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The Peter Attia Drive
AMA #42: Optimizing sleep - bedtime routine, molecule regimen, sleep trackers, sauna, & more
AMA #42: Optimizing sleep - bedtime routine, molecule regimen, sleep trackers, sauna, & more

AMA #42: Optimizing sleep - bedtime routine, molecule regimen, sleep trackers, sauna, & more

The Peter Attia DriveGo to Podcast Page

Nick Stenson, Peter Attia
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15 Clips
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Dec 5, 2022
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0:11
Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek. Ask me, anything or am a episode of the drive podcast? I'm your host Peter attea. At the end of this short episode. I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full along with a ton of other membership benefits. We've created or you can learn more now by going to Peter Atia, m.com.
0:30
It's /, subscribe. So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the ask me. Anything episode. Welcome to ask me. Anything episode 42. And once again, joined by Nick Stenson. In today's episode, we cover a bunch of questions, but all of them on one topic sleep sleep is something that we've talked a lot about on past podcast mainly with Matt Walker. However, we haven't done asleep podcast in over two years and that time.
1:00
Collected, a lot of questions around sleep and we cover those. In today's episode, These include questions around my pre bedtime routine as it relates to various behaviors that I use to optimize my sleep. We've got a lot of questions about my current molecule regimen. So what are the Meds supplements? Etc that I use to help with sleep both for routine use and maybe sometimes what I would describe as unusual circumstances such as great jet lag and things like that. Talk about how I use.
1:29
Wearables including both the positives and potential negatives of using such trackers for sleep. Now if you're a subscriber and you want to watch the full video this podcast, you can find it on the show notes page. And if you're not a subscriber, you can watch the sneak peek of the video on our YouTube page. So, without further delay, I hope you enjoy. Am a number 42
1:55
Peter. Welcome to another. Am a how you doing doing? Well, how are you? I'm not too bad. Not too bad.
2:00
How's your week going?
2:01
It's good. We're still struggling with this decision about to read, or not to read the books. Yes, that's the thing. That's on my mind today. At least
2:09
anyone listening if they have a strong preference either way if Peter should read it or not, let us know. And we'll tally up the
2:15
votes, it's an uninformed vote because I think people would naturally tend to vote for the author to read the book but I have information that they don't have, which is I've already heard myself, read a sample of it and it's absolutely horrible. So
2:30
It's really just a question of can I be coached into reading it better or is it just flogging a dead horse and is it better off to just have a professional? Do
2:37
it now? I think there's anything about you. It's that your coachable. So I think you could get there. It will still be interesting to see what people think. Yeah. All right. So Peter today's am a not going to be about the book but what it is going to be about is sleep. So sleeps, a subject that, I mean, we've had a lot of podcasts on especially, with guess Matt Walker, but it's been about,
3:00
Years since we've had any type of content on it and it's a topic that we get so many questions on and we continue to get so many questions on. So what we did is kind of compiled all those questions for today and we're going to kind of discuss all of that. So that will include questions around your pre bedtime routine, your behaviors. As it relates to how you're currently improving your sleep. We'll talk about molecules that you currently use Pharma over-the-counter supplements and how you
3:29
Think about that with, not only you and your patients and then we'll also talk about wearables. What are some of the pros of them? How can they be helpful at the same time? What are some of the potential dangers of them in terms of what people think about? So with that said, I think we'll just start jumping into it with question number one. Yep, that sounds great. Perfect. So you shared a bit ago on Instagram, kind of your thoughts not only around sleep trackers, but also some changes you made to your pre sleep routine which have been really
4:00
Effective and we received a lot of follow-up questions from audience where they just wanted to dive deeper into that. And so I think what maybe be helpful is just start with what is your current pre bedtime routine look like especially if you're really trying to optimize your sleep for that night.
4:15
You know this is kind of the result of many years certainly of tinkering and also a luxury that I have today that I didn't have pre covid which is the luxury of not traveling, at least not with any regularity. I mean I used to
4:29
Spend 150 to 180 days a year or a night, a year in my own bed, prior to covid, and that's completely changed. Now, it might be 340. So I'm really able to kind of dial in what I do at home. And it's also something I just gravitate towards paying a lot of attention to. So, a lot of these insights are not necessarily new, but it's just a question of being, diligent around, putting them in place. So one of those, of course, is alcohol. Very difficult to have a good night's sleep. If
4:59
You have alcohol in the proximity of bedtime or even if you have two or three drinks, several hours removed from Bedtime, it still will linger and I'll manifest itself in a number of ways. But probably most notably is kind of a reduction in the quality of sleep. So, you'll see you'll trade more deep sleep, and REM sleep for light sleep. And then, the other thing you'll see is much more frequent wake Up's. If you're really trying to dial in your
5:29
Sleep, you're going to have to, basically say, I'm not going to drink in the evening, and for many people that just means not drinking period, because most people are not drinking too much in the daytime and then cutting it out in the evening. The other thing that I think I learned a lot when I was fasting, like crazy is how much the low glucose empty stomach impacted sleep. It was profound. I mean, one of the things that amazed me when I was fasting was that how am I sleep quality improved in ways? That, you know, I'd never seen before frankly. And so I generally
5:59
Eat dinner, early, ish, and large part. That's because we have kids. So they're going to bed early. So we're eating all kind of early but I noticed that if I pay attention to it, when I go to bed, I'm a little bit hungry. And I think in the past there were times when I would have just had a little snack. And now, I don't know. I just say, I'm going to go to bed with a little bit of a hunger Pang. That's also very positive effect on sleep. We've talked a lot about sauna not to get too far into this rabbit hole. But is, you know, I've kind of taken a 180 on sauna
6:29
So I would say six years ago, seven years ago when we first really did our deep dives into this? I came to the conclusion that there was really no benefit to sauna that wasn't captured in a healthy user bias, meaning all of the epidemiologic benefits associated with sauna, which are numerous, let's be clear. There are immeasurable benefits that come from sauna. If you buy the epidemiology in particular, an enormous reduction in cardiovascular mortality and mortality associated with dementia, but I
6:59
felt that that was mostly a healthy user bias and I think over the years and we do this every two or three years. We go back and internally revise our white papers on this. And I think it was the 2019 late, 2019, early 2020 revisit this literature when I kind of changed my mind a little bit and I started to say, maybe the magnitudes of the benefits associated with sauna, are being Amplified by these by
7:29
Diocese that can't be controlled for but the direction of them, the consistency of them across studies. Led me to believe there's probably something there in addition to the plausibility of the mechanisms it's a long-winded way of saying I've become a pretty DieHard Sonic convert over the last couple of years and we have one at home now which you know, I always get asked questions about sauna so I'll guess I'll give a bit of a digression on what kind of sauna we have. And does infrared, does it have to be dry? All those things? Let's park that and we'll come back to
7:59
In the second. But I do try to get into that. Sauna at least four nights a week, if not five or six, I'm really only limited by how much work I need to get done, but it's become a great tool and I liked it before bed. So there I know there are a lot of people who like to do their sauna in the daytime, they like to do it right after the exercise. I think that's great, but I've been using it basically for two purposes. One I Do by that. There is some mortality benefit, that comes from it.
8:29
But empirically, the impact this has had, on my sleep is insane so much, so that I've often wondered is the mortality benefit of sauna, largely attributed to the Sleep benefits that come from its use. I don't know the answer to that question. Of course, these would all be very easy experiments to do. If you lived in a resource unconstraint world,
8:52
is there an ideal amount of time that you try and have between when you last ate and when you go to sleep?
8:59
Going to change for person a person, but just a relative rough number. I think would be helpful for people,
9:04
I strive for about three hours, okay? Between when I finish dinner and when my head hits the pillow, and again, I just want to be clear on all this stuff. It's super important not to go psycho on this and I know that when I talk about it this way, it sounds like I'm going psycho. I'm not. I want to be really clear like last night, my wife and I went out to one of her friends was having a birthday party and we went out and
9:29
And truthfully, I probably ate an hour before going to bed. It didn't faze me. It's not like I was sitting there at the restaurant looking at my watch going. Oh my God. Where is the food? But no, no. So you can do this most of the time and not be a psycho. And I think that's the broader lens. You want to look at through this, which is these are general principles that are going to get violated quite often but you want to kind of revert back to them, whenever you can this weekend, you're going to be in town Lacy's until we got
9:59
Tons of friends in time this is going to be a bananas weekend. I promise you there will not be a night. I'm going to bed this week where I will have had three hours of rest between my last meal and the probably won't be a night that I'm going to bed where I won't have had a drink. But guess what? We have a bunch of friends in town and that's the way it's going to be but that's not the norm. So I just think with sleep in particular, there's such a psychological component to this that you just don't want to get too wrapped up in your head about this sort of stuff because I think that can cause more
10:29
Or harm than good. So you need to be flexible in this regard as an individual. And I think in not terribly rigid I just hope people can interpret. What I'm saying, as guidelines that we try to stick to but we have the flexibility to deviate,
10:42
I think that's really good and it kind of fits back to what I believe is the last a may we did, where we kind of talked about how you think about doing everything together and how sometimes you have to make concessions to live your life. So it's you don't have to be so robotic all the time and
10:59
On that note we have a question coming a little later on which is maybe some of the dangers of sleep trackers, not dangers, in the sense that it causes physical harm, but more so like the psychological piece. So I'll save that for then. But the other question that I had is I know you like to think about things in a risk Matrix. A lot like a two by two. Like are you picking up a gold coin? Are you picking up a penny? Are you picking up in from a tricycle or a freight train? And it kind of creates that two by two Matrix that you like to put in the boxes. What's your cure
11:29
Review on sauna use, in terms of risk reward. Have you thought about how you would quantify that based on that risk
11:36
Matrix? Yeah, and it's going to depend on the individual. I do think that there are probably some people who would need to consult with their doctors before getting into a sauna. Because to be clear, when I get into a sauna, it's hot. I mean, our saunas, we run it at about 198 degrees Fahrenheit. My typical routine is 15 minutes and then a cold plunge and
11:59
20 to 25 minutes by the end of that second stent, you're really sort of taxed. There's clearly a subset of the population for whom that might be a little too taxing outside of that. I think look, the biggest risk of sauna is there are other risks I've heard horror stories of people that have had accidents in saunas, and things like that. So, we'll bracket that all those things are possible. But like, anything else, it comes in an opportunity cost. I think about how much time I actually spend from the moment I decide to get in the sauna until I'm
12:29
Ready to go to bed. It's about an hour. So then the question is, what else could I be doing with that hour? That would be potentially better for me? And in my case, I don't think there's much because my wife and I do it together every night. It's actually a way to spend time together and talk and so we get that basically about our to talk when we probably wouldn't have. Otherwise I probably would have been glued to my computer working and she would have been reading or something like that. But I think for some people that might not be the case for some people that opportunity cost might be too high, Maybe
12:59
Taking them away from an hour of sleep. That they otherwise need, whereas, I'm still able to structure it in a way that I'm still going to get 8 hours in bed. That's where I think each person needs to figure out what they're giving up for that amount of time. Now, of course it could be less, you could spend half an hour in a sauna. All told you want to spend 20 minutes in, call it a half an hour but at least in my world. I think every minute counts and that's probably true for most people. So I would say time is a big opportunity cost. Of course there's a financial cost I think to easily utilize
13:29
why's sauna in one form or another, whether it's dry or infrared or whatever, there's a financial investment and putting one of these things in your home, or your apartment. So that also needs to be weighed into it. And again, I don't know that, that's so much a risk in the way that we think of a drug or something like that, but it's certainly a cost and then as far as the benefits go, I think there are benefits. Some of them are kind of soft benefits. So again, not to harp on this idea but spending more time with your spouse. If that's something that you guys can do together, there's no biomarker
13:59
To tell you that, that's a good thing. Improvement of sleep. I think is a tangible way to assess benefit if you fall in the camp of people who sleep is improved by that, as far as the hard numbers that we've covered before in other podcasts around the reduction. In mortality, I'd be hard-pressed to believe that they are as strong as they are, demonstrated in The Finnish datasets, but if they're half that, they're still pretty good. So, it's harder for me to kind of quantify those benefits. That's where
14:29
I would sort of puts on it. So let me give another example neck. I wouldn't put sauna as valuable as exercise when I start to think about what are the levers, an hour of exercise? I think, is better for you than an hour of sauna. If you're really playing the game of of inches
14:44
and then the other follow-up. I had written down as you kind of mentioned a little bit, but your view on dry infrared temperature. You like to keep it at that kind of stuff. Where do you kind of end up on there?
14:57
Well, I get asked this question a lot, and my answer is, I don't think we know if infrared and dry have the same benefits. There are very different mechanism, they produce a very different feeling if you're in them and the literature is mostly on dry saunas. So for that reason, and just for the fact that I wanted to have a pretty large sauna and I like the experience, the cedar, the Rocks, The Dumping water on it that whole thing that's just why we went with a dry sauna.
15:27
But not everybody has the space for one, and the infrared device is they sell devices that are relatively inexpensive relatively small. Such that if you live in a tiny apartment, you could still have one. You might only be able to seat yourself in it and nobody else. But I still think there is a benefit there so it's going to be much more difficult to quantify by attribution to the literature.
15:50
I also heard Matt walk or talk about this which is even though as it relates to sleep benefits of
15:57
Asana can be there. But for those people who don't have access, can't get access even a warm bath, or even a hot shower, can still have some of those sleep benefits that it's worth people testing before they go to bed, those types of
16:12
activities. Correct. Absolutely. And I think that's just kind of the broader theme around sleep, is you have to kind of try things several times and realize, if they work for you or not, I think there are probably some people who. If they do sauna before bed it
16:27
Probably have a negative impact on their sleep, whereas if they did it earlier in the day it might produce a better outcome. So I think you just have to again it comes back to flexibility and being kind of experimental in how you think
16:39
about stuff.
16:42
And then the last follow-up question, I had wasn't planning on asking it, but it's kind of come up a few times from various episodes. I mean, mainly, like strong convictions, loosely held in for, it's kind of like where has your opinion changed and in one of the recent amas you talked a little bit about time restricted feeding and how your opinions change and the importance of protein and even in this episode, you know, you're talking about your view on sauna has kind of changed over time as new information becomes available and as truthfully.
17:12
So what you see with your patience and practice a lot of times you're taking what the literature says and seeing how it applies to people and there's always going to be that small group of people who are like, why is your opinion change? How can you change your opinion? How can you speak about something now in this way? And then change it. How do you think about that in terms of your journey and how you work with patients to tie back in a previous AMA? You talked a lot about how the biology of Aging so confusing and so complex that there's
17:42
Is going to be changes, any advice you would have for people who are maybe a little more rigid and not open to that change in their opinions or their ideals. If it's anything I haven't said before, I think it just comes
17:56
down to what you anchor to if you anchor to being right, or if you anchor to knowing the truth, if you can be more in the camp of the ladder, it's easier for you to accept
18:10
change. If you anchor to being right, you can sometimes get the right answer, but if that answer changes, it becomes difficult to change. I think part of it is also understanding the nature of science and the scientific process which is that, even the best experiments don't produce certainty, they just increase the probability of one idea, being more likely than another. And in that sense there really isn't much that's black, and
18:40
And white in science. Most things are Shades of Grey. Now, some things are really, really dark Shades of Grey. I mean, it's really clear that we code from DNA to RNA to protein. It's called the central dogma. But turns out there a couple of little exceptions with viruses that go the other way around, so on the edges there's always going to be exceptions. Potentially for things that are even sort of Ironclad and very few things are that Ironclad? Yeah we could go down the rabbit hole of
19:10
The Baka love covid. How many things were deemed absolute certainties when they had no business being deemed certainties. So if there was a little bit, just more acceptance of how uncertain things are, and operating in a world of probabilities would just be a lot easier for people to kind of navigate the changes that are coming. And I will say this, I don't find that the level of interacting with my patients that this poses a problem have a hard time thinking of an example where a patient was frustrated or disappointed.
19:40
Appointed that we were changing our point of view on something in the face of new information, I think they appreciate
19:45
that, definitely. Anything else you want to touch on regarding your
19:50
behavioral,
19:51
pre-sleep routine before we move to your current sleep molecule regiment? Yeah, I think the last thing I'd say,
19:58
is really trying to be as unstimulated as possible before I go into bed. So I even like floss and brush my teeth before doing the sauna. So that once I'm done with
20:10
Sauna, it's dark. I basically just go to bed. I'm not even going into the bathroom turning the lights on. I'm certainly not looking at my computer or my phone or anything like that. That's probably another part of why this sauna is beneficial to sleep. There's so many reasons here and one of them could simply be that it's a forced our of bringing myself down as opposed to working right up until the last minute brushing teeth, flossing teeth. Jumping in bed. I think that's also
20:40
So a big part of this is just dialing down the rheostat of stimulation before bed.
20:46
No, I mean that makes a ton of sense. So what about the molecules, then what is your current sleep molecule regimen.
20:53
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