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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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Cortisol, the body's primary stress hormone released by the adrenal glands, is crucial for the fight or flight response, increasing energy availability during stress. Cortisol levels follow a daily rhythm, peaking in the morning and decreasing at night. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, potentially causing weight gain, high blood pressure, and impaired immunity. Cortisol impacts metabolism, blood sugar, inflammation, memory, and mood; balanced cortisol is essential for health. Both high and low cortisol levels can be detrimental. Consistently high cortisol can lead to Cushing's syndrome, while low cortisol can result in Addison's disease, characterized by fatigue, weight loss, and low blood pressure. Balanced cortisol levels are therefore important.

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Cortisol is the body's primary stress hormone, released by the adrenal glands to aid the fight or flight response by increasing energy. Cortisol levels follow a daily rhythm, peaking in the morning and decreasing at night. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, potentially causing weight gain, high blood pressure, and impaired immunity. Cortisol impacts metabolism, blood sugar, inflammation, memory, and mood; balanced cortisol is crucial for health. Both high and low cortisol levels can be detrimental. Consistently high cortisol can lead to Cushing's syndrome, while low cortisol can result in Addison's disease, marked by fatigue, weight loss, or low blood pressure. Balanced cortisol levels are essential.

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High cortisol levels may increase the risk of developing diabetes. Cortisol can break down bone, fat, and muscle tissue, sending the breakdown products to the liver. The liver uses these products to make glucose and release it into the bloodstream. The liver also stores glucose as glycogen, which can be converted to glucose with the help of epinephrine and norepinephrine. High cortisol levels can increase the effectiveness of these two hormones, resulting in more glycogen breakdown into glucose. These mechanisms can cause excess glucose to build up in the blood, potentially leading to insulin resistance and type two diabetes.

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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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Cortisol, the stress hormone produced by the adrenal gland, redirects energy to the brain, negatively impacting it. Cortisol also affects glucose levels by interfering with mitochondria. Higher cortisol levels lead to greater glucose spikes but impaired clearance. This mitochondrial interference results in insulin resistance. Increased stress correlates with elevated fasting insulin due to reduced mitochondrial function. Addressing the stress is presented as the primary solution.

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Every 24 hours, everyone experiences a significant cortisol release. Sunlight exposure increases cortisol by 50%, and exercise can add another 50-75% increase. This cortisol peak should ideally occur early in the day. Despite cortisol's negative reputation, this surge provides increased energy, improved immune function, and enhanced focus throughout the day. It also sets a timer, leading to sleepiness approximately 14-16 hours later.

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When the body's stress response is imbalanced, the pineal gland produces melatonin, which pulses strongly in the afternoon and evening to prepare for sleep and lower cortisol levels. Healthy circadian rhythms and cortisol-melatonin cycles are essential for feeling calm and sleepy at night. However, high cortisol levels in the afternoon or evening can lead to feeling tired and wired, making it difficult to sleep. One might fall asleep from exhaustion but then wake up between 1 and 4 AM. This can occur when someone is constantly busy and working until bedtime, leaving the body in a stressed state with elevated cortisol levels.

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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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Chronically elevated cortisol increases glucose release into the bloodstream, regardless of current blood sugar. This can lead to increased blood sugar levels and insulin resistance. The consequences include increased appetite, weight gain, and decreased muscle mass. Therefore, if you feel your metabolism is not functioning optimally, you should check your cortisol levels and evaluate your stress management practices.

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Balanced cortisol levels, high in the morning and low at night, along with stable blood sugar, are crucial for healthy sleep. Imbalances in cortisol disrupt the pineal gland's melatonin production, causing strong pulses in the afternoon and evening, hindering the body's ability to calm down and sleep. When cortisol remains high in the afternoon or evening, individuals may experience feeling tired but unable to sleep, or they might fall asleep from exhaustion only to wake up between 1 and 4 AM. This mid-night awakening often occurs when individuals engage in high-activity levels before bed, leaving the body in a stressed state with elevated cortisol.

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"People who drink regularly, could be just one or two drinks per night, or it could be somebody that drinks just on Fridays or just on Saturdays, or maybe just on the weekend, two to four drinks." "Well, those people experience changes in their hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis that result in more cortisol, more of this so called stress hormone being released at baseline when they are not drinking." "Again, I offer a bunch of different patterns to explain how it could also be two or three drinks on Friday or six drinks only on Saturday." "Well, all of those groups experience increases in cortisol release from their adrenal glands when they are not drinking." "And as a consequence, they feel more stressed and more anxiety when they aren't drinking."

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"Stress is created by not being able to predict something that's going to happen in your life. The perception that something's going get worse or you can't control something, right?" "So, when that occurs, we switch on that primitive nervous system called the fight or flight nervous system, and the brain goes into this very alarm state called That means pay attention to the outer world, there's danger out there." "But if it's not a predator and it's traffic, or your co worker, or your ex, this is where it gets to be a problem because it becomes very maladaptive, right?" "And like a lightning storm in the clouds, the brain starts firing very, very incoherently." "And when the brain's incoherent, we're incoherent."

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Stress makes you gain weight. Did you know that? When we are stressed, the body releases a hormone called cortisol. This is a stress hormone. And cortisol leads to weight gain, specifically around the waistline. Cortisol also breaks down muscle, which reduces your metabolism and leads to further weight gain.

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Cortisol is an essential hormone, not inherently bad. It wakes us up and provides energy. As a stress hormone, it burns energy and pares down muscle, making us more efficient at storing calories, which helps us survive on less. It also encourages fat storage. Chronically elevated cortisol levels can cause problems, leading to increased visceral body fat and more fat storage in the midsection.

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Cortisol makes you gain weight. Now it's a stress hormone. When you have high levels of cortisol, it causes you to gain belly fat, it causes your muscles to break down, it makes you more resistant, it raises your blood pressure, it shrinks your memory center in your brain. And what happens is stress also affects your fat cells, literally your nervous system, your autonomic nervous system, your sympathetic nervous system, your fight or flight nervous system has neuronal connections to your fat cells. So literally when you're stressed, your fat cells are listening. And when your body is actually in a state of stress, it's not designed to actually lose weight initially because you want to be flooding your body with sugar and fatty acids.

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Cortisol makes you gain weight. Now it's a stress hormone. When you have high levels of cortisol, it causes you to gain belly fat, it causes your muscles to break down, it makes you more resistant, it raises your blood pressure, it shrinks your memory center in your brain. So literally when you're stressed, your fat cells are listening. And when your body is actually in a state of stress, it's not designed to actually lose weight initially because you want to be flooding your body with sugar and fatty acids. And so you're basically inhibiting the process of metabolism metabolism and you're increasing your fat storage and you're doing all these things that are really bad. And they're good if you're running from a tiger for two minutes, but not if you're doing this every day.

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High cortisol levels may increase the risk of diabetes because cortisol breaks down bone, fat, and muscle tissue. The breakdown products go to the liver, which uses them to make glucose and release it into the bloodstream. The liver also stores glucose as glycogen. Cortisol can increase the effectiveness of epinephrine and norepinephrine, two stress hormones that help the liver break down glycogen into glucose. These two mechanisms can cause excess glucose to build up in the blood, leading to insulin resistance and potentially type 2 diabetes.

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"Go back a 100 million years and some dinosaur is getting stressed because another one is trying to eat it." "it's secreting the exact same stress hormone, the same molecule as we do in a traffic jam." "When that hormone is mobilized, because you're running for your life, everything they're doing is saving your life." "It's sending energy to your thigh muscles." "It's making your heart beat faster." "But what do we do? We sit and we worry for thirty days each month about how we're going to pay the rent, and we're secreting the same hormones and making the same changes in our body and run for your life and your blood pressure goes through the roof." "That's good. That's saving your life." "Do the same thing when you're thinking about psychological stressors and do it chronically and you're going to get sick."

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Cortisol, a stress hormone, can cause weight gain due to overactive stress responses. High cortisol levels lead to belly fat accumulation, muscle breakdown, insulin resistance, elevated blood pressure, and shrinkage of the brain's memory center. Stress impacts fat cells through neuronal connections, causing them to store more fat. When stressed, the body inhibits metabolism and increases fat storage, which is beneficial for short-term survival situations, but detrimental when experienced daily.

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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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There are receptors in the brain that monitor the levels of cortisol in a way to sense threat in our environment. When those levels are high, the brain immediately thinks, I'm about to die. What is the biggest threat to my survival? The first threat that the brain will consider is starvation. So to try to protect us, one of the things that cortisol does is lay down extra fat in the abdominal fat cells. We can digest that fat and stay alive until a food source becomes available. Wait, so are you saying that stress is causing belly fat? Yeah. Wait, what?

Mind Pump Show

Stress is Making You Fat! Here’s Why and How to Fix It | Mind Pump 2754
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Stress is presented as more than a simple calorie equation; chronic stress reshapes hormone activity, notably cortisol and insulin sensitivity, which in turn can shift fat storage, appetite, and energy use. The hosts explain that cortisol follows a diurnal pattern, and when stress remains elevated or the rhythm is inverted, sleep quality deteriorates, further deranging hormonal balance and driving cravings for salty, sugary, and fatty foods. They emphasize that these hormonal fluctuations interact with eating behaviors, sleep, and physical activity in a feedback loop that can derail progress if not addressed at multiple levels beyond calories in and out. Beyond biology, the conversation delves into how perception and daily routines modulate stress responses. They highlight the power of reframing work and life events, cultivating a sense of purpose, practicing gratitude, and surrounding oneself with supportive people. The speakers share practical examples, such as acknowledging hard days, articulating appreciation, and recognizing that perspective can dampen the physiological impact of stress, which in turn aids consistency in training, sleep, and nutrition over time. The episode then shifts to concrete planning: aligning training with stress levels, choosing appropriate programs, and prioritizing recovery. They advocate for structured, lower-volume or recovery-focused approaches during high-stress periods, while reserving harder training blocks for times when stress is lower. The discussion also covers behavioral strategies to reduce decision fatigue around food and workouts, including scheduling, pre-emptive plan-building, and leveraging accountability from coaching or communities to sustain healthier choices when mood or sleep falter. Towards the end, the hosts stress that managing stress is a multifaceted, ongoing process. They encourage integrating adequate sleep, intentional meals with sufficient protein and calories, and purposeful movement that supports resilience. The takeaway is that progress hinges on treating stress as a signal to adjust training, sleep, and nutrition rather than ignoring it, and on implementing a balanced, sustainable framework that supports long-term health and body composition goals.

Huberman Lab

How to Control Your Cortisol & Overcome Burnout
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast. I'm Andrew Huberman, a professor at Stanford, and today we're discussing cortisol, its importance, and how to manage it to avoid or overcome burnout. Cortisol is often labeled as a stress hormone, but it plays a crucial role in energy deployment and overall well-being. The key takeaway is to maintain a proper cortisol rhythm: high in the morning shortly after waking and low in the evening before sleep. This rhythm is essential for health, mood, sleep, and performance. If you're feeling burnt out, wired and tired, or experiencing morning anxiety, adjusting your cortisol rhythm can help. Cortisol is produced in the adrenal glands and is involved in energy regulation, particularly glucose release into the bloodstream. It acts on a slower time scale compared to adrenaline, which is released quickly in response to stress. Understanding cortisol's role as an energy hormone rather than just a stress hormone is crucial. Your cortisol levels fluctuate throughout the day, with a specific pattern: minimal secretion before sleep, a slight rise during the early hours of sleep, a significant increase during the last hours of sleep, and a sharp spike upon waking. This spike is known as the cortisol awakening response (CAR), which is vital for feeling alert in the morning. To optimize cortisol levels, get bright light exposure within the first hour of waking. Sunlight is best, but a 10,000 lux artificial light can also work. Hydration is also important; drinking water first thing in the morning can help increase alertness and cortisol levels. Caffeine can be beneficial but should be consumed later in the morning to avoid a sharp decline in cortisol levels. Exercise is another effective way to manage cortisol. Regular exercise at the same time each day can help anchor your cortisol rhythm. However, exercising late in the day can spike cortisol levels, which may disrupt sleep. If you must work out later, ensure you consume starchy carbohydrates afterward to help lower cortisol. In the evening, it's essential to keep cortisol low. Dim lights and avoid bright screens, especially those emitting blue light, which can increase cortisol levels. Engaging in calming activities, such as breathing exercises or non-sleep deep rest (NSDR), can help reduce stress and lower cortisol. For those experiencing burnout, there are two patterns: one where individuals wake up stressed and crash in the afternoon, and another where they feel sluggish in the morning but are wired at night. Each pattern requires different strategies to manage cortisol effectively. Supplements like ashwagandha and apigenin can help lower cortisol levels, but they should be used in conjunction with behavioral strategies. Ashwagandha can reduce cortisol by 11% to 29%, while apigenin, found in chamomile tea, can also be beneficial. Understanding and managing your cortisol rhythm is crucial for overall health, mood, and cognitive function. By implementing these strategies, you can improve your energy levels, focus, and sleep quality. Thank you for joining today's discussion on cortisol. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and check out the sponsors mentioned.

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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