exposure every morning for about a minute to two minutes in a cold plunge there are days that I miss but when I'm at home I do that and when I travel I do a cold shower I do finish with a warm shower so um and we'll talk about why that's probably not the best idea but um and I've been doing it for some years now um on and off uh but so just full disclosure I'm a devotee um and I have family members that uh hate the the cold but have gotten into it and and are starting to like it but they don't and I don't necessarily like the experience in the cold water but I love the way I feel when I get out and I have I'm a hundred percent on that statement about loving it when I get out occasionally it feels good to be in there it feels invigorating and I think I've learned to control the gasp reflex and the hyperventilation and I just have told myself what we know which is that the forebrain struggles to engage for the first 20 or 30 seconds but if you can get past that wall it's it's far easier to to push through um but when you say that it was really uncomfortable do you mean the experience of getting in or you also felt lousy afterward yeah it's and very important to clear that out I only felt very uncomfortable doing it at the moment but afterwards the first time I went with with the group and actually my husband was there as well because I I really wanted someone I knew um coming along because it's very normal if you haven't done this before you feel a little bit anxious about it and this is jonon studies as well because blood pressure and heart rate goes up in in those who are new to this kind of activity so um I was a little bit anxious about it so it was really uncomfortable just doing it but afterwards as soon as I got up I felt fantastic and we went into the sauna and I did three rounds because I just loved it I loved the feeling afterwards because you have all these nutrients minutes going in your brain and you feel more positive you feel I feel invigorate I had so much energy and that like I I could totally see why people would do this to get energy throughout the day because I definitely had that I didn't have to do 3 three dips to to get that I think one would be enough and I often do that also now today I do one dip sometimes I do two or three dips in in one round you can say in one day but often it's like just one or two times a week for me that is enough to to get that energy and to get that positive feeling and and I think that that is also why I I put up my study in that way I wanted to study the lowest dose you can say the lowest amount that we can get away with but still see um health benefits so what I observed there on the jetty was that some did it a long time they were in the water for a very long time and to me it seemed maybe a little bit extreme could you give me an example of long time well so maybe they were like really swimming and they could be 20 minutes or half an hour that's a long time that's a long time and there was like ice and people who came up I mean I just didn't really feel that this is something that I wanted to go out and recommend to people after my community research subjects dying either because if you're not adapted I mean the people you know people can do that also a 20 minute cold shower or 20 minute cold plunge I know people do it but it's probably not a good idea no probably not it's gonna exhaust yourselves and make them age too fast fast so exactly that's when you pass that hermetic stress the healthy stress level that's what is happening the quite opposite is almost chronic stress actually in the cells well what happened then was that um I found out if if I want to have this protocol get through ethical committee I I really needed to go like very like Sleek with the not too long and and make sure that they were also very healthy and and to get approval of course of this study um but what I did was to to recruit winter swimmers who already have been swimming for two or three seasons and I just observed them I said I'm not gonna do an intervention study yet I did that after but I I wanted to do like a proof of concept where they were already adapted to the cold and then compare them to a match control group who were matched on um on you could say diet so whether they vegetarian or not um and one of them worse in each group uh also they weren't all vegetarians no no no just one in each group yeah it's gonna say with all the amazing fish and meat in uh in Denmark I'd have a hard time being a vegetarian no the breads are amazing the fruits and vegetables too but okay so there were a couple vegetarians in each group yeah one one in each yeah okay and then I'm vegetarian I have family members of vegetarians so I've just poking fun yeah yeah but they were they were matched on different things so what we usually match the mono is also BMI um which shows one gender in this study and we would always choose both men and women normally but we do see that there are different Brown fat levels depending on gender so women have more Brown fat than men really yeah interesting yeah I think it's interesting uh a deserved study yeah yeah why actually I think it's interesting because women are also smaller so in size and mass right but they also have um a lower peripheral temperature especially on hands and ears and is that right that's that's documented that what women do run colder than men yeah and physiologically I didn't say psychologically no no no we won't we won't go to the psychological yeah something else that's a different podcast yeah so women are just colder physically so on hands and ears it's measured on that um and and and feet as well so compared to men and men have bigger Hearts than women and they can pump out more blood peripheral than in a woman's body so they that could be an explanation for the colder hands for example some comfortable state is also different between genders so men are more comfortable at 22 degrees Celsius and women are thermal comfortable at 24 degrees Celsius and this is the thermostat Wars of home have been now validated two degrees Celsius by the way prior to um starting recording uh I made the executive decision that we were going to go with Celsius throughout the podcast um because the majority of the world uses Celsius so for those of you that think in Fahrenheit um the internet is your friend in making those conversions so we're sticking with Celsius so men tend to be Thermo comfortable at 22 degrees Celsius women at 24. okay interesting explains a lot about like also some arguments in the homes where men are turning down the heater and women are turning up the heater and they cannot really so it's it's really it's I'm on both sides here I understand the men we understand the women but it's there is a difference there which was also one of the reasons why we had we in this proof of concept study chose one gender so it is not like only because we wanted to study man it was just to see to eliminate uh all the confounding factors which could have an impact on on our results so um that was one of the reasons um but also because we yeah so women have have more Brown fat than men and otherwise we would have to like do four groups or something like that and not having funding yet we were like okay we need to do like just one a group just a control group and then and a group who will always winter swimmers so I recruited winter swimmers who have been swimming for two to three seasons um because I wanted them to be already adapted but not going too long in the water so they told me I did a lot of screening here of course beforehand and interviews to see to ask them how much do you do and um how much do you how long do you stay in the water and I monitored how long did they didn't stay in the water and recruited based on um that they only did like two to three times per week it seems reasonable for for Denmark at least to do that and they stayed only in the water for one to two minutes so the coastal subsides very quickly and you will get this activation of your rest and digest system which is your parasympathetic nervous system so the the other branch of your other enormous nervous system and you get that activation because you submerged into cold water and when you do that you have an activation of your diving response and that's gonna slow down the you can say the the cons Assumption of oxygen also in your body and that's going to slow down your heart rate could I pause you on this because I've heard this before that when we get into cold water shower or immersion we get this sympathetic autonomic response so increased blood pressure increased heart rate release of norepinephrine from the locus ceruleus in the brain release of um adrenaline dopamine adrenaline from the from the adrenals dopamine presumably within the brain but that the parasympathetic response is activated when we put our face into cold water or go underwater and that's a calming relaxation response so this brings us back to I don't want to take us off track from you describing the study but this brings us back to the first question which is if I go completely underwater for a moment when I start my cold plunge does that change the physiological outcome as compared to if I just submerge myself up to the neck and that and actually nowadays there's it seems to be a little bit of a movement online of people putting a bowl of ice water on their countertop and submerging their face into it did you see this this is a start obviously more and more posts about this so um could you just touch on the what the dive reflex is and why it act perhaps activates the parasympathetic response this calming response but also the diving reflex is activated when you submerge into cool water um even just to the neck yeah or I thought you had to get your face under I'm not I'm not arguing different you're the expert I just wanna yeah I haven't really I haven't read that I've just seen that you can activate your uh that diving response as soon as you go underwater with your body um so you don't have to do it with your face as far as I understand I could I could be wrong though um yeah so when when you activate your diving response you will slow down your um your oxygen consumption in your body and that is because the body tries to preserve um oxygen so you will not get hypothermic too fast so it's kind of like a survival system in your body um so this survival system is very um important for us of course so that would be activated and because of that you will have to maybe one minute or so I'm that can be precise on that because I maybe it also varies a bit in humans so one to two minutes you will have full activation of the sympathetic nervous system but also the parasympathetic nervous system um and that's going to activate for example something like serotonin in your brain which is like also good for mental balance and people feeling in mental balance afterwards they after they go up you know so that is like measured on a questionnaires and also measure like on anecdotes of course people tell all the time that they feel good afterwards we need studies on this so if anyone's sitting out there thinking that's interesting then please do some studies on that to get more out of that yeah so you had so you observed these winter swimmers who are done this for a few seasons yeah they're coming around for a new season of winter swimming and you've decided to recruit them as subjects they are getting into cold water um climbing down a ladder or jumping into the water up to their neck yeah climbing yeah okay climbing down a ladder into it because it's done Outdoors what a fun study to do my graduate thesis was done under fluorescent lights with no windows in a in a building that uh I mean I had a ton of fun as a PhD student I actually lived in the laboratory as a PhD student I loved it so much but um not something required to do a PhD by the way but um they're climbing down the ladder yeah getting it up to their neck staying in for one to two minutes and then getting out and how many times a week are they doing this so to do this two to three times per week and for each time they go each day they go they take three rounds off so three dips and two sauna sessions so they start in the cold and they end in the cold water okay so it's get in for one to two minutes then get out and get into the sauna yeah um what is the temperature of the sauna about 80 degrees Celsius okay then how long are they in the sauna so they stayed there for 10 to 15 minutes so depending on if they went two times per week or three times per week okay and then they get back into the cold for a few minutes two minutes up to two minutes yeah okay then back into the sauna 15 minutes or so yeah then back into the cold for a third round yeah back into the sauna and then then they're ending and then back into the cold again and then ending on cold yeah and uh and we'll talk about why it's important to end on cold the so-called sober principle um how cold was the water in this particular given average because I realized it's outdoor winter swimming so it's going to vary depending on wind chill and things as well of course so it's a very uncontrolled environment to do this kind of study then but I wanted to do something that was also very close to something people could do for free going out in nature and use that and also have the nature like it's very healthy impact on us it lowers our stress stress level as well so by doing so I also measured the temperature every time they went so I have this graph and it's actually in the winter swimming book it shows the temperature in Denmark going like from October to April and it's like it starts at 12 degrees I think it's around 12 to 12 degrees Celsius and the water and then it goes down to two degrees in on average in January and then up again um so it's within the spectrum of very cold water I would say from around 15 15 degrees Celsius and down but it was actually not colder than like two to four degrees in in on average when it was the coldest so it doesn't have to be that cold to be good enough and and enough to activate our metabolism um and what time of day are um the participants doing this cold sauna alternation so I think they did this uh throughout the day so I didn't control whether they wanted to go in the morning in the afternoon or in the evening at that time where I set up this study I would I was not controlling it in that way I wanted them to go whenever they had time and I also think that is the most important message to give to give to people is to do it when you have time it's not if if doing it when you get home from work and it's six o'clock in the evening and this is the time where you are where you can do it and then then try out if it's going to impact your sleep or not if it doesn't impact your sleep then fine but you have to try for yourself and find out what works for you it's the same for coffee for example right some people can drink coffee in the evening and go to bed and they can sleep I can't or exercise or exercise exactly so I can't I can't do that and that's because the coffee exercise cold water and immersion is going to activate your sympathetic nervous system you haven't increase in stress response in your body and and that's going to make it really hard to fall asleep for some people at least maybe you are super exhausted anyways and then you will just crash anyways but yeah but um that's that's the only thing so I just told them to do this if they can during the daytime um and that's primarily what they also did and then uh all along you're measuring Brown fat by way of this infrared uh camera right um so what did you observe in terms of changes in brown how quickly did that occur and um and then I'd like to ask also about sauna a bit more because earlier you mentioned that you can activate round fat with sauna as well with heat surface of the skin um how long did it take before you observed significant increases in brown fat and was it increased density of my brown fat or distribution was it you know showing expansion to different regions throughout the body and maybe you could also touch on some of the changes in insulin sensitivity and Metabolism yeah a very good question and and I didn't mention this before but besides measuring um temperature as an outcome for brown fat activity we also did pet MRI scanning of the brown fat so this is like the the golden standard for measuring Brown fat and it's not very feasible for normal people to get an and a pet a CT or pet MRI a scanning of the brown fat is super expensive um so we had both uh to see if we could have like a continuous measure of brown fat in humans because that was already not not out there so I wanted to see during both the experience governmental days but also during day and night what kind of like circadian rhythm do we have in our Brown fat activity so that's why I wanted to have that as well so the Pet City scanning or the pit MRI scanning was to see upon code activation um stimulation for some hours do we have activation can we see the brown fat in this subject and also during Thermo neutrality or thermal comfortable State how is that activated in each of the group of course ah so you want to see how comfortable people were away from the cold water and sauna just had different temperature environments is that right yeah so I also measured that how comfortable are you I had I made this scale like visual analog scale and asked them how comfortable do you feel with this temperature and throughout the study days during cold exposure and thermal comfortable day that had a whole day where I just kept them Thermal comfortable to see do they activate the brown fat if they're just completely thermal comfortable as good as we could get with that because you were asking people um on a scale from one to ten and five being thermal comfortable where are you on the scale so one would be very cold and ten would be super burning hot um yeah and so that was the way to like try to figure out how do they actually feel also during their studies they also measured a Electro myography so of of muscles to see do they shiver during the cooling day and sometimes people shiver before they know they're really shivering so I had interesting yeah so our conscious perception of shivering might not be the best readout of shiver yeah well you if you also get adapted to the cold water you will have a less shivering there will be less vigorous they will be very small so you wouldn't probably know that you are shivering because this shivering is so small and the mitochondria in the muscle cells will be so dense that it doesn't need to shiver maybe that much to get a dead thermogenesis going and compared to when you're completely new uh to code water exposure you're not adapted then the body needs to create these mitochondria these energy Fabrics to keep you warm and that's also what the exercise is in the beginning but um when we measured this we did see that the winter swimmers were shivering less or having less vigorous shivering when they said I'm cold so even though they they perception their perception of the cup was pretty similar in in the in the groups and we could see that the the activation of the the muscles that we measured on um were different and more pictures in the control group were the subjects incentivized to be in the study were they paid or anything of that sort of they just happen to like doing uh cold and sauna and so that's why they did the study um well they got paid a little bit for it but not much and um that's how we do this sure I was just curious yeah yeah I was just curious there might be some folks that Wonder so so what did you discover in terms of changes in brown fat insulin resistance or insulin sensitivity rather and um metabolism so what we we saw was we had this kind of different measures to see what to try and unreal what what's actually going on when they are already adapted to the cold water compared to a control group who was matched on on various parameters we we did see that the winter swimmers had an increased insulin sensitivity they produced less insulin on all the experimental days so besides from just cooling them and measuring the brown fat on each of these cooling days or two cooling days and one thermal comfortable day right so I wanted to measure insulin when I just they were fasting meaning that they hadn't eaten in eight hours before the study day um and they were completely laying still not moving just in a bit and we measured insulin during the experimental day just to see how what level are they on and we could see that the the winter swimmer had lower production of insulin and they also when they had an glucose drink so we give them that to see if they to test before we enroll them in studies to see if they have diabetes for example and not knowing for example that that wouldn't that would like ruin maybe the study so we test for that and see if they have like a normal curve so what was this seeing that was that the winter swimmers had a faster glucose clearance in the bloodstream so after two hours we could see that they had a lower level and it went the curve went down faster than in the control group so despite having lower insulin release they have better blood glucose clearance which is really what you want what we all seek right you know excessive insulin is bad insulin being a um more or less a chaperone for blood glucose um can do all sorts of other things as well of course but um and having high blood glucose obviously terrible yeah for cells especially brain cells I don't think people realize how toxic high blood glucose is having high glucose if you want to kill neurons you make you make their uh put them in an environment where there's too much sugar um oh yeah very yeah very neurotoxic I mean that's and their mechanisms like insulin that buffer that we keep you know keeping blood glucose in a reasonable range so that um that doesn't happen I mean I think that's why people will go into insulinemic shock um hypoglycemic shock is also possible so that range in which neurons are happy is not a it's not a tremendously large range incidentally the range in which neurons are are um happy in surviving uh is much greater as one gets colder than when you heat up I mean you can basically destroy brain cells by getting too hot for too long oh yeah yeah you can definitely destroy brain cells permanently by getting too cold for too long but you have to get really really cold for a really long time yeah yeah um very interesting yeah we're thinking about doing uh an episode on um uh sort of survival of the brain after death kind of things which actually happens you hear about these people who are declared dead and then come back and there's actually now a lot of crowd preservation type approaches for that this is uh anyway we risk going into the the uh the esoteric now so I'll steer us back to our discussion about your study but um so if I do the math these subjects are in the cold let's say they're doing three rounds of cold for one to two minutes three to two or three times a week what were the thresholds that you discovered were important for getting these positive changes in um such as reduced blood sugar or clearance of blood sugar um being more efficient uh reduced insulin improved Brown fat distribution and density um how much cold exposure do people need how much heat exposure do people need in order to extract these benefits yeah so when we then calculated the numbers together we could see that this was ended up being 11 minutes in total per week so not in one session of course but they had two to three visits to the water and the sauna per week so when we divide that out it corresponds to being in cold water one to two minutes at a time but also in the sauna 10 to 15 minutes at a time and I think this is very like also similar to what we see in other studies when we look for example to the observational studies from The Finnish cohort study from laauken at L for example they published this very amazing paper in 2015 and some results from this long cohort study where they show that that up to 30 minutes in the sauna was healthy and they you you lower your risk of cardiovascular disease and that's like the threshold and if you go further than that then there is not more healthy benefits to to gain from that so and before that it's like 19 minutes then you will have this dose response relationship up to 19 minutes that's really in decreasing your risk of cardiovascular diseases and I think that's per week 90 minutes per week 90 minutes per session now recession yeah per session if we um then compare that with my study which was 10 to 15 minutes per session then I think it fits very well with what we call the Hermetic stress or healthy stress that you expose the cells to this kind of like potent very stressful situation where they increase heat shock proteins in the cells and that will repair the cells but if you then overdo it and you go beyond the maybe 30 minutes in the sauna this observational study from Finland with more than up to 2 000 sauna bathers where they have full of these for 20 years they see that a 30 minutes position is like enough and if you go above that you don't get more health benefits out of it so I think there's a window where we can say the healthy stress corresponds to like 10 minutes and I think it's per session per session and it's not it's not much actually so you don't need to it shows that you don't have to expose yourself very much to the Heat or very much actually to the cold to get this healthy benefits from going into cold going to heat and have healthy benefits on your cardiovascular system so I think this is very important also a message to to to get out that you don't have to go extreme you don't have to swim for a half an hour in the cold water you can go in the water for one to two minutes and per session but go up to 11 minutes per week in total and for the sauna my study showed uh 57 minutes in total two weeks and if we also then divide it out on these two to three days and two sessions each day correspond to 10 to 15 minutes so it's a low threshold but I think it's it's good to have that to maybe we can aim for that if people need to have something to to aim for and I think and I think it's really good to have that because then you you don't have then you don't overdo it and if you overdo it you exhaust the cells and that will increase your risk of cardiovascular disease also so well I get a lot of questions about this and I did solicit for questions for this podcast on on Twitter and one of the questions that I got was as one becomes more cold adapted do the benefits start to wear off or can people do too much cold exposure of course the answer to that is yes you can become hypothermic but I'm sensing a different answer now which is if I understand correctly the threshold is 11 minutes total per week of deliberate cold exposure divided into two or three sessions of maybe one to three minutes depending on how long somebody stays in and then 57 minutes I want to be careful not to round up um to an hour but divided into maybe three 20-minute sessions or so you know um so one doesn't have to be perfect as long as you get a beyond that threshold but I I wonder something which is it the case that if somebody said oh you know I'm just going to do one 11 minute session per week that might actually not be as beneficial as dividing it up because what you told us earlier is that the Hermetic response depends on having that cold shock you actually don't want to become too cold adapted I mean once the blood pressure response drops down so in minute four five and six yeah you're getting very cold and you're shivering but you're one is not getting the autonomic stimulus that they want I guess I could liken this to um if exercise worked in a way where it was only the first few minutes of exercise that really triggered the adaptation of course this is not how it works but um in fact probably quite the opposite um but if that were the case then it's not simply the total amount of exercise but dividing up the the the sessions into little bouts where every single time it acts as a stimulus that seems to be the key here um this is very important um because having watched the landscape of this on social media but also in books and generally um I think you're the first person to really touch on this that the goal is not to get so cold adapted that you can sit in for the full 11 minutes in one session where the goal isn't to be able to do an hour of very hot sauna if you want to I suppose people could do it for other reasons but if the goal is to improve these Health metrics yeah then the idea is to keep the stimulus a stimulus short exactly yeah great well this also I think there's practical feasibility as you pointed out because getting into a cold shower or cold immersion or natural body water for a couple of minutes is far less uh um you know challenging to most people than finding a full morning to go you know spend there um but I've never really heard it articulated that the longer sessions might not be beneficial it might actually be detrimental um that's very important uh were there any other observations that you made um that did not make it into the paper or that were kind of in the the margin notes I mean in terms of psychological benefits um or anything of that sort there was this recent study on soldiers that talked about weight loss it's sort of a controversial study for a lot of reasons um but one of the things they remarked in the paper was that there were a lot of psychological changes improved buffering against anxiety um they even the men and women in that study reported one of the significant effects was um significantly improved sexual satisfaction of course they didn't tell us what that meant for these subjects but so we won't go there but but a number of subjective improvements was there anything that you observed or took note of in in your study that perhaps didn't make the main abstract but that we should be aware of uh yeah there was some um and I'm I'm today I regret that I didn't measure on sleep for example I I frankly didn't really think about that when I I when I designed the study um so we were very um much occupied with the metabolism and kind of had the thought maybe this could impact a Sleep Quality um and I wish I just if I had the thought that why don't you just ask them in a questionnaire but I asked them every morning or everyone who's not many Monies to just two mornings actually and we measured on um but the winter swimmers um told us before I wrote them that they had a really good sleep quality the control group also had that but they told me on the day where we measured the brown fat on a day and night so if actually two days and two nights and they told me that they didn't they had a good night's sleep but they also woke up so it's just telling me that they also had like a quick wake up and then they fell asleep again um and the winter swimmers is so they have a really good sleep so it's like and in general they also say we we sleep very well I sleep very well so it's anecdotally General it corresponds to what I heard in my study but nothing that I measured on um which would could be fun to do in the future but we didn't measure on Sleep Quality that would have been a really good idea to do they also told me that they were very comfortable when they were cold they they don't mind a winter swimmers they don't mind going out for example um in in the code with a t-shirt they were also less scared of showing their skin that was also one observation interesting yeah so kind of a reduced social anxiety yeah they were just so comfortable in the lab you as you just mentioned before coats on and everybody's journeying around us very busy and and all the other scientists out in the hallway and also my supervisor I had her office down down the hallway and and one of the winter swimmers one day it just got out of bed after I had been in the study for eight hours we it was a long day right he jumped out of the bed and had his clothes in the bathroom and he went out completely naked he didn't care he just went out it was like so that's a side effect perhaps of getting too comfortable with the cold um and we're not recommending that although in your book you um did a uh you dedicated some let me start that again although in your book you dedicated some uh pages to um naked winter swimming or I should say naked cold water exposure as opposed to um uh with bathing suit yeah are there any data on this I'm sorry chuckling but um I think in most places in the United States it's uh skinny dipping is not um is not legal most public beaches there are a few in fact where my laboratory before moving to Stanford was in San Diego and I at the Salk Institute for biological studies beautiful building incredible Sciences done there the beach right below that is called Black's Beach okay and um and it's a known nude beach um and so whenever tourists were heading down the stairway there um I would you know sort of let them know especially if they had kids I'd let them know you know and it's a nude beach of a particular um uh of a particular genre so I I'd give them a little warning about what what they could expect down below it's a um in any event those beaches are quite rare um in the United States maybe compared to Europe I don't know um but yeah maybe yeah so is there anything special about um clothes lists versus closed um exposure yeah I think in that sense we have a bit more free with this kind of like but but remember we also had this winter swimming culture for so for hundreds of years in Denmark and the wind said the oldest winter swimming clubs that we have especially the one we have in Copenhagen where I did my next study which we haven't talked about but and it's also not published yet but um in that winter swimming club it's the oldest one we have and it's huge and they they swim naked at this facility men and women men and women and they have sauna where they can go in together and they also have the separate saunas but it's very much a Danish thing and and I think it's I think it's I think it's good if people want that um and I had it in my book because people want to know if they have to swim with their bathing suit on or if they can take it off or what's the what's the difference is there any difference in this and if you ask me there is no difference oh if you have your little skinny bikini on it's not going to do any difference to your cold exposure or your adaptation it's not going to do any difference for your benefits of course but I think that it has something else it has something to do with how you also observe yourself how you absorb your surroundings and it's sometimes some sense of freedom in skinny dipping so I think people in Denmark who does this is they do the winter swimming because they feel free when they do they come home from work they go to this club and they skinny dip and they feel like in touch with nature and they have maybe done this their whole life so this is an old tradition in Denmark in some of the clubs um but the newer clubs are coming they don't they don't do skinny diff so everyone has bathing suit I never Skinny Dip because there are people around people with phones and taking pictures all the time so this is different different nowadays everything's recorded yeah yeah and also this this old tradition is also fading away because of that yeah I um I use sauna and cold at home but when I travel there there's a Banya so Russian Banya has hot sauna and cold plunge um there's one in San Francisco called Archimedes Banya um and that one is clothing optional so some people are clothed such as myself and then other people are not and it's co-ed most of the time I think they have male female separated uh evenings or something like that and then um the other Banya is Spa 88 which is in on Wall Street in New York is an amazing Banya as well and these are starting to crop up in different cities or maybe they've been there for a long time and has deliberate cold exposure and sauna gets more popular more people are using them the the one in New York that I that Spa 88 is always closed um and it's interesting because you know people hear naked or skinny dipping and they they might get certain ideas in mind it um yeah all these places are very well lit and they all have a tone of kind of um of Health that it's about the kind of health and and wellness um I guess the point being that um there's no requirement uh to do one thing or the other although in the studies that uh you did obviously um people were clothed but I I did um I did pay attention to those pages in your book I thought it was interesting that you put some um some dedicated uh passages in your book related to this and I think my publisher wanted that yeah it was not me it was like my publisher really wanted to have a little discussion about that so I was like okay well I think it you know it points to a larger theme which is I think for a lot of people who already do these practices um there's no shock there yeah um for people that do not do deliberate cold exposure or sauna I think that um you know there is this idea perhaps that oh you know these are um Traditions that are are kind of Fringe or that they're kind of and I just I want to um cue that point because there's so many things that are happening right now in biomedical research and Medicine you know serious quality peer-reviewed studies published in excellent journals like your paper on things like deliberate cold exposure sauna um the use of particular supplements natural natural herbs and supplements I mean there's an entire brain answer the National Institutes of Health in the United States dedicated just to the study of supplements and behavioral interventions for health like meditation and breath work really incredible it's really incredible and psychedelics of course being something that for a long time was part of a certain community and feel and now is being um frankly adopted by mainstream medicine even Pharma so it the the times are changing um and so uh yes I think it's important to know that um it's perfectly acceptable and encouraged to wear clothing absolutely absolutely yeah yeah and one other thing that I wanted to to mention going back to your questions around with there were any observations in the studies which would really maybe haven't discussed yet and maybe it's in in the back of the the paper and not mentioned that much was one of the winter swimmers didn't have any brown fat when we measured him zero zero and uh in we do see this um in in in previous studies as well that some humans don't have any brown fat was he did he carry a lot of white fat adipose tissue was he was he obese no he wasn't no he was not obese because that he would not have been in the study then oh right yes you mentioned this earlier forgive me no no it's fine but he was um but what I did observe before I knew that he didn't have any problem for us that during the cooling experiment where I cooled them for uh two hours before they go into the Pet City scanner he was not able to control his shivering like the winter swimmers they could so he got he got very cold very easily uh compared to the others so and without I didn't know what was different about him but we could all or me and the three others were working on the experiment we were like okay what's going on because we turned down the the temperature but he started like shivering and then we had to turn it up again and it was just all over the place the temperature is not it wasn't that controlled like the others it was pretty similar protocol I could just do pretty much the same because they were same size and they also same gender so it it was easier to like foresee what was going to happen and when will they start Shiver I quickly learned that but with this subject it was just with this volunteer was just very much different and then when we scanned him and didn't find any problem I I I didn't even think about it so when we scanned him we didn't see anything I told the Pet City people to like oh you put up the wrong uh scanning explain the technology yeah the technology it was like this scanning looked like the thermal neutral day the thermal comfortable day where we also scanned them to see if they have any brown fat so you have made a mistake I was pretty sure and the re-analysis and analyzed this um scanning and they just concluded well it the scanning was fine the experiment went well it was just that he didn't have any brown fat so he was like but we just in the paper called a brown fat negative so he didn't have any and in in my studies it would be called a knockout so it didn't have any brown fan so what the observation with him and I think that would be that's interesting is that he both shivered very early on and didn't regulate his temperature as well he also told me that then he was like F5 on the scale of how comfortable he felt with the cold um so it was from one to ten and five being thermal comfortable and 10 being very cold and and one very hard so on this like scale up and up and down and he he was like more up and down on this scale than any of the others it was an observation that I did um what we did see in his blood samples also that his blood samples looked a bit more like the control group um also his insulin levels were like the control group so a little bit higher than the other winter swimmers and he also had um his blood glucose clearance was not as fast as um as the the other winter swimmers so he was like an outlier what we call it an in the analysis we also had to take him out of the analysis because he was an outlier um so the results showing that the brown fat is a more efficiently activated in the winter swimmers is without him having him in that group but it didn't ruin the study if we I tried to put him in as well and didn't it didn't ruin the results or anything but just to to keep it more clear we put we took him out of the analysis yeah so he was a mutant a knockout yeah and I'm sure they're out there um very interesting so if you shiver early um then perhaps you have less brown fat to begin with although it's hard to conclude from one person that's sort of the the the implication there oh you haven't adapted to the code so you should build that up yeah right so in addition to looking at regulation of blood sugar Brown fat metabolism and so on were there any markers that you examined in the deliberate cold exposure group as compared to controls that reveal to you that deliberate cold exposure could have additional benefits um say for uh immune system function or for any function for that matter before we looked at inflammation of course we measure of the outcome of blood pressure and so on but we also measured the il-6 in the study just to see also an inflammatory anti-inflammatory marker so il-6 went up and it also follows with the il-10 so that is like also very known in the literature so we measured that and I think it's very important to to think about the code exposure the heat exposure as something that then lowers the inflammation in the body and if we can do that we will have an open door for um a preventing lifestyle diseases right so for um type 2 diabetes but actually also for some mental diseases as well so as known as depression and anxiety and also Alzheimer's disease which are all associated in research also newer research showing that a that inflammation increases the risk of depression anxiety and Alzheimer's neurological diseases so if we can decrease inflammation in the body we will decrease our modern lifestyle diseases but also these increasing mental diseases that we see in these modern lifestyle times um so I think that it's I think it's very interesting that we can go out in nature and we can use these natural stressors and it I don't want to have it sound very romantic or anything it's just it's just exposure to temperature actually just a colder to heat that is going to trick our body into a natural state again and reset it where the the homeostasis the balance has is lost a bit so the body is going to repair itself in that way and I think it's beautiful that we can do that just by changing the temperature of our body and although people are very scared of doing this because in our times we have been away from cold away from Heat temperature for some for decades now um since we isolated our houses better and we are more sedentary we also sit more indoor we don't move as much so this very modern sedentary lifestyle has made us more temperature comfortable just neutral so no no wonder I mean that obesity is increasing we don't expose ourselves to the Natural stresses that we did earlier on um in in our environment but also about so maybe the 70s the 60s where we started having more like comfortable Lifestyles right and obesity increases in the in the 80s we can see that from statistics so I think that if we can take in cold and heat and you mentioned other things also before but of course exercise is very important here and also a bit of fasting actually because it all increases the Hermetic stress in the body so it's it doesn't have to be other than natural stresses to the body which then could keep us in that Natural Balance again could we talk about what I refer to as the soberg principle which is to end on cold and the reason I called it the sober principle is because um in reviewing oh by the way I wasn't a official reviewer of your paper but I mean in reading and um reviewing your paper for its after published Contents I noticed that you had people end on cold and this has been a long-standing debate in the the uh deliberate cold exposure Community should you warm up with a warm shower afterwards or get back in the sauna what should you end on cold or end on Heat and the sober principle says end on cold as I understand it in order to force your body to heat itself back up and thereby increase metabolism further still is that right yes so when you when you end on the cold you you force your body to heat up by itself and that will require that you activate you keep your brown fat activated and also your muscles which is a good thing it's a good collaboration so keep your thermogenesis up and that's like an an exercise even when you go home so in that way you don't have to think about your cold exposure or dipping in in your plunge or open sea or what it is as just a an exercise that you do for one to two minutes and then it's over if you end on the code you have an exercise for your body going on for hours afterwards and that's not only on your metabolism but it's also going to keep your neurotransmitters activated as well and increase that because your body is still cold so you need that those neurotransmitters to activate the brown fat as well so that's going to make your brown fat cells more efficient and also your muscle cells more efficient so increasing mitochondria in the cells which will then generate heat very fast so if you have done this for a few times so maybe three four five times um being new to this but I have tried it a few times you will notice a switch where you like feel that you get easily warmer and you can keep yourself warmer and that is also what was shown in in my study is that the the winter swimmers were physically warmer on the skin compared to the control group so they when they are out of the cold when they're out of the cold just relaxing and we tested this in in on the days where they were sleeping in the lab so we could see that they had a more activation of the brown fat a higher temperature so probably because they also lose heat they have a high heat loss to the body compared to the control group um because they have a more vascular skin because of the contrast or cold and heat so they lose heat faster from the body during that day but is that a bad thing no probably not because that's gonna keep your brown fat and your muscles a little bit activated so we you will have to to it it has to work to keep you warm I and I would hypothesize that it also might lead to some of the um subjectively reported improvements in sleep because in order to fall asleep you need your core body temperature to drop by about one to three degrees so it's not just sufficient to be sleeping in a cold room and under the blanket you also need your body temperature to drop yes and so what you're saying if I understand correctly is that by forcing by ending on cold and forcing oneself to heat up naturally that increases the brown fat stores which I sort of see as a kind of like the oil in the candle of the Furnace that is thermogenesis and that in turn leads to increased heat loss which people might think oh I don't want to lose heat from the body but there are times when you want to lose heat from the body basically it sounds like what we want is to be a very efficient heating and cooling system yes that it's not about being cold or being hot it's really about keeping the system tuned well keeping the oil in the candle this brown fat um functioning yeah what could I ask one question about um fed or fasted is there any or rather are there any known benefits of doing deliberate cold exposure and or sauna fasted uh versus um after a meal say within the last hour or something of that sort I do my deliberate cold exposure first thing in the morning um so in general I'm fasted because I don't eat until a little bit later in the day yeah uh but what's known about that and was that looked at in your study I know you measured glucose but that was as a separate um test away from the cold away from the cold yeah but I also tested glucose on the days under cold so we measured that as well on on the cooling days um specifically on fasting and fat I don't know I don't think that I've seen studies specifically on this okay um more science needed um a number of people ask about the use of deliberate cold exposure to offset some of the symptoms of various diseases now here we're not talking about curing disease we're talking about offsetting symptoms um one question I've seen quite often is whether or not people with Raynaud's syndrome this is a syndrome and my high school girlfriend had this syndrome and I'll never forget uh we went we're at a school dance together and um this was when we first started dating and um she had Ray nodes which leads to very poor blood flow to the the uh the extremities and um and she was very cold so she left to go to the bathroom and warm up her hands in the warm water and I was left standing there at the dance and people came up to me and asked you know why I was there and who I was there with and I kept telling them who I was with and they didn't believe me because they couldn't believe that she would be with me made total sense if you knew me at the time um I was I I was way out of my league with her um at the time I like to think eventually I caught up but in any case um she was in the bathroom for about an hour so at one point I did consider the possibility that she had just left but indeed she hadn't she warmed her hands back up but people with Ray nodes suffer from this um from this thing a very very cold extremities um their fingertips will even turn blue um you know as if they were starting to get frostbitten it's quite dramatic um and that question gets asked whether or not there's any use of cold to try and increase the um elasticity the plasticity of the of the small capillaries and vessels by everything you've described up until now it seems like that would be a logical thing to do um and in addition to that whether or not people with autoimmune conditions people with um any other types of conditions are known to benefit from deliberate cold exposure I'm not aware of any studies but I get asked about this a lot and there were a lot of questions about this for you in the Twitter feed yeah I think [Music] I haven't seen any studies directed on this outcome and measuring rhinoids syndrome um I do know that it's it's uh it's not that rare actually a problem and I know that many women or more women than men suffer from this um but logically it would help them if they expose their hands to cold and also heat to make the vest it more vascular but and I have heard from people saying that it had helped them but also heard for some others saying it didn't help them so studies are needed on this specific topic I think I hurt my hands when I go into the cover and I don't have this syndrome at all but I keep my hands above the water you do yeah and I do that um often I take a little bit of a swim and then of course I have to have my hands in the water but it helps me when I then get back to the daddy and then take my hands up because then I can stand there for a little bit and get my one to two minutes exposure and then I can go up because then otherwise that would stop me from being in the water enough time that I as long as I I would like to so if people suffer from having this pain in the fingers and it can be very intense so just take the hands up a bit from the water and and that's gonna help you also boots neoprene boots it's going to help on the feet some people have the hurt and feel the pain in the feet and on the ankles and that's going to help them also a little bit okay so there is no problem with keeping hands out or feet in uh neoprene booties if people feel the need to do that if that's what the if pain of the hands or feet is a barrier for people doing uh cold exposure then it seems it would be okay to do to keep hands out or to keep your feet Yes because then you you do get the exposure uh but of course hands and feet are very potent places in your body to get a fast activation of your nervous system of course but if you can just you can also just dip them and then take them up it's gonna still gonna activate that but you have your full body is covered in in the co-preceptors you'll have a full activation anyways so you are providing very reassuring information to people because I know a number of people that do not like to put their hands in I find that the more of my body I get in the more comfortable I am it's like I don't know if it's psychologically and or physiologically I find that if where there's an interface between the water and the cold it's most uncomfortable so I prefer to just get everything under I keep my head out although I these days I've been dunking all the way in and then coming out and then dunking once more with my head under before I get out after the the plunge um that raises a different question now we're getting into kind of the practicalities of deliberate cold exposure which I think are important um sometimes I'll experience and I hear from a lot of people that they'll get a kind of back of the head headache at the interface of the of the water um you know when they're in doing cold immersion to the neck um okay I assume this has to do with blood flow that there's vasoconstriction right up until the neck and in the region surrounding it but that maybe there's still blood flow to the head but do we know what the origin of these um headaches is and again this doesn't happen for everybody but some people do experience them okay yeah I haven't really heard about that one specifically um so but I would say that there are different reasons for maybe keeping your head out of the water but it seems like maybe for some that could be a reason for like just getting like a quick head dunk going all the way in yeah that's what I've started doing to eliminate I wasn't getting headaches but I could I noticed that interface okay and I wasn't in the rest of the experience at somewhat experience of it so much so I started dunking all the way in I noticed in some of the photos that you've put out um and in your book that you'll sometimes wear a cap while you go in yeah okay and well it comes from uh different reasons uh so let's talk about some of the physiological reasons so when you submerged in in cold water up to the neck and study have shown and this is from Denmark studies from Peace hospital um that when you submerge into cold water up to the neck at zero degrees uh so zero degrees Celsius very cold and you have a decreased blood flow to the brain by around 30 to 40 percent and makes sense because you activate the SIM pathetic nervous system and and therefore you will have a less blood flow to the brain makes you maybe a little bit dizzier and proof again that you're you need a heart more than a brain because when the sympathetic nervous system gets activated uh blood flow is maintained to the heart to keep you alive but obviously taken away from the brain to keep you from thinking that's why it's hard to think when you're stressed yeah well the muscles and then your vital organs need to you have to be able to run away from that tiger right the rationale of its total sense and who am I to disagree with Mother Nature well but yeah so one of the reasons being that you should keep your head out of the water is that you could increase that decrease in blood flow to the brain further if you dump the head so there's just a very nice paper from um from a a research group in Canada where they have collectively looked at different papers where they compared heat loss in a group in the papers where they dunk the head and compared to heat loss uh submerging up to the neck to see how much extra heat do we lose from our core when we dump the head so and I think it's very interesting that if you submerge up to the neck you have a heat loss of 11 from the body core and when you then also dunk the head you will increase that heat loss rate by 36 percent so that means I'm not saying that I'm not I'm not here to say what is right and what is wrong I just think that people should know the information so they can for themselves evaluate what is best for them but if you increase your heat loss rate by 36 from your core that's going to increase your after drop which we touched upon a little bit earlier even further so that's meaning that you are closer to hypothermia than you are if you just submerge up to the neck so you should really think about whether this is like something that you want to do or if it's just better for you not to get that code in your core the beanie is also because I have a little bit of sensitive ears so meaning that if there's wind and because we swim in the open sea in Denmark we have a lot of wind our when our conditions are just very rainy very windy and when the temperature is also freezing you could get this what is that called um so very cold and light-headed just from wind so if you also submerge into cold water and you then get up you could you will get a brain freeze immediately so it is enough to just go up to the neck wherever you need to just not get dizzy also because the the heat loss is increased of course but also the blood flow to the brain has decreased so the beanie will keep you a little bit warmer so you can stay for one to two minutes so it's just a way of like getting around some of the conditions also so people can choose that if they they feel that but it's quite normal to do in in Scandinavia whereabini love it and um so for those of you afraid of doing a two-minute cold shower what uh Dr Silver just described uh let's uh you see how um she and others are capable of doing things far harder than that um when the way you describe it with the cold wind and Scandinavia and uh um is is quite striking along the lines of covering the head um there's this um seemingly paradoxical thing of people going into hot saunas and wearing wool caps you know if you go to a Banya or you I go to a sauna and there are people who are um well from Eastern Europe or typically or Finland or um Russia or Ukraine or elsewhere what you'll see is that many of them are wearing wool caps in the sauna which many people think is to make it hotter that's actually not the case it actually insulates you from the heat environment the urge the sense of urgency to get out of the hot sauna is a brain-driven mechanism and so um the reason that people wear wool hats in the saunas it actually lets you stay in the sauna longer because it takes a lot of heat to the skin before you feel that you you half to get out whereas so when you insulate the brain you don't get that signal it's pretty interesting I've tried this before just by putting a towel over my head in the sauna and you can stay in there you know much more easily and for for much longer you know as we talk about these different stimuli for um the Hermetic response the adaptation of distress you know it occurs to me that the the big ones in our evolutionary history have been light right I mean you were talking about seasonal changes um we know there especially as you go up to Nordic countries there are seasonal changes in the amount of Light by time of year dramatic ones in fact less so at the equator of course yeah um light temperature food movement and it it's sort of interesting and at the same time perhaps it should have been obvious to us that there are stimuli that our bodies have evolved to adapt to in very powerful ways and so the idea that temperature heat and cold could evoke these tremendous physiological changes that are beneficial for us probably shouldn't surprise us at all I mean I mean this is why we I mean these are not um esoteric mechanisms they're actually the the foundational mechanisms by which our our body and the bodies of other animals adapt um so I do have a question about the uh different ways that people could approach deliberate cold exposure so for instance um children I've been to banyas where there are kids you know six or seven years old with their parents at the Banya um and so they're in hot sauna I'm not suggesting people do this if they're if they're not you know adapted to it and you know talk to your parents kids and talk to your kids parents um talk to your doctors um but is remarkable I mean uh children doing sauna from a young age or deliberate cold exposure uh are there any data on this and is it safe assuming that you know obviously that they can swim and they're doing this in a tub or shower um and then I'd also like to ask you about are there any additional male female differences I know your study focused on men but um other Studies have focused on both and you of course um are a woman and can attest to your own experience with this um so children men women um differences there in terms of protocols is there anything that people should build into the structure of of their deliberate cold exposure that's unique to that so yeah so this was on cold exposure so um yeah I think that um starting with the the question about children um I think that it's important to to think about as children are smaller than adults so we cannot really completely transfer all the information and the benefits and also protocols for how long and and stuff like that two children we cannot do that because they are just smaller in mass and one study that actually um improves this is a study where they have compared a heat loss in children boys who were 12 years old compared to adults men and looked at the heat loss of the cold temperature and expose them to a one or one or two minutes um code exposure immersion up to the neck and what they saw was that the the boys in this study could actually defend the core temperature in a same way as the adults could but they had to use their muscles way faster so it means that they couldn't stay for as long and they used more energy to defend their core temperature compared to the to the adults but for one minute it seems that they could actually complain but they would be colder when they then come out because they are smaller in their Mass to that ratio right so it means that if the surface is so large on children and their mass and muscles being smaller to that ratio it means that they can be in the water less time before they get hypothermic so just think about that they are just smaller they can't defend their temperature for a very long time but in this study they saw that for up to I think it was a minute or so they can one minute yeah I'm glad you mentioned hypothermia and smaller bodied um people children uh I used to do some Pacific ocean swims in the morning um without wetsuits and I adapted to it pretty quickly and these are fairly long swims and we brought an excellent swimmer with us um that was interning with me for a while um is 16 years old at the time and very lean and um it wasn't small for his age but he was smaller than us than the it was all guys on the swim that day Sometimes women join us um and he got hypothermic and he's an excellent swimmer and he didn't report feeling overly cold but um fortunately we got him to Shore and heated him up again um so he lived I don't think his mother was going to ever let him go swimming with us again he's thriving in the world he's a university student now um and he recalls that swim I mean this is why you always want to Ocean swim with a buddy with people um yeah he he became hypothermic his teeth turned yellow he was slurring his words he wasn't making sense you know we got him on the shore and he was kind of you know drooling and a little semi-euphoric and then kind of you know it was um hypothermia is no joke so I think yeah so I I I'm really glad that this is coming up because the cold is a powerful stimulus and um and I and kids are at a and smaller bodied people are at a greater risk of hypothermia so a good reason to approach it with caution maybe start with cold showers get uh then cold immersion and still water natural water and open bodies of water of course are always going to be um more dangerous for other reasons currents and things of that sort of exactly okay I'm drowning yeah so important note there um what about any additional male female differences or similarities that um we should be aware of and this comes up all the time on social media anytime I post anything about a study it's what about women because oftentimes there are differences yeah yeah and and there are we we also just took about the difference in in in temperature in men and women so it means that if we did if we replicated my study in women it could be that they would have enough you can say cold exposure with just nine minutes per week it could be because they apparently are also just colder and and they have increased metabolism in their Brown fat is just they have more Brown fat it could be but this is just something that I I frankly don't know but women also do cold exposure winter swimming with the 11 minutes protocol I do it myself and feel good about it so I would say that um women Also regarding activation of the brown fat it should be the same um in theory but I don't know if women actually do you need to have another protocol when it comes to this rapid code exposure I think that it's another question if we are talking about ice swimming when it comes to how far can you be in the cold water without getting hypothermic then there will be differences in men and and female but but if you do this cold exposure for a very brief amount of time which is what I try to to talk to about talk about what we call also micro stressing the body to to increase the Hermetic stress the healthy stress then this is such a short amount of um exposure that it it's fairly the same I think I think women can look at this as a fairly a good protocol for the for for them as well I always say that if you really dread the cold and um and don't like the cold then you are a perfect candidate for using deliberate cold exposure because the sympathetic aka the stress response will be greater and thereby the adaptation to that shorter one or two minutes is um is going to be much greater right for people that are perfectly comfortable in the cold it's harder to get an adaptation response the same way that if somebody's very strong and they can lift a very heavy weight that that very heavy weight is unlikely to evoke the same kind of or same degree of of uh adaptive responses if somebody is not quite as strong so another reason to keep these exposures relatively short yeah and more frequent than to do longer duration exposures frequently however let's say somebody only had two days a week um to do deliberate cold exposure maybe they don't have access to Asana maybe they do would you suggest that they get in for one or two minutes then get out then get back in for another couple of minutes then get out and call that for you know four or five minutes um to try and get to that 11 minutes total per week um as opposed to getting in for a full five minutes um and then getting out and coming back a second time that week I know this is getting down into the weeds but these are the sorts of things that I think people really want to know because a lot of people either don't live close to a body of water or don't have a cold plunge um that they can do this with although cold shower apparently works too so most people live close to a shower yeah it's a definite I think the the changes in temperature is what is strengthening your your cells in the body so if you can do the short amount of exposure and then get out and get back in that is gonna you can say um strengthen yourselves because you are challenging them to to adapt to um changing temperatures so doing one session you can change this right you you can do it if you are able to go to cold water but also a sauna then you just do it that automatically you will have a change in temperature but you could also do it by variating the temperature in your coat plunge if you have if you have a plunge or if you have an open CEO or you have seasoning Seasons even you have we have that in Denmark so we have four seasons and the temperature is going to vary with that so we have nature who can just change this for us and we don't have to think about it if you have a cold plunge well then I would say that changing the temperature is what is going to create this hermetic stress and also keep your cells on its toes you can say because you are tried the body will still be um stressed to try to adapt to the new temperature as it's seen as something actually toxic to the body right it's a small small piece of toxicity that you are exposing yourself to we don't have to swallow it but it's enough that you touch it actually yeah great a great way to frame it um that brings me back to this idea of circadian time in your study you didn't um control first specific time of day and now I'm realizing that may be a great asset to the whole thing so we know for instance that our bodies go through pretty dramatic shifts in temperature from the time we wake up um our body starts heating up as we wake up and continues to heat until the afternoon and then starts to drop in the later afternoon and then assuming all things are working correctly um that body temperature drops and we sleep so I could imagine that doing deliberate cold exposure at different times just by way of convenience or by way of intention could be very beneficial because my body temperature is going to be quite a bit warmer at one time of day versus another and in that way keeping the system tuned and that's really what I keep hearing coming through in as you explain these data and all these beautiful studies yours and others is that it's not really about getting cold it's about going from warm to cold and from cold to warm it's not it and I love this idea because I I probably said this a hundred times on my podcast and a million times in my life and I'll continue to which is that biology is not an event it's a process like these these um metabolic and thermoregulatory processes are indeed like the Turning of a knob it's a verb as opposed to a noun and I and so I I think if people can internalize that idea that they're going to have a lot more flexibility a lot more fun and and get a lot more benefit as opposed to thinking okay I need to get into X degrees of water for x amount of time on X number of days yeah you know all the time how much and how cold and and I mean it's not it's just like well because we also don't have studies showing exactly if you just keep five degrees in your water and you do that for a month then what happens we maybe the future will know much more about this and I'm sure it's going to come and I really hope so but I just think by logically changing that temperature up and down up and down and you also do that in your water it doesn't really it's not that important what temperature you you will have your water then then just keep changing it going up and down it could be all up to 12 degrees Celsius you're going to activate your brown fat anyways I mean 12 19 degrees a cold air is enough to activate your rampers so maybe we don't have to go as cold as I think many people think um and putting ice even all the time it you don't have to it's not I don't think it's necessary to to expose yourself to that cold temperature all the time um but vary it a bit so keep the system off balance and that's the way to keep it tuned Yeah you mentioned a study that is more recent or an ongoing that's not published or um if you're willing um could you share maybe some of the data from that our findings from that study um with of course the the cue to everybody that these are not yet published data so the conclusions could change the data could change for that matter yeah so we have we haven't analyzed all the data yet and I I know from the study that we did publish that we we would need to look more of the data so I don't really have any results yet that I can share because we are still in very preliminary analysis of this so I I wouldn't know yet what to exactly say about it but what we looked at was both men and women method so that's that's coming oh that's fantastic that answer is going to please a great number of people and and Intrigue everybody so well listen I I want to really thank you for coming here today to talk about your work um and the incredible direction that it points to because I think that um you know no one study is definitive but your study really again stands as a landmark in the landscape of exploring deliberate cold exposure and Heat how it can impact and potentially impact our health because frankly there just haven't been that many um high resolution uh detailed modern studies of this there have been studies of sauna there have been some studies of coal there are a lot of groups in physiology that work on hypothermia and very cold exposure but um most of the temperatures used in those days just aren't practical so first of all I just want to thank you for doing the work that you've done and for the work that you continue to do I'm um uh waiting with baited breath as they say to um to hear the results of this study that's ongoing on both men and women so um we'll have to have you back to inform us about that soon and I want to thank you for um the incredible public education efforts that you've been doing on social media um and in with respect to your book um and we of course will put links to all of those things in the show note captions so people can learn from you and can continue to learn from you we we certainly need more scientists who are both experienced with doing hardcore research as it's called and who also do the practices I think that's a wonderful additional asset you know you're not just behind a lab coat or bundled up in a down uh in a down feather jacket as everyone else is getting in the cold you do these things and that you are so open and generous in the way that you share uh knowledge which includes coming here today to to share knowledge with me and uh our audience so thank you ever so much you're very welcome I am so pleased to be here and thank you so much for inviting me and I could explain my study and I can share some of my insights from from doing that so I'm very grateful for being here delighted and we'll have to have you back again thank you for joining me for today's discussion all about deliberate cold and deliberate heat exposure science and protocols with Dr Susanna soberg if you'd like to learn more about Dr soberg's research or you would like to learn about the research of her Institute The soberg Institute please see the links in the show note caption also in the show note caption you can find a link to Dr sober's excellent book winter swimming if you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast please subscribe to our YouTube channel that's a terrific zero cost way to support us in addition please subscribe to the podcast on Spotify and apple and in addition on both Spotify and apple you can leave us up to a five-star review if you have questions for me or topics you'd like me to cover on the huberman Lab podcast or guests that you'd like me to consider inviting on the huberman Lab podcast please put that in the comments on YouTube I do read all the comments in addition please check out the sponsors mentioned 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for those of you that haven't already subscribed to our so-called neural network newsletter this is a completely zero cost monthly newsletter that has summaries of podcast episodes and so-called tool kits toolkits are lists of about a page to two pages long that give the critical tools for instance for optimizing sleep for neuroplasticity or deliberate cold exposure or deliberate heat exposure optimizing dopamine again all available to you at zero cost you simply go to hubermanlab.com go to the menu tab in the corner scroll down to newsletter you provide us your email we do not share your email with anybody and in addition to that there are samples of toolkits on the hubermanlab.com website again under newsletter and you don't even have to sign up to access those but I think most people do end up signing up for the newsletter because it's rich with useful information and again completely zero cost thank you once again for joining me for today's discussion with Dr Susanna soberg and last but certainly not least thank you for your interest in science [Music]