Tests, Fixes, and Ideas That Are Shaping My Longevity Strategy

Everybody talks about growth hormone. Almost nobody talks about what controls it.

Physiological studies show that total daily GH output begins to fall in our 30s largely because the bursts of GH released become smaller.

In longevity circles, that observation is often interpreted in a linear way: GH decreases with age, so perhaps the solution is to increase GH again.

Yet major endocrine reviews and guideline statements have not endorsed raising GH as an anti-aging approach in otherwise healthy adults. Trials in older adults without GH deficiency have produced modest improvements in body composition but also higher rates of adverse effects, and there is no GH-raising therapy approved specifically for anti-aging.

The reason is that GH is not a single dial that can be turned up.

GH output emerges from a regulatory network in the brain involving multiple interacting inputs:

growth hormone–releasing hormone (GHRH), which stimulates GH release

somatostatin, which suppresses GH release

ghrelin, which amplifies GH release

These inputs interact continuously with sleep depth, metabolic state, and reproductive hormones such as testosterone and estrogen.

So when GH changes across the lifespan, the more complete explanation lies in the upstream regulators.

In this article we will look at:

what growth hormone–releasing hormone (GHRH) is and how it stimulates GH production

the lesser-known role of GHRH as a sleep-promoting neuropeptide tied to deep sleep

what tends to change after midlife in the sleep–GHRH–GH axis

whether aging itself is the primary driver of those changes — or whether age is partly a proxy for modifiable factors

Let’s get started.

Everybody talks about growth hormone. Almost nobody talks about what controls it. Read Post »

Why You Really Wake Up to Pee at 3am

Peeing at night is often misunderstood, and the specific pattern of nighttime urination points to different potential causes and different solutions. For the generally healthy individual, nighttime peeing falls into sleep-related and non-sleep-related categories, each with distinct drivers. Changes in antidiuretic hormone regulation, reproductive hormones, and sleep disruption all play a role in why this

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Is dietary cholesterol required for good human health?

A deep-dive on how dietary cholesterol might or might not affect your LDL-C

Cholesterol is one of the body’s most tightly regulated and energetically expensive molecules; however, it is still widely portrayed as something to restrict or minimize.

Every nucleated cell can synthesize it, and several organs use substantial metabolic resources for its local production. In some tissues, most notably the brain, dietary cholesterol does not materially influence cholesterol content under normal physiological conditions because lipoprotein-bound cholesterol does not cross the intact blood–brain barrier.

This raises a central biological question: if cholesterol can simply be obtained from food, why did evolution invest in such an elaborate and tightly regulated system to manufacture it internally?

The answer lies in the indispensable structural, metabolic, and signalling roles of cholesterol and the biological necessity of local, on-demand synthesis.

Cholesterol is not only useful but also essential for multicellular life.

Is dietary cholesterol required for good human health? Read Post »

Is It Just Stress? 4 Reasons You’re Waking at 3 A.M.

Waking at 3 a.m. with racing thoughts isn’t just about work pressure, relationships, or caregiving responsibilities — those are only one category of stressor. There are at least 4 elements that activate the same stress response pathways and can keep your brain in a more activated state during sleep: physical stressors, metabolic issues, chronic low-grade

Is It Just Stress? 4 Reasons You’re Waking at 3 A.M. Read Post »

3 Reasons You Keep Waking Up at 3 a.m. After 40

Worse sleep in midlife is usually blamed on age — but for generally healthy adults, age itself isn’t the problem. What changes is your vulnerability to disruptors that were always there, now compounding through shifts in your underlying physiology. Three underappreciated factors — chronic low-grade inflammation, blood sugar instability, and stress tolerance — are often

3 Reasons You Keep Waking Up at 3 a.m. After 40 Read Post »

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