Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月23日
Dr. Mark Hyman’s secret to a long life: ‘A stress that doesn’t kill you makes you stronger’
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本文介绍了著名健康专家Mark Hyman博士关于“适度压力延长寿命”的观点。Hyman博士认为,适度的压力(Hormesis)可以激活人体内的“长寿开关”,促进细胞修复和再生,从而延缓衰老,改善健康状况。文章重点介绍了三种基于Hormesis的日常活动:运动、间歇性禁食和冷热疗法,并解释了这些活动如何通过对身体施加短期压力来提升长期的健康和抗衰能力。Hyman博士强调,我们每个人都拥有激活长寿开关、逆转生物钟的能力,只需遵循基本的生物学原理即可。

🤔**适度压力(Hormesis)可以激活长寿开关:**人体拥有约3000个基因专门负责应对逆境,这些“长寿开关”可以通过适度压力被激活,从而促进细胞修复、减少炎症,最终延缓衰老进程。

🏋️**运动是激活长寿开关的有效方式:**高强度间歇训练(HIIT)或力量训练等运动,虽然会带来短期疼痛,但可以促进肌肉生长和修复,提高身体对衰老的抵抗力。建议每周进行至少150分钟的中等强度运动和两天力量训练。

🍽️**间歇性禁食也能激活长寿开关:**通过在夜间禁食12-16小时,可以促进细胞分解和受损蛋白清除,提高胰岛素敏感性和新陈代谢,从而延缓衰老。

🥶/🔥**冷热疗法也能促进长寿:**冷水浴或桑拿等冷热交替的刺激,可以提高新陈代谢、改善情绪、减少疼痛和炎症,并增强免疫系统和心血管健康。

😷**其他方式:**Hyman博士还提到,在运动时使用缺氧面罩等方式,也可以通过制造短期压力来激活长寿开关。

What doesn’t kill you might not just make you stronger, but help you live longer too. For aging and longevity expert Dr. Mark Hyman, stressing the body and brain is critical to lengthening health span—or the number of healthy years lived free of disease. “One of the things that really helps us is adversity,” Hyman tells Fortune, adding that “a stress that doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.” 63-year-old Hyman, the founder and senior advisor for the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine and author of Young Forever: The Secrets to Living Your Longest, Healthiest Life, has researched wellness practices and aging from an—ironically—young age. Before becoming a doctor, he taught yoga, interested in how to maintain healthy nutrition, exercise, and mindfulness. While Hyman lives by his strength training regimen and nutritious diet, he also practices stressing the body—a lesser-known but equally essential feature of healthy aging. “About 3,000 of our genes out of our 20,000 genes are focused on helping to keep us alive in adverse situations,” he says, noting people don’t often use them by choice. “We have our built-in regenerative renewal repair system. I call it the longevity switches, and they are activated by adversity.” Hormesis is the body’s biological response to short, healthy stress. The process activates pathways that can benefit and slow the aging journey by “cleaning up old cells” and reducing inflammation, Hyman says. In short, the body builds resilience and short-term stress leads to longer-term strength. Lucky for us, easy everyday hormesis-based activities are available. Here are Hyman’s three most popular stress activities for a longer, healthier life: 1. Exercise The next time you’re in the gym and feel the short-term stress of a HITT workout or weight-lifting session, remember hormesis. Exercise is a type of hormesis because it takes short-term pain to have a long-term gain biologically. Beyond improving mental clarity and reducing the risk of heart disease more common with aging, exercise can help build the body’s resilience to aging. Any type of exercise, from a 30-minute power walk to a strength training session, can make a difference. Hyman touts his 30-minute strength training routine, which includes body weight sessions and resistance bands for muscle strength, mobility, and balance; Research suggests resistance bands may reduce frailty in older adults.Hyman also loves mountain biking as a form of exercise and says the key is finding something you enjoy and can do repeatedly. National guidelines recommend at least 150 minutes of moderate-intensity workouts and two days of strength training a week.  @drmarkhyman What doesn’t kill you makes you strong is the central idea of aging. For example, when you practice resistance training by lifting heavy weights and inflicting damage on your muscles, your body responds by repairing the damaged fibers, thus creating bigger and stronger muscles. ⁣ ⁣ This is called hormesis, a phenomenon that demonstrates the beneficial effects of low-level stressors. In this episode, I dive into why hormesis is so essential to longevity, and the many health benefits we gain from resistance training. You can find the full episode on The Doctor’s Farmacy. #drmarkhyman #muscle #protein #resistancetraining ♬ Steven Universe – L.Dre 2. Fasting Research suggests intermittent fasting may combat age-related processes by reducing inflammation, increasing insulin sensitivity, and improving metabolism. Hyman fasts overnight between 12 and 16 hours, another form of hormesis that stresses the body by breaking down cells and ridding the body of damaged proteins. Moreover, late-night meals, which interfere with the completion of an overnight fast, may impact the body’s ability to store and burn calories.  After fasting overnight, Hyman eats a nutritious breakfast filled with protein to repair and build muscle (this also helps combat age-related muscle loss). 3. Hot vs. cold Hyman jumps in a cold shower for two minutes every morning. The popular morning cold plunge, which releases dopamine and adrenaline, can also have longevity benefits as a hormesis activity. The immediate stress effect gives the body delayed gratification and can improve mental clarity longer-term. “Total body immersion in cold water between 40 to 60 degrees for one to three to five minutes can profoundly affect your health in positive ways by improving your metabolism, improving your mood, reducing pain, [and] inflammation,” Hyman says. @drmarkhyman I’m a big fan of cold therapy because of it’s many health benefits. Scientists have found evidence that exposure to cold speeds up metabolism, and reduces inflammation, swelling, and sore muscles. It’s also linked to improved quality of sleep, more focus, and even to an improved immune response. You can do an ice plunge, cold water swimming, or even just a cold shower. Find the full episode on The Doctor’s Farmacy. #markhyman #longevity #aging #youngforever #hormesis #coldtherapy ♬ Paris – Else Cold water plunges are still being studied, but research is promising. Still, the American Heart Association says people with underlying heart conditions be careful and speak to a doctor beforehand. Significant temperature changes in either direction can activate the longevity pathways—even a hot bath or sauna. Going into a sauna in 170 degrees four or five times a week for 30 minutes can have massive benefits, Hyman says. “You’ll end up increasing heat shock proteins which clean up all damaged proteins and boost your immune system and increase your cardiovascular health,” he says. Beyond these stress-related longevity hacks, Hyman also has an oxygen deprivation mask he sometimes uses when exercising to put him in a temporary stress state.“We have the power within us to activate our longevity switches and turn back the biological clock. We just have to follow the basic principles of human biology to do that,” Hyman says.

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长寿 衰老 压力 荷尔蒙 健康
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