Dr. Andrew Huberman, Ph.D. is a Professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford University School of Medicine. His lab focuses on neural regeneration, neuroplasticity, and brain states such as stress, focus, fear, and optimal performance.
In this episode, Andrew Huberman describes the mechanisms by which deliberate heat exposure impacts body temperature, metabolism, heart health, hormone production, exercise recovery, cognition, mood, and longevity.
Host: Andrew Huberman (@hubermanlab)
Our body can heat up from outside in or inside out
We have two body temperatures: (1) skin/shell; (2) core (organs, viscera, spinal cord)
The brain is constantly sending signals to the body’s heating and cooling system based on the environment
If you throw a cold towel on your body, your brain will actually think you need to heat up your core
In a hot environment, the brain tries to cool down your core
The transition between hot and cold temperatures engages the process of heating and reheating
Heating up mechanism: (1) skin has neurons that sense changes in heat; (2) electrical signals are sent to the spinal cord; (3) signals are sent to the brain – specifically the preoptic area (POA) which send signals to the brain & body and trigger behavioral responses
The impulse to get yourself out of a hot environment is the consequence of the POA communicating with the amygdala and in turn activating adrenal glands
A word of caution: there’s a lot more wiggle room when it comes to cold and cooling the body than there is to heat – the neurons are quite sensitive to heat and once they’re damaged, they’re gone
Humans unload heat by sweating
“Deliberate heat exposure can be a powerful tool to improve health and longevity.” – Dr. Andrew Huberman
Regular use of sauna and other heat exposure can reduce mortality by cardiovascular events, stroke, and all-cause mortality
Defining sauna use: temperature between 80C-100C or 176F-212F (depending on how hot it feels to you), 5-20 minutes per session, 2-7 times per week
You will become better adapted and better at sweating excess heat with frequent exposure
Options if you don’t have access to a sauna: try hot water bath up to the neck; wear a plastic suit (like fighters trying to drop weight)
Wet sauna and dry sauna are both acceptable; most infrared saunas don’t get hot enough
Biological changes to heat: blood flow, plasma, stroke volume, and heart rate all increase – which the body perceives as similar to cardiovascular exercise
Hormone effects of heat: decrease in cortisol output
Activation of heat shock proteins (HSP): heat changes the way in which proteins are configured at a molecular level – HSP makes sure cells of the brain and body don’t misfold
Heat for lifespan: heat upregulates pathways (FOXO3) related to DNA repair and clearing out of senescent cells
Heat for metabolic enhancement: recipe seems to be 57 minutes per week (total, spread out across sessions) of heat exposure – cold exposure recipe is 11 minutes per spread out of the uncomfortable but safe cold
Hormesis: subjecting yourself to enough stress to induce adaptation of some kind
Growth hormone: impacts metabolism and growth of cells and tissues of the body, responsible for tissue repair and growth spurt during puberty
Starting in the early 30s, growth hormone release is greatly diminished
Sauna exposure increased growth hormone 16 fold – important caveat, effect on growth hormone went down with increased sauna use because body becomes heat adapted
If growth hormone increase is your main goal for sauna use, limit to 1x/week or 1x/10 days – and enter fasted or without food in the 2-3 hours prior for maximum benefits
The endorphin system is activated when we experience short stress
Dynorphin system: the struggle of heat exposure ultimately activates pathways that lead to an increase in the baseline level of mood and heightened level of happiness and improved mood
Glabrous skin: hair-free skin found in palms of hands, soles of feet, the upper half of the face
Glabrous skin surfaces can be leveraged to cool the blood and core of the body
To warm a cold body: use a warm blanket or warmer on glabrous surfaces
To cool a hot body: use a cool compress, frozen or cold materials on glabrous surfaces
Fever is natural heat inoculation designed to kill pathogens in the body
Cold exposure (11 minutes per week, up to the neck) has been shown to increase brown fat which increases metabolism and the ability to feel comfortable in cold temperatures
Local heat exposure (not to the point of burning) converts white fat to beige fat which leads to systemic increases in thermogenesis, metabolism, and fat loss – children have a lot of brown and beige fat
Beige fat is a more metabolically active version of white fat
Sauna bathing is associated with reduced cardiovascular mortality and improves risk prediction in men and women: a prospective cohort study (BMC Medicine)
Endocrine Effects of Repeated Hot Thermal Stress and Cold Water Immersion in Young Adult Men (American Journal of Men’s Health)
Endocrine effects of repeated sauna bathing (Acta Physiologica Scandinavica)
Growth hormone response to different consecutive stress stimuli in healthy men: is there any difference? (The International Journal on the Biology of Stress)
Sauna Bathing and Risk of Psychotic Disorders: A Prospective Cohort Study (Medical Principles and Practice)
Local hyperthermia therapy induces browning of white fat and treats obesity (Cell)