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cover of episode Dr. Craig Heller: Using Temperature To Optimize Performance, Brain & Body Health

Dr. Craig Heller: Using Temperature To Optimize Performance, Brain & Body Health

2021/10/4
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Huberman Lab

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A
Andrew Huberman
是一位专注于神经科学、学习和健康的斯坦福大学教授和播客主持人。
C
Craig Heller
Topics
Andrew Huberman: 控制核心体温是优化身心表现最有效的方法之一,无论环境如何。 冷敷头部或颈部并非最佳降温方式,反而可能适得其反,导致体温过高。 Craig Heller: 冷水浴或冷水淋浴会引起肾上腺素分泌和血管收缩,但其生理益处有限。 主要散热部位是手掌、脚底和面部上部,因为这些部位有特殊的血管结构,可以有效地将血液从动脉直接输送到静脉,绕过毛细血管,从而快速散热。 冷水浴和冷水淋浴的主要区别在于冷水浴会形成边界层,而冷水淋浴不会。 运动前冷水浴或冷水淋浴可以提高身体散热能力,从而延长有氧运动时间。 无氧运动会局部升高肌肉温度,导致肌肉疲劳。无氧运动中,肌肉产热速度远超血液散热速度,可能导致肌肉过热。 肌肉疲劳的主要原因是肌肉局部温度升高,而非缺乏能量或氧气。 身体表面是良好的绝缘体,冷敷无法快速冷却肌肉。 冷敷颈部或头部可能适得其反,导致核心温度升高,因为这会刺激大脑的体温调节中枢。 运动后脑雾或精神疲劳可能与大脑温度升高有关。 面部上方(发际线以上)的血管会将冷血输送到大脑,从而起到降温作用。 冷却手掌可以显著提高无氧运动表现,并消除延迟性肌肉酸痛,使无氧运动表现增加三倍。 适当冷却可以使耐力运动表现翻倍。 CoolMitt 的温度适中,不会导致血管收缩。使用 CoolMitt 冷却手掌 3 分钟可以获得最佳效果。 使用冷冻豌豆等冷敷物冷却手掌可以提高运动表现,但需要找到合适的冷却时间和方式。 冷却手掌、脚底和面部比冷却腋窝、腹股沟和颈部降温速度快一倍。 治疗体温过低应优先冷却四肢。 治疗体温过低可以使用暖水袋等暖敷物,并优先加热脚部。 动物也会利用手掌和脚底散热。 热身的主要目的是提高关节灵活性,而非升高体温。 通过冷却训练获得的运动能力提升是永久性的。 女性运动员使用冷却技术也能获得与男性运动员相同的效果。 颤抖可以提高新陈代谢,即使没有寒冷刺激也能发生。 熊的体温在冬眠期间会下降到33-34摄氏度,并通过颤抖来维持体温。 人类也存在棕色脂肪,但分布不集中。冷敷上背部刺激棕色脂肪产热的效果可能并不理想。 脑冻结是由脑部血管血流变化引起的。 任何形式的肌肉活动都会增加能量消耗和产热。 含兴奋剂的能量饮料可能会降低运动表现,因为咖啡因是腺苷的拮抗剂,会减少肌肉的氧气利用率。 规律的睡眠时间、避免睡前使用电子设备、睡前放松以及合适的睡眠温度有助于提高睡眠质量。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

Why do cold showers or ice baths often feel good but may not be the best way to cool down?

Cold showers and ice baths stimulate vasoconstriction, which can make it harder for the body to lose heat. While they provide an adrenaline rush and feel good, they can actually impair heat loss by constricting blood vessels, leading to hyperthermia.

What are the best body parts to cool for optimal performance?

The best body parts for cooling are the palms of the hands, the soles of the feet, and the upper part of the face. These areas have specialized blood vessels that allow for efficient heat loss, bypassing capillaries to shunt blood directly from arteries to veins.

How does cooling the palms of the hands enhance performance?

Cooling the palms can triple anaerobic performance, such as dips or bench presses. By cooling these specialized heat loss portals, athletes can significantly increase their work volume and reduce delayed onset muscle soreness, allowing them to perform more reps and sets without fatigue.

Why do traditional methods like putting ice on the neck or back of the head often fail to cool the body effectively?

Putting ice on the neck or back of the head can actually trick the brain's thermostat into thinking the body is cooler than it is, leading to reduced heat loss. This can result in a rise in core body temperature, making these methods counterproductive for cooling.

How does cooling the brain impact cognitive performance?

Cooling the brain can reduce inflammation and improve cognitive function. A rise in body temperature impairs mental performance, and cooling the brain through the upper face can help maintain clarity and focus during physical exertion.

What is the role of brown fat in thermogenesis?

Brown fat is a specialized fat tissue that produces heat by burning energy. It is activated by cold exposure and shivering, helping to maintain body temperature. In humans, brown fat is distributed throughout the body, unlike in hibernating animals, where it is concentrated in specific pads.

How does shivering increase metabolism?

Shivering increases metabolism by activating muscle activity, which raises energy consumption and heat production. While shivering can boost metabolism several times above resting levels, it is less efficient than exercise, which can increase metabolism up to 10 times.

Why might caffeine in pre-workout drinks hinder performance?

Caffeine acts as an adenosine antagonist, reducing adenosine release in muscles. Adenosine normally dilates blood vessels to increase oxygen supply to muscles during exercise. By blocking adenosine, caffeine may reduce oxygen utilization and hinder muscular performance.

What is the best way to warm up a hypothermic person?

The best way to warm up a hypothermic person is to use warm pads on the feet, as they have specialized blood vessels that can quickly transfer heat to the core body. This method is more effective than warming the torso or extremities directly.

How does cooling enhance recovery from exercise?

Cooling during or after exercise eliminates delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) by preventing the buildup of microtears in muscles. This allows athletes to perform more work without the typical post-exercise soreness, enhancing overall recovery and performance.

Shownotes Transcript

This episode I am joined by Dr. Craig Heller, Professor of Biology at Stanford University and world expert on the science of temperature regulation. We discuss how the body and brain maintain temperature under different conditions and how most everyone uses the wrong approach to cool off or heat up. Dr. Heller teaches us the best ways and in doing so, explains how to offset hyperthermia and hypothermia. He also explains how we can use the precise timing and location of cooling on our body to greatly enhance endurance and weight training performance. He describes how cooling technology discovered and engineered in his laboratory has led to a tripling of anaerobic (weight training) performance and allowed endurance athletes to run further and faster, as well as to eliminate delayed onset muscle soreness. Dr. Heller explains how heat impairs muscular and mental performance, and how to cool the brain to reduce inflammation and to enhance sleep and cognition. We discuss how anyone can apply these principles for themselves, even their dogs! Our conversation includes both many practical tools and mechanistic science.

For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com).

Thank you to our sponsors

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Timestamps

(00:00:00) Introducing Dr. Craig Heller, Physiology & Performance

(00:02:20) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT

(00:06:45) Cold Showers, Ice Baths, Cryotherapy

(00:10:45) Boundary Layers 

(00:11:55) Cooling Before Aerobic Activity to Enhance Performance

(00:14:45) Anaerobic Activity Locally Increases Muscle Heat

(00:16:45) Temperature Gates Our Energy Use 

(00:19:00) Local Versus Systemic Fatigue: Heat Is Why We Fail

(00:22:10) Cooling Off: Most Methods are Counterproductive

(00:26:43) Exercise-Induced Brain Fog

(00:27:45) Hyperthermia

(00:31:50) Best Body Sites for Cooling: Palms, Foot Pads, Upper Face 

(00:38:00) Cooling Your Brain via The Upper Face; Concussion

(00:41:25) Extraordinary (Tripling!) Performance by Cooling the Palms

(00:45:35) Enhancing Recovery, Eliminating Soreness w/Intra-workout Cooling

(00:50:00) Multiple Sclerosis: Heat Sensitivity & Amelioration with Cooling

(00:51:00) Enhancing Endurance with Proper Cooling

(00:53:00) Cool Mitt, Ice-Cold Is Too Cold, 3 Minutes Cooling

(00:58:20) How You Can Use Palmer Cooling to Enhance Performance

(01:01:15) Radiation, Convection, Heat-Transfer, Role of Surface Area

(01:04:40) Hypothermia Story, Ideal Re-Heating Strategy

(01:11:40) Paw-lmer Cooling for Dog Health & Performance

(01:12:45) Warming Up, & Varying Temperature Around the Body

(01:17:35) Cooling-Enhanced Performance Is Permanent

(01:19:55) Anabolic Steroids versus Palmer Cooling

(01:24:00) Female Athletic Performance 

(01:25:18) Shivering & Cold, Metabolism

(01:26:55) Studies of Bears & Hibernation, Brown Fat

(01:31:10) Brown Fat Distribution & Activation In Humans

(01:34:18) Brain Freeze, Ice Headache: Blood Pressure, Headache

(01:37:50) Fidgeters, Non-Exercise Induced Thermogenesis

(01:39:44) How Pre-Workout Drinks, & Caffeine May Inhibit Performance

(01:43:42) Sleep, Cold, Warm Baths, Screens, & Socks

(01:48:44) Synthesis

(01:49:30) Supporting the Podcast & Scientific Research 

Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac)

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