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A blueprint for choosing the right fish oil supplement — filled with specific recommendations, guidelines for interpreting testing data, and dosage protocols.
Peter Attia recommends his patients split their cardio time accordingly: 80% zone 2, 20% VO2 max work (he also follows this rule). This video explains why. Another important topic Peter explains: The optimal interval length for VO2 max training is 3-8 minutes (much longer than traditional HIIT).
Rhonda: What do you think about, so metabolic flexibility, being the capability to shift between using glucose as a substrate and using fatty acids? I mean, this is something that-
Peter: This is the zone two thing, right? This is exactly why we train that zone two system. And that's why we have our patients spend 80% of their cardio training time in zone two. That's really pushing that metabolic flexibility. This is the training system for making sure you expand the capacity of your mitochondria to, under ever-increasing demands, have the ability to utilize fatty acids for oxidative phosphorylation, and glucose for that matter.
Rhonda: But if you were to do, let's say you're doing more high-intensity interval training, which I do a lot of, that increases the capacity because it's such a potent stimulator of mitochondrial biogenesis. So maybe, and I hesitate to say, I think a lot of times when I'm doing my HIIT, I'm still really using my mitochondria. Like, you know, I'm not like doing an all-out sprint, but like, you know, I do shift into using glucose, of course.
Peter: We just think that only 20% of the cardio training volume should be there. And the reason for that is actually kind of an empirical observation. If you ask the question, who are the most metabolically flexible, healthiest specimens we have on this planet, they are high-level endurance athletes, namely cross-country skiers, distance runners, and cyclists. So what do we know about this group? We know that they have the highest VO2 maxes of any humans on the planet, and we know that they are the most metabolically flexible of any humans on this planet. Now, my experience is far more with cyclists, and so I usually just talk about this through the lens of a cyclist. And the other thing I like about cycling compared to skiing or running is we can use wattage, because we can put people on power meters and we can get the numbers. A world-class cyclist is able to put out four watts per kilogram of power while keeping lactate below two millimole. In fact, the best cyclists in the world are probably at about 4.2, 4.3 watts per kilo. So let's just do the math on that. If someone's listening to this and they've ever been near a power meter. So if you're 80 kilos, you're 175 pounds, that means you're able to put out 330 to 340 watts, which, by the way, most people who weigh 80 kilos can't do that for one minute. Literally, they can't do that for one minute. These people can do it for hours and keep their lactate below two millimole. It's the single greatest demonstration of metabolic flexibility that you will ever see. How do these people train? This is one of the questions my patients ask me, is Peter, where is this 80-20 coming from? Where is the study that demonstrated this? And I said, well, the studies are all based on what do you have to do to achieve that level of performance? So these athletes and their coaches have all figured out that to produce the highest VO2 max and to produce the greatest degree of metabolic flexibility, you think of it as a pyramid, where the base of the pyramid is your zone two efficiency and the peak of the pyramid is your VO2 max. And the area, total area of the pyramid is your cardiorespiratory engine. So you want not a narrow base with a high peak, not a wide base with a short peak. You want a big base, big peak. And the way to get that is about 80-20. If you try to do too much high intensity, you simply don't have the aerobic base on which to build it. So yeah, you might have more mitochondria, but they're not as efficient. If you only do the low intensity stuff, they're efficient, but you might not have enough. This is a bit of an oversimplification, but you want the best of both worlds, right? You want both the breadth and the peak effectively. So what we basically do with our patients is we start from a standpoint of time. How much time are you willing to exercise a week? I'm not gonna tell you what you need to do. Let's start with you telling me what you're willing to do. And then the simplest approach is we'll put half of that into strength and stability, half of that into cardio. Of the cardio, it's 80-20. 80% of that will be zone two, 20% of that will be VO2 max. And VO2 max, by the way, training is pretty hard because it's slightly longer intervals than what people think of as traditional HIIT. So traditional HIIT works. I'm just saying it's not the best way to get there.
It's a good way to get there and and we know like even just looking at the tabata studies right tabata is neither one or the other right like a 20 on 10 off times eight rounds is neither a pure zone two no it's it's it's way too hard even for vo2 max actually because vo2 max sweet spot is three to eight minutes with one to one rest to recovery so three on three off three on three off that's a lower intensity than most people are doing in a hit class most people in a hit class are doing shorter intervals and pushing much harder
Rhonda: i i just had a talk with um with Marty Gibala and i asked him that question you know and he was like ronda you gotta do more three because i wanted i was like i want to do vo2 max training like this is what i do i do a lot of the you know i'll do i'll do 16 rounds and i'll do 20 seconds on 10 seconds off right but my 10 seconds off or i mean i my heart my heart rate's still pretty hot like i don't so um he's like you you gotta do like three minutes at least one you know and so i've shifted my my training now to doing and it's absolutely true i am not going as hard you can't yeah it's you just can't go as hard um and so
Peter: and it's an art form you'll you'll figure it out because you'll realize and you'll you'll have to you'll be like i went too hard and i was dead at a minute and a half and i was like loafing the last minute and a half or i held back too much and by the end of the three minutes it was like oh i actually could have gone harder and that's okay like you'll you'll you'll sort of figure out what that sweet spot is um but that that three to eight minutes is the is the optimal zone for for generating vo2 max power
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