Most Replayed Moment: This Is The Best Exercise Protocol For Women!

Most Replayed Moment: This Is The Best Exercise Protocol For Women!

58% of female runners have a luteal phase defect — and staying in the "moderate" exercise zone makes hormonal health worse, not better.

May 8, 2026 39:55 Difficulty: Intermediate Played
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Claims & Sources

2 / 12 cited (17%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

58% of female runners have a luteal phase defect, meaning the second half of their menstrual cycle is compromised.

Dr. Natalie Crawford no source cited

Very lean female long-distance runners frequently have high visceral fat around their organs, despite appearing thin externally.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

A man's brain becomes more cognitively focused in times of low caloric intake, whereas a woman's brain responds to calorie deficits by suppressing reproduction and storing fat.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

High-intensity sprint intervals trigger epigenetic changes that activate the GLUT4 protein, enabling glucose uptake into muscle cells and reducing insulin resistance.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

High-intensity exercise causes muscles to release myokines that signal the liver to stop storing visceral fat and instead produce non-esterified fatty acids as mitochondrial fuel.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

Staying in the moderate-intensity heart rate zones (3–4) during exercise elevates cortisol and inflammation without triggering the adaptive signalling cascade needed for body composition improvements.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

High-intensity exercise produces lactate that the brain uses as a preferred fuel, potentially preventing the glucose metabolism missteps associated with Alzheimer's and dementia.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

Women have fewer glycolytic/lactate-producing muscle fibres than men from birth and lose more of these fibres with age.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

Research from Lisa Masconi's group at Arizona shows that glucose utilisation in the female forebrain changes dramatically through perimenopause, menopause, and postmenopause, with patterns that may predict dementia risk.

Dr. Mary Claire Haver Lisa Masconi's research group (Arizona)

Women who choose to become primary caregivers for a parent with dementia have a 60% increased risk of developing dementia themselves, even after controlling for genetic factors.

Dr. Mary Claire Haver no source cited

Women who are 80–90 years old today had less cognitive stimulation in their 30s–50s due to fewer career opportunities, contributing to higher rates of dementia and Alzheimer's in that cohort.

Dr. Stacy Sims no source cited

An MRI study by Hal Hirschfield showed that when people imagine their future selves, the same brain regions activate as when they think about a celebrity — indicating the brain treats the future self like a stranger.

Steven Bartlett Hal Hirschfield and colleagues (MRI study)

TL;DR

Four leading women's health experts — Dr. Stacy Sims, Dr. Vonda Wright, Dr. Mary Claire Haver, and Dr. Natalie Crawford — reveal why most women are training the wrong way. They break down why moderate-intensity cardio is often the worst zone to stay in, how under-recovery (not overtraining) disrupts hormones, and why short bursts of high-intensity interval training are critical for body composition, insulin sensitivity, and brain health — especially around perimenopause. The single most actionable takeaway: swap long, medium-effort runs for 30-second all-out sprint intervals with full recovery, two to four times a week.

#polarized training #luteal phase defect #hypothalamic amenorrhea #visceral fat #GLUT4 activation #lactate and brain health #perimenopause exercise #sprint intervals #strength training for women #cortisol and training #Alzheimer's prevention #female physiology #under-recovery #VO2 max protocols #neuroplasticity #women's health #exercise protocol #HIIT #perimenopause #hormones #cortisol #lactate #Alzheimer's #strength training #VO2 max #luteal phase #insulin resistance #recovery #dementia #running #menopause

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Health & Fitness
Lactate From Hard Exercise May Be Your Brain's Best Defence Against Dementia

Most Replayed Moment: This Is The Best Exercise Protocol Fo… · May 8, 2026 Health & Fitness

Women have fewer lactate-producing muscle fibres than men and lose more with age. Lactate is a preferred brain fuel, and its shortage during perimenopause may be a key driver of the disproportionate Alzheimer's risk women face. High-intensity training isn't just for fitness — it's brain medicine.

Look closer

Leading experts in female physiology — Dr. Stacy Sims, Dr. Vonda Wright, Dr. Mary Claire Haver, and Dr. Natalie Crawford — join host Steven Bartlett to unpack the exercise advice women rarely receive. They cover why moderate-intensity training is often counterproductive, how under-recovery (not overtraining) damages hormonal health, why high-intensity intervals are critical for body composition and brain health in perimenopause, and how lactate production from intense exercise may protect against Alzheimer's.

Chapter list
VO2 max
The maximum rate of oxygen consumption during intense exercise — a key measure of cardiovascular fitness and aerobic capacity.
Norwegian 4x4
A VO2 max training protocol involving four minutes of high-intensity effort followed by four minutes of recovery, repeated four times, performed at most once per week.
Luteal phase
The second half of the menstrual cycle following ovulation, when progesterone rises to prepare the uterus for potential implantation.
Luteal phase defect
A condition where the luteal phase is shortened or progesterone levels are insufficient, often linked to energy deficiency or overtraining in female athletes.
Relative Energy Deficiency (RED-S)
A syndrome where an athlete's energy intake is insufficient relative to the energy expended in exercise, impairing hormonal, bone, and reproductive function.
Hypothalamic amenorrhea
The absence of menstruation caused by the hypothalamus ceasing to send reproductive hormone signals (FSH and LH), typically triggered by chronic stress, underfueling, or excessive exercise.
GLUT4
A glucose transporter protein in muscle and fat cells that moves glucose from the bloodstream into cells; activation by exercise and insulin reduces blood sugar and insulin resistance.
Myokines
Hormone-like signalling proteins released by muscle fibres during contraction that communicate with other organs — including signalling the liver to reduce visceral fat storage.
Visceral fat
Fat stored around internal organs in the abdominal cavity, metabolically active and strongly linked to inflammation, insulin resistance, and cardiovascular disease.
Estradiol
The primary form of oestrogen in reproductive-age women, crucial for bone density, metabolic function, and cardiovascular and brain health.
Cortisol
A steroid hormone released in response to stress and low blood glucose; chronically elevated cortisol drives fat storage, inflammation, and metabolic dysfunction.
Adaptive stress
A controlled training stress (e.g., heavy lifting or sprint intervals) that triggers a cascade of biological repair mechanisms, leaving the body stronger than before.
Polarized training
A training model that concentrates effort at the extremes — very high intensity and very low intensity — while avoiding the moderate 'junk miles' zone that raises cortisol without triggering adaptation.
Epigenetic change
A modification in how genes are expressed (turned on or off) without altering the DNA sequence itself; high-intensity exercise can induce epigenetic changes that improve metabolic function.
Neuroplasticity
The brain's ability to reorganise itself by forming new neural connections throughout life, strengthened by cognitive challenges, reading, and learning.
Parasympathetic response
The 'rest and digest' branch of the autonomic nervous system that promotes recovery, calm, and repair — activated by low-intensity movement, nature, and social connection.
DEXA scan
Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry — an imaging scan that measures bone density, muscle mass, and body fat distribution, including visceral fat deposits not visible externally.
One-rep max (1RM)
The maximum weight a person can lift for one complete repetition of an exercise with good form; used to calculate training loads (e.g., 80% of 1RM for strength work).
Episodic
Occurring in separate, distinct episodes rather than continuously; used here to describe ancestral stress responses (e.g., encountering a predator) as opposed to modern chronic stress.
Corpus luteum
The temporary endocrine structure formed in the ovary after ovulation that produces progesterone to sustain the luteal phase; its premature demise causes luteal phase defects.