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Alcohol disrupts top-down inhibition in the brain, shutting down areas involved in flexible behavior and consideration of options. As a result, people tend to say what they want. Drinking diminishes the prefrontal cortex and top-down inhibition, leading to an increase in habitual and impulsive behavior. This effect is observed in the short term, after a few drinks. Furthermore, repeated alcohol consumption causes changes in the brain circuits responsible for habitual and impulsive behavior.

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Cortisol normally spikes during the day, but downregulation methods like breathing exercises and physical exercise can help manage it. It's important to monitor psychological and physical stress in the six to eight hours before sleep. This approach supports a healthy cortisol release pattern, which is needed to reduce inflammation and aid recovery.

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Then we have alcohol. Alcohol messes with your kidney. It messes with your liver. It creates the bags. A lot of people think it's normal to drink alcohol on a regular basis. They drink a bottle of wine, two bottles of wine, and they think, well, that's fine. Well, here's the question. Can you give it up? If you can't give it up, then you're probably addicted.

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Cortisol, the fight or flight hormone, is released in response to stress. Cortisol levels are naturally higher in the morning, promoting alertness. Drinking coffee can interfere with this process, causing the body to release more cortisol and prolonging a stress state. High cortisol levels have been linked to blood sugar imbalances, immune system suppression, thyroid abnormalities, digestive impairment, hormonal imbalances, fertility issues, and inflammation. Constant cortisol activation can lead to coffee dependence and adrenal exhaustion.

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Alcohol is very bad for sleep. One, it will make you fall asleep faster. That's proven. But two, you get substantially less REM sleep. Sometimes if you have a couple drinks, people are like, oh my god. Was sleeping so hard. You absolutely were sleeping really hard because you deprived your brain of REM sleep the entire first half of the night, and now it's trying to make up it. Goes into these crazy deep REM cycles. Alcoholics who are drinking all the time when they're coming off, they have to oftentimes take medication for crazy dreams because they've been deprived of REM sleep for so long. They're trying to make up for

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"Most of the things that we regard as psychiatric disorders are positive feedback loops that have gone out of control." "So for example, let's say your mood starts to fall, and then you isolate. Right? And then you start performing worse at work." "Yeah. With with panic disorder, what happens is people get anxious. Right? But then they start to avoid and that makes their anxiety worse. And so then they're in a loop." "And with alcoholism, what happens to people is they start to see that if they drink it cures their hangover. Well, that's obviously that's gonna generate a positive feedback loop. And so many of the things that we see as conditions I think are positive feedback."

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Alcohol affects sleep by segmenting it, leading to more frequent awakenings and suppression of REM sleep. REM sleep is crucial for emotional regulation and mood stability. People may feel they slept deeply due to waking from a deep sleep and falling asleep faster from alcohol's sedating effects, but they are actually waking up frequently. This creates a negative cycle, as the type of sleep lost is what's needed to improve well-being.

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Alcohol has got to be the most common endocrine disruptor in the world. We don't think of it as like a toxin like that because it's not in rocket fuel or firefighting equipment or any of these other toxins. It disrupts pretty much every hormone in our body. Every kind of alcohol? Any kind of alcohol. Most of the studies are done in people who chronically consume alcohol, but it can be small amounts on a chronic basis. It can lower thyroid growth hormone. It raises estrogen, which is okay sometimes, but not if you're a man. It lowers testosterone. It raises cortisol. It damages the pancreas and insulin. Can your body recover from things like that? One thing about our body, it has an incredible regenerative capacity.

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- So if we have this hormone called cortisol, cortisol does a couple of interesting things: increases the inflammation that we experience, it increases our heart rate, it increases our blood pressure, it makes us more mentally stressed, we feel more mentally stressed, and it floods our bloodstream with sugar. - Now since it does all of these different things, each of these things goes back and regulates cortisol. - So there's a really interesting set of studies that show that people who have been traumatized have high levels of cortisol. - And those high levels of cortisol increase their hypervigilance, make it hard for them to go to sleep, and the cortisol is doing that to your brain.

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Cortisol levels spike throughout the day due to stress, cold water, and exercise, but should return to baseline quickly. Consistently elevated cortisol levels in the afternoon are a reliable indicator of certain forms of depression. This finding is based on the work of David Spiegel at Stanford psychiatry and Robert Sapolsky, author of "Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers" and "Behave."

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Regular drinkers, even those consuming just 1 or 2 drinks per night or a few on weekends, experience changes in their hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. This leads to increased cortisol, the stress hormone, being released even when they are not drinking. It's important to note that this applies to various drinking patterns, whether it's a drink with dinner or several on weekends. As a result, these individuals often feel heightened stress and anxiety during periods of sobriety.

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Alcohol is discussed for its effects on the body, with the speaker noting, "Alcohol messes with your kidney. It messes with your liver. It creates the bags." The idea that drinking regularly is normal is challenged: "A lot of people think it's normal to drink alcohol on a regular basis." They describe heavy drinking, saying, "They drink a bottle of wine, two bottles of wine, and they think, Well, that's fine." The speaker asks, "Well, here's the question. Can you give it up?" and concludes, "If you can't give it up, then you're probably addicted."

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If you drink coffee on an empty stomach for weeks, months, and years at a time, it messes with your HPA and HPT access. So it upregulates the adrenals causing them, I'm gonna put in this in air quotes, to eventually burn out. You feel more brain fog. You feel you feel more dependence on caffeine, meaning, like, you don't have the energy anymore without it because you've really pushed those adrenals. And when we push the HPA axis, the adrenals that hard, it often begins to downregulate the thyroid, and you feel that as a more sluggish metabolism. The brain fog, the low energy, the low mood, the dry skin, the cold hands and feet, more of those issues. So we wanna be careful. Again, what feels good in the short term can be disastrous in the long term overall.

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Alcohol, without a doubt, lowers testosterone levels. So I don't even wanna mix words that some people say, oh, you can have a couple drinks a week, can have this, you can have that. All of them, all of it lowers testosterone levels. It affects your liver. It can imbalance your blood sugar levels throughout the night. It can produce more stress hormones and lower testosterone.

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Alcohol, without a doubt, lowers testosterone levels. So I don't even want to mix words that some people say, oh, you can have a couple drinks a week, you can have this, you can have that. All of them, all of it lowers testosterone levels. It affects your liver. It can imbalance your blood sugar levels throughout the night. It can produce more stress hormones and lower testosterone.

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The speaker discusses cortisol as both essential and potentially harmful when chronically elevated. "We also see that it's during that nighttime phase when we drop levels of cortisol, which otherwise, if left in high concentrations, it's it's a stress related chemical." "It's it's an adaptive chemical too." "We all need cortisol." "But if you're just chronically high in cortisol, that is, you know, deathly for your cardiovascular system." "And sleep will actually ratchet down that level." Sleep reduces cortisol levels, and the speaker implies this protects cardiovascular health. Understanding this pattern highlights the importance of sleep in hormonal regulation.

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But, essentially, it's the syndrome where after you drink, once your blood alcohol content comes down to zero, you feel sort of apathetic, you're tired, you have a headache, you often feel nauseous. There's actual sort of effects of ethanol on your brain that lead to the hangover. I think if you are drinking at an amount that you're getting a hangover, it is a good sign that you're drinking above limit that would be considered okay for your body. It seems to be most related to how high the ethanol concentration in your brain gets because they've actually done a ton of studies with mice and with people. It was initially thought to be due to the byproducts of alcohol, like that acetaldehyde molecule we talked about, but it doesn't seem to be related to that. It seems to be related to ethanol.

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People who drink regularly, even just one or two drinks per night or a few drinks on the weekend, experience changes in their hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis. This results in more cortisol, the stress hormone, being released at baseline when they are not drinking. People who drink a bit, meaning one drink a night with dinner and maybe a few more on the weekend, or even two or three drinks on Friday or six drinks only on Saturday, experience increases in cortisol release from their adrenal glands when they are not drinking. As a consequence, they feel more stressed and more anxiety when they aren't drinking.

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Simple way of putting this is that if people meditate regularly, that's reducing stress. The reduction in stress is reducing cortisol. Again, cortisol is healthy, but it should be restricted to early part of the day. You don't want too many peaks in cortisol, especially not late in the day. By meditating, you get the healthy pattern of cortisol release. You sort of inoculate yourself somewhat against the unhealthy pattern of cortisol release. And as a consequence, either the sleep that people get is deeper and or the total amount of sleep that they need is reduced.

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Speaker 0: Alcohol, without a doubt, lowers testosterone levels. I don't even want to mix words that some people say, Oh, you can have a couple of drinks a week, you can have this, you can have that. All of them, all of it lowers testosterone levels. It affects your liver. It can imbalance your blood sugar levels throughout the night. It can produce more stress hormones and lower testosterone.

Mind Pump Show

Shocking Truth About Caffeine! - What Is Does To Fat Loss, Longevity & Overall Health | Mind Pump
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Over 85% of people misuse caffeine, leading to fat gain and muscle loss. In this episode, the hosts discuss optimal caffeine use to enhance workouts while minimizing negative effects. They highlight that if caffeine were discovered today, it likely wouldn't be legal due to its potential dangers, including anxiety, heart palpitations, and withdrawal symptoms. Many people rely on caffeine to function, indicating misuse. The hosts emphasize the importance of understanding caffeine's effects on the body, particularly its role in stress response and hormone imbalance. They explain that excessive caffeine can lead to HPA axis dysfunction, previously known as adrenal fatigue, which hampers muscle building and fat loss. Stress from caffeine can cause the body to prioritize fat storage over muscle gain, especially when combined with other stressors like poor sleep or high-intensity workouts. The conversation also touches on the cultural shift towards high caffeine consumption, with energy drinks now containing significantly more caffeine than in the past. The hosts suggest that individuals should consider cycling off caffeine to reset their tolerance and improve overall health. They recommend strategies for reducing caffeine intake, such as gradually weaning off or going cold turkey, despite the discomfort that may accompany withdrawal. The hosts discuss the importance of addressing metabolic health before making dietary or training changes, particularly for clients experiencing hormone imbalances. They stress that a healthy metabolism is crucial for effective fat loss and muscle gain, and that clients should focus on improving their health first before pursuing aggressive weight loss strategies. Listeners are encouraged to prioritize protein intake and consider alternatives to caffeine, such as Brain FM, to enhance focus and energy during workouts. The hosts also share personal anecdotes about their experiences with caffeine and fitness, emphasizing the need for a balanced approach to health and wellness. In conclusion, the episode underscores the significance of understanding caffeine's impact on the body, the importance of metabolic health, and the need for a mindful approach to fitness and nutrition. The hosts encourage listeners to be aware of their caffeine consumption and to prioritize their overall health for better long-term results.

The Dhru Purohit Show

ALCOHOL DETOX: How Giving Up Alcohol Can CHANGE YOUR LIFE Forever | Antonio Neves
Guests: Antonio Neves, David Perlmutter, Austin Perlmutter
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Antonio Neves discusses his relationship with alcohol, noting that while he drinks occasionally during client dinners, he feels self-imposed pressure to join in. He acknowledges that he manages his intake and stays hydrated, but recognizes that alcohol affects his sleep and recovery differently now that he is in his 40s. The conversation shifts to the broader implications of alcohol consumption, highlighting studies that link moderate to heavy drinking with increased dementia risk, brain shrinkage, and reduced blood flow to the brain. David Perlmutter and Austin Perlmutter contribute insights about the wellness community's evolving stance on alcohol, emphasizing that cutting back can lead to better health outcomes. They reference the Blue Zones, where some cultures consume alcohol in moderation, but stress that other lifestyle factors, such as strong community ties and healthy diets, play a significant role in longevity. Antonio shares a personal story about his father's heavy drinking and its potential link to his dementia, prompting a discussion about the societal normalization of alcohol and the pressure to drink. The group reflects on the emotional aspects of drinking, noting how it can serve as a coping mechanism for stress and anxiety, often leading to unhealthy habits. They explore alternatives to alcohol, such as non-alcoholic beverages and the importance of community support. The concept of "Man Morning" is introduced, a gathering aimed at fostering connections among men without the influence of alcohol. The group emphasizes the need for intentional conversations and the value of being present with one another. The discussion highlights the importance of surrounding oneself with supportive individuals and the impact of social connections on health. They encourage listeners to take inventory of their relationships and consider the benefits of reducing alcohol consumption. The conversation concludes with practical action items, such as reaching out to friends and scheduling activities that promote connection and well-being, reinforcing the idea that community and intentionality are crucial for personal growth.

The Dhru Purohit Show

Silent Health Killer: "This Is Linked To Cancer, Weight Gain & Cognitive Decline" | Ruari Fairbairns
Guests: Ruari Fairbairns
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Regular alcohol consumption significantly impacts individuals, often without their awareness. Many people are conditioned to associate alcohol with social interactions due to cultural norms, leading to ingrained neural pathways that connect drinking with identity. Alcohol is a neurotoxin that damages the brain, disrupts sleep, and contributes to mental health issues like anxiety and depression. It is linked to numerous physical ailments, including cancer, and can hinder personal productivity and relationships. Research, such as a study by Professor Kevin Moore, shows that taking a break from alcohol can lead to substantial health improvements, including weight loss and increased happiness. Many individuals use alcohol to numb emotional pain or dissatisfaction in their lives, which can mask underlying issues that need addressing. Sobriety can catalyze significant life changes, revealing the true reasons behind drinking habits. The societal expectation to drink creates peer pressure, making it challenging for individuals to change their relationship with alcohol. However, sobriety movements and alcohol-free alternatives are becoming more accessible, allowing people to feel included without drinking. The conversation around alcohol needs to shift, recognizing its harmful effects and promoting healthier lifestyles. Community support is crucial for those seeking to change their drinking habits. Engaging with like-minded individuals can provide encouragement and reduce feelings of isolation. Programs like One Year No Beer offer structured challenges to help individuals reassess their relationship with alcohol, emphasizing that change is possible without hitting rock bottom. Awareness is key to behavior change. Tools like journaling and wearables can help individuals track their alcohol consumption and its effects on their health. Ultimately, the goal is to cultivate a healthier lifestyle, where individuals can enjoy life without relying on alcohol.

Huberman Lab

What Alcohol Does to Your Body, Brain & Health
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In this episode of the Huberman Lab Podcast, Andrew Huberman discusses the effects of alcohol on biology, behavior, and health. He highlights that both humans and animals consume alcohol for various reasons, including recreation and medicinal purposes. The episode covers the biological impact of alcohol, including its effects on brain function, behavior, and the potential health implications of low to moderate drinking versus abstaining entirely. Huberman emphasizes that high alcohol consumption (12-24 drinks per week) is linked to neurodegeneration, particularly in the neocortex, which is crucial for memory and planning. A recent study involving over 35,000 adults found that even low to moderate drinking (1-2 drinks per day) may lead to thinning of the neocortex, indicating that chronic low-level alcohol intake can still disrupt brain health. The podcast also addresses the genetic factors influencing alcohol consumption and the risks associated with drinking at a young age, which can lead to long-term dependence. Huberman aims to provide listeners with the knowledge to make informed decisions about alcohol consumption, whether to abstain or drink in moderation. Huberman explains the chemistry of alcohol, noting that ethanol is toxic and must be metabolized into acetaldehyde, which is even more harmful. This process can lead to cellular damage and is linked to various health issues, including cancer risk. Alcohol disrupts the gut microbiome, leading to inflammation and potentially increasing cravings for more alcohol. The episode discusses the physiological effects of alcohol, including its impact on the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which regulates stress hormones. Regular drinkers may experience increased baseline cortisol levels, leading to heightened stress and anxiety when not drinking. Huberman stresses that while alcohol may provide temporary relief from stress, it ultimately exacerbates stress levels over time. Huberman also covers the phenomenon of hangovers, which result from disrupted sleep, dehydration, and gut microbiome imbalance. He suggests that consuming electrolytes, fermented foods, and engaging in deliberate cold exposure may help alleviate hangover symptoms. Tolerance to alcohol is explained as a process where repeated exposure diminishes the positive effects of alcohol while increasing negative feelings, leading to a cycle of increased consumption. Huberman warns that even moderate drinking can have detrimental effects on health, including increased cancer risk, particularly breast cancer, due to alcohol's impact on DNA methylation and hormonal balance. The episode concludes with a discussion on the importance of understanding the risks associated with alcohol consumption, particularly for those with a family history of alcoholism or those who start drinking at a young age. Huberman encourages listeners to consider the long-term effects of alcohol on their health and to explore healthier coping mechanisms for stress and social situations.

Huberman Lab

Dr. Matt Walker: The Biology of Sleep & Your Unique Sleep Needs | Huberman Lab Guest Series
Guests: Matthew Walker, Allan Rechtschaffen
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In this episode of the Huberman Lab guest series, Andrew Huberman and Dr. Matthew Walker discuss the importance of sleep, its stages, and practical tools for improving sleep quality. Dr. Walker, a professor of neuroscience and psychology and author of *Why We Sleep*, emphasizes the critical role sleep plays in mental and physical health, including its effects on emotional regulation, learning, and neuroplasticity. The conversation begins with an overview of sleep, which is divided into two main types: non-rapid eye movement (non-REM) sleep and rapid eye movement (REM) sleep. Non-REM sleep is further categorized into four stages, with stages three and four representing deep sleep, essential for physical restoration. REM sleep is associated with dreaming and plays a vital role in emotional processing and memory consolidation. The typical sleep cycle lasts about 90 minutes, alternating between non-REM and REM sleep, with the ratio of these stages changing throughout the night. Dr. Walker introduces the QQRT formula—Quality, Quantity, Regularity, and Timing—as a framework for optimizing sleep. Quality refers to the continuity and depth of sleep, while Quantity is the total hours slept, ideally between 7 to 9 hours for adults. Regularity involves maintaining consistent sleep and wake times, while Timing relates to aligning sleep with one’s natural circadian rhythm or chronotype. The discussion highlights that sleep deprivation can lead to significant impairments in cognitive function, emotional regulation, and physical health. For example, a lack of sleep can reduce testosterone levels in men and impair immune function, making individuals more susceptible to illness. Dr. Walker notes that even one night of poor sleep can dramatically affect hormone levels and metabolic health, increasing the risk of conditions like type 2 diabetes. Cortisol, a hormone associated with stress, is also discussed. Its levels naturally rise in the morning to promote wakefulness and decrease during sleep. Sleep helps regulate cortisol levels, and disturbances in sleep can lead to elevated cortisol, contributing to stress and anxiety. The episode concludes with practical advice for improving sleep, such as creating a conducive sleep environment, managing light exposure, and avoiding stimulants before bedtime. Dr. Walker emphasizes the importance of understanding one’s sleep patterns and making adjustments to enhance sleep quality, ultimately leading to better overall health and well-being.
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