cover of episode Episode 370: Dr. Mary Claire Haver: Why Every Woman Needs to Lift, Tips for Menopause, Maximizing Semaglutide, and More

Episode 370: Dr. Mary Claire Haver: Why Every Woman Needs to Lift, Tips for Menopause, Maximizing Semaglutide, and More

2024/8/9
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Jennifer Cohen
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Mary Claire Haver
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Jennifer Cohen: 本期节目讨论了力量训练对女性,特别是更年期女性的重要性。Cohen 指出,女性在30岁左右达到肌肉量峰值,之后会自然下降。为了对抗这种衰退,女性需要进行力量训练以维持肌肉和骨骼健康,预防虚弱和骨质疏松,并降低心血管疾病的风险。她强调,单纯的有氧运动不足以应对年龄增长带来的肌肉流失,力量训练是必不可少的。她还分享了自己的经验,以及如何通过穿戴负重背心来增加日常活动的强度,并建议女性根据自身情况循序渐进地进行力量训练。 Mary Claire Haver: Haver 医生作为一位更年期专家,也强调了力量训练的重要性,并补充了更多医学证据。她指出,力量训练可以显著降低女性患心血管疾病的风险,其效果甚至超过男性。她还讨论了司美格鲁肽等药物在更年期体重管理中的作用,但强调这些药物应该在医生的密切监测下使用,并结合健康的生活方式,包括营养均衡和规律运动。Haver 医生还指出,在使用司美格鲁肽的同时进行激素替代疗法,减肥效果会更好,并且更容易保持体重,因为激素可以帮助维持肌肉质量。 Mary Claire Haver: Haver 医生详细阐述了司美格鲁肽在更年期体重管理中的应用,以及如何最大限度地发挥其作用。她指出,司美格鲁肽可以帮助患者减少食欲,从而减少食物摄入,但它只是一个工具,不能替代健康的生活方式。她强调,在使用司美格鲁肽期间,需要密切监测患者的肌肉质量和整体健康状况,以确保长期健康。她还指出,如果停用司美格鲁肽后没有改变生活习惯,体重很可能会反弹。因此,改变生活方式,包括饮食和运动习惯,对于长期保持体重至关重要。

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This chapter discusses the critical importance of strength training for women, especially post-30, and its benefits during menopause, including preventing frailty and osteoporosis.

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Hi guys, it's Tony Robbins. You're listening to Habits & Hustle. Crush it! Hey friends, you're listening to Fitness Friday on the Habits & Hustle podcast where myself and my friends share quick and very actionable advice for you becoming your healthiest self. So stay tuned and let me know how you leveled up.

Before we dive into today's episode, I first want to thank our sponsor, Therasage. Their TriLight panel has become my favorite biohacking thing for healing my body. It's a portable red light panel that I simply cannot live without. I literally bring it with me everywhere I go. And I personally use their red light therapy to help reduce inflammations in places in my body where, honestly, I have pain. You can use it on a sore back, on a sore neck, on a sore neck.

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A S A G E.com and use code be bold for 15% off any of their products. I'm a big believer in strength training and lifting heavy, especially as you age. I know you talk about that as well in your book. What can you tell us on the research that you've done of how strength training and menopause or as you age, the importance of

of those two are together? So most women peak at their muscle mass at about age 30, and then we have an age-related decline in muscle mass. And in order to overcome that natural progression, we have to work harder and harder and harder every single year. Or we're just going to have to give up that, you know...

And so as we're living longer than men, we're becoming more and more frail in those years. And so when you look at long-term care homes, 66% are female, 33% are male. And the most likely reasons a woman is going to be admitted is for pregnancy.

dementia. And then for frailty, she can't get off the toilet. She can't, you know, lift her legs. She can't get off the floor. If she falls, she can't pick herself up. And so this is the end result or she's fallen and broken, you know, a bone and can't take care of herself. All of this is pretty much avoidable, but you know,

My generation, our generation, I was a cardio queen. I ran. Everything was about to be thin. Like my whole focus for movement was to be skinny. Okay. Which I had skinny privilege. I ran marathons. I did all this stuff, you know, super proud of that. But God, if I could go back and talk to that girl, pick up some fricking weight, you know, because I chipped away at my bone and muscle strength to be thin. Yeah.

I never looked at nutrition outside of calories. You know, I tried to eat healthy. I didn't know what that was until I went back to school. They didn't teach us that in medical school. Just, you know, don't eat French fries. Okay. So, but for movement, two to three days a week of progressive load resistance training, that scares the hell out of women because they've never done it. They don't know how. But it is so important. So when they did studies on elderly women, which is 65 plus, okay, I am eight years away from that or nine. How old are you?

55. Oh, you look great though. So almost 56. So they were looking at vibratory training, putting them, they put them in 10% weighted vests. They had them start lifting. They were doing deadlifts. These women were making major gains in their 70s and 80s for muscle mass and bone strength and osteoporosis. And I'm like, okay, osteoporosis prevention program, let's go. There's great studies on collagen. There's great studies on wearing a weighted vest. I wear one all the time now when I'm walking the dog.

when I'm doing housework, when I'm, you know, walking on my treadmill, which I do a lot of work on my walking desk, but I put the weighted vest on to do it because I'm cheating the system. I'm just, you know, I'm never going to be obese. That is not in my genetics. It would be a lot of work. I could do it. Yeah. So, but, you know, for me, it's avoiding the frailty card. And I want to be 90 and playing on the floor with my grandkids. Yeah, I agree. For great-grandkids. You know, I want to be classed.

climbing a mountain. I don't want to be on a walker like my mother at 85. Yeah. Who can barely get around. She can't get in and out of the tub. We're trying to figure out converting her bathroom right now. She sits on the toilet and does a sponge bath. That is the best she can do right now. Wow. You know? And that, no, no. So I'm doing squats like nobody's business right now. Yeah. Because this is my mother. So,

These are the things I talk to my patients about. They're not coming in saying, I want a bikini body. We're, you know, those ships have sailed and it'd be great. I mean, who doesn't want that? But they're like, look, I'm looking at my future. I'm looking at my aunts. I'm looking at my moms. What plan can I get on right now? What habits can I change? What do I need to focus on so that I can be healthy and vibrant as long as possible and not 10 years of horrible morbidity, not be everything in pain, breaking hips, breaking, you know, so everything.

50% of women will have an osteoporotic fracture before they die. Yeah. And men don't do that. Yeah. You know, like very few men. So it happens, but it's rare. And so I want to be like a man. I want to die like a man. They just die. Yeah. They live and die. We have a protracted whole.

horrible last 10 years of our life, completely dependent on others. And then doesn't have to be like that. So this is what we talk about when we talk about menopause care. And this is what we're talking for straight training is being, is an essential piece of it. Do you think that cardio, because cardio is known to break down muscle, muscle mass, right? I think, I think you need a walk, a brisk walk, a brisk walk with a weighted vest. I stopped running. I stopped going for my knees.

You know, I might do a few sprints just to get my VO2 max going. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, a few sprints here and there, a little bit of Tabata. You don't have to go crazy. You know, but like...

If you're on the couch, get up and walk, baby. That's it. Just walk for me. The weighted vest is amazing. I love it. If you, okay. All right. You're walking. Good. Grab a weighted vest. Let's get some hand weights. Let's, you know, let's work. You have to meet the patients where they are. And, you know, saying you need to do three days of resistance training, girl, she's going to run out of my office screaming. But, you know, she's like, hey, I'm walking every day. This used to work for me. It's not working anymore. I measure their muscle mass in clinic. I have an InBody scanner. So I'm doing visceral fat, muscle mass, you know, I work.

really can look at their insides and be like, okay, here's the path you're on right now.

Here's what we can do to reverse this. Yeah. I'm a big believer in strength training for your bone density, for the way to vest is amazing. And now the cardiovascular data. Women are much more likely to decrease their risk of cardiovascular disease by 20% to 50% if they strength train. Yeah, absolutely. More than men. They can do less strength training and have more benefits than a man. They can. Yeah.

They will have more cardiovascular benefits with less work. Oh, I love that. Okay. Let's talk about semiglutide and the, you know, semiglutide, the GLP-1. Yeah. Is there a benefit?

for going on something like that, like the Ozempics of the world, if you are gaining belly fat from menopause or for perimenopause. So most of my patients, you know, again, I usually defer to people who have training in obesity medicine. You know, I don't have...

Unless my patients are obese and especially patients with lifelong obesity and they've done everything, they've done every diet, you know, this is a whole mind, you know, it's more than just mindset for so many patients. But I do think that there's a place I have a handful of patients on it. We monitor them very closely before they leave the office. They know they're coming back every six weeks.

We're monitoring their muscle mass. We talk about acceptable muscle mass loss. We talk about protein intake. Like going to the long-term success of you being on semaglutide where you're going to end up healthier in the long run is really dependent on the doctor who gives it to you and how they take care of you and monitor you. Weight loss at any cost.

is rarely sustainable and rarely better for your health long-term. And the reason why I'm even asking you this question is because we're talking so much about muscle mass, right? And keeping lean muscle mass on your body. It breaks down your... When you lose weight, you're losing fat,

and muscle. If you severely calorically restrict half of what you lose is muscle, which is why so many people yo-yo because muscle is what controls our basal metabolic rate. So you've lost 10 pounds, five of its muscle. You immediately put on another 10 pounds, you know, you go back, but you've gained 10 pounds of fat and you could never get that muscle back without eating all the protein and doing all the resistance training. So this semaglutide is a tool in your toolbox to be healthy. You cannot ignore the value of nutrition.

of movement and the right, you know, doing the right movement, you know, just getting your shots and not eating is not going to serve you long-term. But also you, when you get off, I mean, you're the doctor. I'd like to ask you, once you get off of it, your appetite, I would imagine rebounds,

If you don't change your habits and you go back to your old habits, you're going to gain the weight back. How do you change your habits? It's not a habit for, it's not about habits. It's about making, it's turning off like your hunger. I'm seeing something different.

So my patients are using that food noise going away, that time that they now have in their day as a time to, we talk about this, you know, how they're going to, this is a multifactorial disease. And we talk about habit changing. Is it successful for everyone? No, but I've seen some beautiful results. And when the patients come in and they've held onto their muscle mass,

And they see that visceral fat going down. They're watching their cholesterol go down. And semaglutide plus HRT, they lose 30% more weight, by the way. Really? More fat, yes. Wow. Menopausal women on semaglutide lose X amount. Women on semaglutide plus HRT lose 30% more. Wow, I'm signing up. And they're more likely to keep it off because you're more likely to maintain your muscle mass if you have your hormones on board, including estrogen.