Published Jul 22, 2024

Dr. Stacy Sims: Female-Specific Exercise & Nutrition for Health, Performance & Longevity

Dr. Stacy Sims shares groundbreaking insights into female-specific exercise and nutrition, offering strategies for optimal training, nutrition, and supplements tailored to women's unique physiology for better performance, recovery, and longevity.
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Episode Highlights

  • Pre-Training

    emphasizes the importance of pre-training nutrition for optimal performance. She suggests a combination of protein and carbohydrates, tailored to the type of exercise, to fuel the body and protect the brain. highlights the neural benefits of proper pre-workout nutrition, which can enhance intensity and reduce cortisol levels 1. Sims also discusses the impact of the menstrual cycle on appetite and the need to adjust nutrition accordingly 2.

    Women have been so conditioned to not eat and not take up space to be these small, you know, all of these socio cultural things that women are afraid to admit the fact that they want to eat and they should be eating.

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    Post-Training

    Post-training nutrition is crucial for recovery and muscle building. Sims recommends women consume 35-60 grams of high-quality protein within 45 minutes post-exercise, depending on age, to prevent muscle breakdown and promote repair 3. Huberman notes that delaying food intake post-exercise can lead to lean mass loss, emphasizing the importance of timely nutrition 4.

    The longer someone withholds food after exercise, the greater they stay in that catabolic or breakdown state.

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    Supplements

    Sims discusses key supplements for women, including creatine and vitamin D3, to support health and performance. She clarifies misconceptions about creatine, noting it doesn't necessarily cause water retention or hair loss 5. Huberman and Sims also explore the unique sleep needs of women, particularly during different phases of the menstrual cycle and perimenopause, and suggest adaptogens like rhodiola and theanine to improve sleep quality 6.

    We see a significant issue with insomnia in women who have really bad hot flushes and significant menopausal symptoms.

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