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Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

The 7 Powerful Ways to Increase Autophagy

Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Dr. Eric Berg

Health & Fitness

4.61.6K Ratings

🗓️ 3 December 2023

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Let’s talk about autophagy. Autophagy is an incredible process. It basically eats up the junk in your body and transforms it into usable things.


This “junk” is unusable damaged proteins, which trigger inflammation. It also helps get rid of pathogens and viral antigens.


Autophagy is like an anti-aging cleaning system of the body. But it doesn’t just clean things up—it provides raw material to build new cells and provide fuel when you need it.


Two major things will stop autophagy: sugar and protein. But any significant amount of calories will also stop autophagy.


Autophagy may act as a strong protective barrier against disease. But, if you already have cancer, autophagy can aid the growth and progression of cancer.


Autophagy can help you if you’re healthy and can hurt you if you’re not healthy. Unfortunately, many people wait until they get sick before they utilize strategies like autophagy.


The best way to trigger autophagy is to do fasting. You’ll notice more positive benefits from autophagy once you get into about 18 hours of fasting. You’ll notice even more benefits when you get up to 48 to 72 hours of fasting. You can take electrolytes, nutrients, and sea salt, but you shouldn’t consume any calories while fasting.


An additional simple strategy to see more benefits from autophagy is to go on a low-sugar, low-carb diet. Consuming a moderate amount of protein is also crucial—not excess protein or low protein.


Exercise is important to stimulate autophagy. Aerobic exercise (lower intensity and longer duration) will stimulate autophagy more than high-intensity exercise. But, I suggest doing both forms of exercise for different benefits.


Certain phytonutrients and adaptogens can also trigger autophagy to a certain degree.


DATA:

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/arti...

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

So let's talk about the truth of something called autophagy.

0:04.0

It's a fascinating biological process that's always happening to a certain degree, and I'm going to

0:10.0

get into all the triggers and how long it takes to get an autophagy, but this is what

0:14.2

autophagy does. It self eats it eats the junk from your body and transforms that into

0:21.2

usable things.

0:23.3

So it's like a very complex junkyard

0:26.2

with a recycling unit right next to it.

0:29.4

And when I say junk, I'm talking about unusable

0:31.9

damaged proteins in the body which trigger

0:35.2

inflammation also it recycles something called organelles what's an organell

0:40.0

well inside your cells you have all these different machines that are on an assembly line to actually make certain stuff.

0:48.5

You have the mitochondria, you have other machines that make certain proteins.

0:53.2

Well, if there's any damage that goes on to that machinery,

0:56.0

well, atophagy can take care of it.

0:58.0

And atophagy helps to get rid of pathogens, right, like bacteria, fungus, mold, and viruses.

1:09.0

All of those can also trigger inflammation as well.

1:12.2

And it gets rid of something else called viral

1:14.3

antigens. Now what is a viral antigen? Well there's something on viruses that

1:18.1

signal your immune system to create a reaction that can also cause inflammation.

1:24.0

And it's also part of the antibody production machine,

1:27.0

which I'm not going to get into,

1:28.0

but what you should know is

...

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