Explore the groundbreaking benefits of Urolithin A for longevity

“Mitochondria are the powerhouses of our cells, and if we don’t keep them in check, we risk losing the energy, strength, and vitality that allow us to age powerfully.” – Dr. Anurag Singh

In this energizing episode of the Well Beyond 40 podcast, I sit down with Dr. Anurag Singh, a pioneering expert in mitochondrial health, to dive deep into the science that can help us all age with power. As the Chief Medical Officer at Timeline, Dr. Singh has spearheaded over 50 clinical trials, focusing on groundbreaking ways to keep our cellular engines—the mitochondria—running optimally well beyond our 40s.

We explore the fascinating compound Urolithin A, which I call “exercise in a bottle.” Urolithin A is derived from foods like pomegranates and walnuts, and plays a critical role in maintaining muscle health, boosting energy levels, and even improving skin quality as we age. Dr. Singh sheds light on the alarming statistics of muscle loss starting in our 30s and how it accelerates into our 60s and 70s. He offers actionable strategies that go beyond just increasing protein intake and resistance training, emphasizing the importance of using every tool available, including Urolithin A, to combat the decline.

For those navigating the world of GLP-1 agonists for weight loss, Dr. Singh provides essential insights into how these medications impact muscle mass and mitochondria. His advice is clear: while these drugs can be effective, they must be coupled with proper nutrition, exercise, and mitochondrial support to prevent long-term muscle loss and metabolic issues.

Tune in to discover how you can harness the power of your mitochondria to not only live longer but to live stronger, with more energy and resilience, well into your later years. Don’t miss this chance to learn how to integrate cutting-edge science into your daily routine for a healthier, more vibrant you!

Freebies From Today’s Episode
Get 50% off a Sample Pack of Timeline Nutrition or Skin Products with code JJ50

Timestamps

00:03:28- The Role of Muscle and Mitochondria in Aging

00:06:35- GLP-1 Agonists and Muscle Health

00:13:37- The Impact of Urolithin A on Muscle and Mitochondria

00:21:21- Understanding Immune Metabolism

00:22:18- Inflammation in Athletes

00:22:29- Case Study: Training the Next Heavyweight Champion

00:23:25- Collaborations and New Discoveries

00:26:01- The Role of Urolithin A in Health

00:26:52- Global Gut Microbiome Variations

00:29:54- Dosing and Benefits of Urolithin A

00:33:33- Skin Health and Urolithin A

Resources Mentioned in this episode

Timeline Longevity Instagram

7-Day Eat Protein First Challenge

Hand Grip Dynamometer

Vital Choice wild-caught seafood

Reignite Wellness™ Magnesium Body Calm

Timeline Mitopure (Urolithin A) Use code JJ10 for 10% off all products

Reignite Wellness™ Plant-Based & Paleo-Inspired All-In-One Shakes

Download my free Resistance Training Cheat Sheet

Episode Sponsors: 

Try Timeline. Use code JJ10 for 10% off all products

Try Qualia risk-free for up to 100 days and code VIRGINWELLNESS for an additional 15% off

Click Here To Read Transcript


I’m JJ Virgin, PhD dropout, sorry mom, turned four time New York Times bestselling author. Yes, I’m a certified nutrition specialist, fitness hall of famer, and I speak at health conferences and trainings around the globe, but I’m driven by my insatiable curiosity and love of science. Science to keep asking questions, digging for answers, and sharing the information that I uncover with as many people as I can.

And that’s why I created the Well Beyond 40 podcast to synthesize and simplify the science of health into actionable strategies to help you thrive. In each episode we’ll talk about what’s working in the world of wellness. From personalized nutrition and healing your metabolism, to healthy aging and prescriptive fitness.

Join me on the journey to better health, so you can love how you look and feel right now, and have the energy to play full out at 100. When we talk about aging, we often focus on what we can see. Like wrinkles, gray hair, maybe a few extra pounds. But what if the real secret to staying young isn’t on the outside, but deep inside our cells?

I’m talking about mitochondria, those tiny powerhouses that keep our bodies running smoothly. These little guys are your ticket to feeling energetic, strong, and vibrant well beyond 40. To help us understand this fascinating field, I brought in someone who’s not just studying the stuff in the lab, but actually developing products that can change the game for how we age.

I’m thrilled to welcome Dr. Anurag Singh to the show. Dr. Singh is a true pioneer in mitochondrial health. He’s got both an MD and a PhD, and he’s leading the charge in developing cutting edge products. that boosts our cells energy factories. As the chief medical officer at Timeline, he’s led over 50 clinical trials and has a stack of patents in scientific papers to his name.

In this episode, you’re going to learn about a game changing compound called Urolithin A. Which has been my secret weapon for healthy aging and can be yours too. We’ll explore how this compound, which comes from foods like raspberries, walnuts, and pomegranates, can help combat muscle loss, boost energy levels, and even improve your skin health.

And for those of you following the buzz around GLP 1 agonist drugs for weight loss, we’ve got some crucial insights on how to protect your muscle mass If you’re using these medications, this episode is practical science backed strategies you can start using right away. Let’s dive into this energizing conversation with Dr.

Anurag Singh and discover how we can all age with power.

So I’m here at the Health Optimization Summit, so I just did this talk and I was talking about powerful aging and the big thing that I said was there’s Three things you got to do and you’ve got to eat protein first and you’ve got to take creatine and you’ve got to take. So, I’m super excited that you are here, Dr.

Anurag Singh, to talk about what I called exercise in a bottle, urolithin A. Well, thanks for having me, JJ. It’s always a pleasure to talk to you. Well, I’m thrilled we’re in person. That’s even better. Yeah, exactly. Let’s talk first. So, let’s just paint the picture of why. Muscle is so important as we are well beyond 40.

Sure. Yeah. Well, I always say muscle is the longevity organ, right? And it needs a lot of energy, right? So then the energy is coming from mitochondria. In fact, if you look at muscle cells, they have one of the highest abundance of mitochondria. And so they’re not only producing energy, they’re also consuming it at a very high rate.

And what happens with aging, if you look at the muscle function decline in that sort of aging trajectory, after our thirties, forties, we started losing about 1 to 3 percent of our muscle mass and strength every year. And so, or every sort of in that spectrum. And now this gets accelerated in our sixties and seventies.

And so if you’re not proactively. Thinking about your muscle health and not taking nutrients and we’ll talk about it, proteins and other supplements to, to, you know, feed the muscle, uh, then you’re not going to be able to move better in your sixties and seventies.

Here’s what I’ve decided about those statistics.

Cause I, what I found the most frightening about those statistics is you’re losing muscle, you’re losing even more strength, like, like whatever muscle is, it’s like two times as much strength, three times as much power. But I call those the sedentary. Like if you are doing the things we’re talking about, I think that you can take those statistics so far down, like that you won’t be a statistic.

So that’s what we’re really looking at today. But, It’s not going to be enough just to eat more protein or just to do some resistance training. And in fact, you know, as you age, you, your margin for error goes way down and you want every tool in the toolbox.

Absolutely correct.

Right. So that was why when I was talking, doing this talk, I was like, all right, well, I travel, like I always travel with urolithin A because of that.

So you talked about mitochondria. I still think it’s important. Even though we all know it’s the powerhouse of the cell, I still think it is important just to discuss really what happens to both mitochondria and muscle when we age, and what exactly is mitochondria, why does it matter so much, and what the heck is happening to it?

Sure. So there are these classical hallmarks of aging, and mitochondrial dysfunction is one one of the key elements, and people say it’s a key element, but I think it’s actually the element that links all the other key element. It’s the element, because it links to inflammation, it links to, you know, how you absorb nutrients and how you digest protein even, right?

Because these are the factories. So mitochondria are these factories. Sort of cellular batteries that are keeping us charged, right? So think of them as like the battery in a Tesla car, for example. If, if you’re not using them, I say you, there’s, you know, they, they will go stress and they will go bad. And so there is, you know, you talked about being more active and eating right, diet.

These are all tools that we have and known to improve mitochondria health. And, and so if you’re not paying attention to your mitochondria, and we’ve done studies looking at 70 year olds who are. Training for fit, you know, half marathons versus those who are very sedentary. And one answer is it’s really mitochondria at the root of all the muscle decline, cognitive decline even, because that’s kind of a trajectory.

So we’re going to get into GLP 1 drugs today. And because there’s been so much talk about how they impact body composition, I actually think that what it’s done is It’s just uncovered a way bigger problem because as we were talking offline, I don’t think it’s the GLP 1 agonist. I think it’s any poorly designed caloric restriction diet is going to cause muscle loss.

It’s like anywhere from 20 to 50 percent apparently. So, but specifically, let’s talk about both with GLP 1s and with diet, like what happens to muscle? What happens to mitochondria?

Yeah. So, you know, with GLP 1, let’s start with that. So  GLP 1, these are great drugs. They were developed for people with diabetes, you know, with diabetes because, you know, they kind of contract this hormone called glucagon that, you know, keeps insulin and other things in check.

And, and so if it goes crazy, then well, your, your glucose levels go crazy. But what they discovered as a sort of side benefit was that it also, Delays, gastric emptying, kind of hits the reward center in the brain that, uh, you know, keeps you eating more or less. And so it became clear that in addition to its di anti-diabetic effects, that it had these metabolic effects that it could help you lower, you know, weight if you took.

For a year. And so what has become the problem for, for healthcare practitioners now, there’s become a lifestyle choice, right? So people are, those who don’t need the drug are taking it and those that actually need it are not getting access to it. So I think that’s the GLP 1 story. Uh, and losing so much muscle.

And fat in such a short period of time is impairing mitochondria. It’s impairing your metabolic health. And I think that’s part of the problem. I think the conversation should be bring diet, bring exercise, and in hand to hand with, with the GLP 1 story, because these are element being regularly fed, walking 000 steps.

is the greatest medicine we have to improve our mitochondria.

Right. I mean, that’s, I’m actually thrilled this is coming out because this always need to come out. And you start to look at it and think, okay, if someone is, if we start to lose muscle mass, starting at around age 30, and we know, as you said, it starts to double at age 60, accelerates, and someone goes on one of these medications, let’s say they’re 50, without proper counseling, they could lose, and they’re saying you lose up to 50 percent of the weight from muscle.

And let’s say they had 40 pounds of weight to lose. They could lose muscle that they can never regain. Possibly. Yeah. So, you know, what about someone I’d say even 30 plus starting to go on these with the risk of sarcopenia? It seems like you shouldn’t be able to use these unless you’re committed to the right diet and exercise.

I

think 200 percent would you point out? I think this is an even greater problem for the 50 plus, as you said, because they’re already on this trajectory of losing muscle mass and strength. And now if they’re on GLP 1, as you said, they’re losing about. 15 percent of their body weight, which 5 percent is muscle mass.

So, or more or more in some other trials. So you’re losing about seven to 10 kilos of your hardcore muscle mass in a very short period of time that you’re going to lose in 10 years normally. Right. And so I think Wait another 10 years, you’re going to see a lot more sarcopenia and frailty showing up.

That’s frightening. And that’s my, I, I somehow see parallels with the statin world because when I was practicing medicine, people were giving statins to everybody, you know, you know, even if you had borderline cholesterol. And then they found out all these side effects on the muscle, that there were some kind of mitochondrial toxins, right?

So I see parallels with that, that there’s too much of a push to go on. But these are great medicines, don’t get me wrong. I think these are great for the target population. I just worry about this 50, 30, 40, it’s also worry. But I think they have residual energetics and muscle mass that can recalibrate.

And it will become a problem, but I think it’s the 50 year olds.

Again, it could be any person on a diet. On caloric restriction, this could happen with GLP 1 agonists or not. It’s just the GLP 1s and dampening the appetite make it even easier for it to have happen. And when you think about it, we lose, um, you know, we’re losing, let’s say we go on that.

You said, you know, we could lose 10 pounds of muscle. That could take you a year to put back on. I agree. A good year, like, and that’s, you’re doing everything. And that’s really frightening.

And that’s what the study is. Actually, if you look at the, all the trials that are coming out now that follow people after they’ve taken the 15 or 18 months of these GLP 1 agonists is that the fat is coming back after a while.

Muscle does not. And that’s the problem. I think that’s the problem that I think as a, Community focused on nutrition and what other tools you can build. I think that education piece is missing today in the health community. Hasn’t that

been, like, like, again, I think this is exposing this problem that we’ve always known with yo yo dieting.

And I remember reading something saying yo yo dieting doesn’t affect your metabolic health. I’m like, give me a break. You lose muscle and fat. You gain back fat, you lose muscle and fat, you gain back fat. How does that shift in your body composition over time, losing muscle, not impact your metabolic health?

It has to.

Yeah, it has to. But

the piece that they don’t talk about is the mitochondria. What, do we know what GLP 1 agonists do to mitochondria? Is it toxic like the, the statins are? I

think the initial research is, is not there, to be honest. I think it will start coming. Uh, and I think the, this amount of, Weight loss is like starvation, I think.

So you actually have to see, it’s not, it’s very similar, as you mentioned, to caloric restriction in terms of following the same pattern, but it is even more accelerated. I think it’s like starvation. Um, now the effects on mitochondria, uh, there is some, well, if you’re very overweight, BMI over 30 plus, and you’re on these drugs, I think the mitochondria will be better off on their mitochondria front because, you know, fat is, and fate.

It is not a stressor anymore. So, but in terms of healthy population, where it’s becoming like a lifestyle, uh, push, I, I, I worry. And I think there is some data that actually you could benefit with. For example, there’s some great research on, Probiotics like Akkermansia being natural GLP 1 booster. So I think people need to think how can we naturally boost these levels because this is made by the body, right?

Yeah.

Protein. Protein. Yeah. It’ll

take more BCAAs, take more. Yeah, exactly.

Yeah. It’s, I mean, that’s why I go, the original GLP 1 increase is protein. Protein. Yeah. And fiber. And then I think Akkermansia is really interesting. So. What role then, someone’s going on these and you want to design the perfect program, I would say, okay, let’s optimize their protein a pound, you know, a gram per pound of target body weight.

Um, let’s get them lifting heavy, but what role then would Urolithin A play in here to help avoid this muscle loss?

Yeah. So that’s where I think I GLV 1 support protocol that you need to be thinking. As you mentioned, the two key components are. Keep your muscle active, right? And eat one gram or even more if you’re older for per kilogram of body weight.

And then the third element, which is

one gram per pound. So two grams per kilogram, per

kilogram. So the more protein. Yeah, exactly. So I think that where MitoPure, Urolithin A, plays such a key role is that it, it sort of prevents the mitochondria from going in shock with this fast metabolic health change.

And MitoPure works by taking stress mitochondria out and keeping newer healthy mitochondria coming in and keeping your energetics of the muscle better. And I think that’s where MitoPure totally fits in. It has these great effects itself. If you are diabetic, if you’re on this weight loss journey, it has these great metabolic health effects.

So it’s. It’s kind of like a junked support protocol.

Okay, so how does someone know that they have stressed mitochondria, that they have like, you know, let’s walk through that. Is there any kind of test? How would one know that, oh, I’ve got to fix my mitochondria?

It’s the question I get asked the most, how do I know my mitochondria are happy or not?

Uh, well in clinic today, uh, the easiest, well, let’s say the easiest way to know is to think about your energy levels that the fuel you have left at the end of the day, right? After a whole day’s work of F activity efforts, we are here at this conference walking around. Do you still have some fuel left in the tank?

That’s your mitochondria. That’s the fuel they’re providing. Um, a lot of times people who exercise feel, oh, am I recovering easier than before? That’s again, your mitochondria are good. So these are kind of indicators of how good you are. You can do some lab testing, like look at your VO2

max levels.

Because that’s so much fun.

That’s, uh, I’m kidding. It’s, uh, yeah, you have to go on this incremental exercise testing.

So. I’m going to pause and VO2 and for people listening, VO2 max, um, is probably the biggest indicator now of all cause mortality. Like it is so mission critical to get this, your VO2 max optimized.

And this is really looking at your engines. How do you take your air in and move it into your lungs, move your bloodstream, get it into your mitochondria, make energy. And so, And it’s a really horrible test. It is. It’s really icky. Although, so what you have to do is on a treadmill or a bike or a rower, they put a little clip on your nose.

They put a very tight fitting mask on. We had to do this in grad school. It was like amazing that I made through grad school. Anyway, and then you had to run basically for 12 minutes as much as you could so that you could use as much oxygen. So you’re getting really good VO2 max test. It’s no fun at all.

And, but I hear that DEXA now is going to do a predictor and that you’re, the OroRing is doing a predictors, which is nice because I think most people are like, I’m not doing that. Um, how does mitopure, urolithin A, impact VO2max? What’s happening there to improve it? And how much can you see improvement in it?

Yeah. So we’ve done these, many of these randomized clinical trials in older adults, in 50 year olds, sort of the target age group of, of the. Those

aren’t older. That’s middle age.

That’s middle age. Yes, that’s right. Older is elite. Middle age adults. Now we’ve just completed a study in even elite Olympians now that we are almost around the Olympics kind of buzz in Paris.

And in all those trials, believe it or not, we see about a five to 10 percent improvement.

That is huge.

Which is, if you look at all the exercise trials would take exercise, regular exercise intervention of four to six months. And the fact that we are able to see this without changing diet. Or physical activity levels suggested.

This is a very direct mitochondrial effect.

Wow. I like to call this exercise in a bottle, but I always like to then say that this is not being done exercise. This means supportive, but that is crazy. The difference in that, um, in terms of muscle quality, like how are you. Discerning the increase in muscle quality when someone’s using urolithin A.

Like, are you doing grip strings tests or pushup tests? Are you doing biopsies? Like how can you tell that someone’s muscle mitochondria is improving?

Yeah. So we do what we call a battery of physical performance test. So the easiest test is to make people walk for six minutes and you line up a hospital, uh, you know, kind of an aisle and you have a stopwatch and you see the distance they walk.

And we have Good idea of how much healthy people walk in six minutes, et cetera. This is the easiest tool available. Then you get to the complex tools. Like we were talking about the testing for VO2. It’s not, it’s acquires heavy equipment to test with the mask and people

complying,

we use something called as a isokinetic biodex testing, which is basically a tool to look at your leg strength.

Leg strength is also a very good indicator of all cause, problems. You know, mortality and health span, et cetera. And that’s where we pick up a lot of the effects of the molecule, uh, is on the leg muscles. We also take a look at, uh, hand grip. The muscle here, it’s called the first dorsal ventrostii. It’s the first muscle that goes bad, actually, with aging and the mitochondria go back.

So it’s really how, you know, handshake, they say a firm handshake is a good indicator as well. So all these tests we see an effect, uh, of about 10 to 12% improvement in strength. We also do, most people don’t like in clinical trials as we take a little piece of their muscle tissue with a, yeah, we don’t like a procedure called muscle biopsies.

And then we do a whole 30,000 genomic scan of all the mitochondrial genes in an unbiased way, and that’s where we, it’s really black or white. Right. We see. Really bad looking mitochondria change their energy profile and look very healthy like what exercise people do.

Wow. How readily available is that test?

Uh, it’s a difficult pitch to tell somebody to do that test, but now what we have just figured out, and it’s a trial we’ll publish soon, is that a good way to mimic those findings is to take a blood draw and look at your, uh, what we call white blood cells. White blood cells might have also a lot of mitochondria, and if you’re taking an oral supplement much like MitoPure, the effects on mitochondria that we are picking up in the blood cells are very, uh, Similar analogous to what we’re seeing happening at the deep muscle genomic level.

So that’s an easy test. We can take a little blood draw or blood spot and tell how good your mitochondria are. We are also working with a few companies that are offering these kits. Now there’s one called MeScreen. Yes. Friends

with Pimel. I did my MeScreen. So yeah, me too.

So yeah, so we, we, we are trying to now use these as surrogate markers, which are not, um, Relatively less non invasive and they give you as good a readout.

So these are the tests. The other test that I see is people don’t say. It’s related to mitochondria, but there’s a big link coming with inflammation and mitochondrial health. And CRP in every trial, HSCRP is by far the biomarker that we see always being dampened.

Wow.

And so I personally What’s the connection?

So the connection are Is that actually your immune cells, or when your mitochondria are stressed, okay, they release these fragments of, of bad mitochondria that induce what we call during the aging process, inflammation. So there is a, There’s a, this is the field we are calling it as immune metabolism. So actually the mitochondria stress are becoming like danger signals for your immune cells and they pick up the stress as well.

And that is something we can do at a very deep level. In a much less invasive way. How

much are you seeing this inflammation like as looking at it through, I guess you’re looking at HSCRP, how much do you see it decrease?

We see HSCRP, we look at every interleukin also, like interleukin 6 is also known to be very closely linked.

We see almost like these are old people or middle aged, a little bit sedentary, they have high CRP. Some of them come in with like 3 4 which is like higher and we see almost like a 30 40 percent reduction. Athletes. That is

huge.

Athletes are inflamed. All these athletes are inflamed.

They are super inflamed.

And we see like after training over training is inducing high levels of inflammation. We see that even getting bad.

Wow. I, I’ve done some very weird things in my career. And one of them is I worked with King World Production. They wanted to train the next heavyweight champion of the world. And, and they, what they did was they took, failed out Um, college and early pro athletes.

And they, they thought they could take, this was really ridiculous, but they took basketball and football, all these different players. And I was the team nutritionist, but I got to look at all their labs and it was a train, they were training them way too hard, but that was not my part. Um, and I’d worked with a heavyweight champ, Razor Roddick.

So I’d ever read, I think I’d already done this, but I was like, their inflammation was off the charts.

Yeah.

And I did not have this tool back then, which would have been super helpful because I was like, you know, there just wasn’t that much I could throw at them to get it down.

Yeah.

You know,

so we can, with a very small volume.

So we’ve been working with an institute called the Buck Institute of Aging in the U S and You’ll be amazed at what they can tell you from just a little amount of blood. So we’ve been collaborating and you’ll see the story come out very soon.

Can you give a single hint?

Yeah, so this is again a study in 50 years, middle aged adults done in Germany and the U.

S. And what we see is after a month of mito pure supplementation, uh, they, And what happens in immune cells is that you lose some of these stem cell like immune cells. So your, there’s an organ called the thymus, it recedes after twenties, thirties. And so all these vaccines that we are putting on is just to, you know, you’re left with what I say, a goodie bag that after a while the virus changes its pattern or whatever.

Uh, what we see in this study is that we have brought these young, youthful, young, young Immune cells back. Wow. They have better mitochondria and their mitochondria health is closely correlated with whole body mitochondrial health. So this, these are and inflammation is down. So this would be sort of the trifecta, I’m a trained immunologist and we’ve always said, nobody knows what vitamin C does.

Everybody takes it for immune system. But we To link mitochondrial health to immune health and whole body mitochondrial health is, is, I think it’s going to be the biggest paper we’ll put out, publication. Yeah,

amazing. Well, especially nowadays. The one thing I did notice, like there were a lot of things I noticed when I started using, and I like to do, I love being my N of one and doing one thing at a time.

Like I don’t do two things at a time because then I’m like, I don’t know what, what happened. When I started this, I just told the story upstairs in the talk. Um, I was always the jar opener in the house and all of a sudden I couldn’t open the jar and I was like, Oh, well, tough jar. I gave it to my husband.

Then it happened again. The third time it happened. I was like, Oh, and, um, thankfully you guys came along at that time. I took the test with the pomegranate where, and maybe you can explain that test when I’m done telling the story, but I was not one of those people that converts pomegranate into urolithin A well in the gut microbiome.

I started taking this, the, the two things that I noticed was I could open jars, my grip strength improved, but the other thing was I could push harder at the gym, so that was a big thing. That’s always a big one. I can, you know, when you’re someone who’s worked out since you’re 16, to see an improvement is, it’s hard.

It’s really easy when you’re new, when you’ve been doing it forever, getting improvements is a whole nother ballgame. So, um, maybe you can talk about urolithinase specifically, what it is, how to know if you need it, you know, how much do you need, et cetera.

So, Urolithinae is a natural compound, right? It’s derived from dietary precursors that are present in pomegranates, pecans, walnuts, all the good stuff that is found in Mediterranean diet, etc.

The problem is you can drink lots of pomegranate juice.

I hope not because it’s like too much sugar.

Yeah.

Yeah. When you sent me the pomegranate juice, I was like, I don’t want to drink the pomegranate juice. Yeah, if you But

Yeah, if you drink too much pomegranate juice, it’s still, you need something else called the gut microbiome to, to convert this, these polyphenols antioxidants into urolithin A, which I call a postbiotic.

So it’s what the pharmacy inside, as I say, the gut microbiome is actually delivering for our benefit. And what we see and I’ve done trials and France, Germany, U. S., Canada, and now just one in India. French are the best. They, they must be eating a lot of fermented foods. They must be eating a lot of fruits and nuts.

We say about 30,

40%.

Naturally.

Asia,

uh, Asia, we haven’t gone to Japan yet. Uh, in Germany, it’s a bit lower. U. S. and Canada is catastrophic. It’s like 10%. Uh, if, you know, if at all. And that’s because our

gut microbiome’s a mess or what?

India, zero.

Zero.

I’m zero.

Zero.

I’m zero.

Why is that?

And, and, that. bugged me for a while until I figured out all of us, and I grew up in India, for everything, you take antibiotics.

Oh, boy, wiped out. Everything, their gut microbiome is just wiped out. The good stuff. So, it does, I mean, yes, you can retrain it by eating more fiber and giving probiotics. I can drink six glasses of pomegranate juice, take the 30 plus gram of sugar. Zero.

Well, what I’ve heard though, is that if you wipe out the gut microbiome, you know, in your first two years of life, you’re pretty much, you’re not restoring it.

And then I just did a podcast earlier today with, with our buddy, Dr. Naysha Winters, and she was sharing that colonoscopy prep wipes out your gut microbiome. I was like, Oh, I didn’t know that one. So I

think that, well, the type of delivery. So

many things wipe out our gut microbiome. We don’t think of what it, what it does.

So, wow. So very few people can actually make this content. Very few

people can make it. And even if they make it, Of all the people, I think there’s about 2 percent that I call the blessed ones because they’re making it the levels what our supplementation protocol will give them. And so the other percentage they’re making are making it what I call sub therapeutic.

So they’re not gonna get anything out of it. So, and that’s why, you know, we invented the test. I, you know, I bled like thousands of people in the hallways just to figure out how it would work. And then it’s an easy tool, right? It just allows you to know, Oh, my, my. BODY does not have the right gut microbiome and I’ve been eating right?

Thinking I’ve been eating right? And I need this. And so that’s why we created this advanced supplementation as I call it. It’s really the way I see your latin A. It’s like a foundation for improving your overall cellular health. Now you can. Put layers over it. You can, you know, do caloric restriction, you can do your exercise, you can take whatever vitamins and minerals, you’ll just amplify the response.

But when you look at it, if you think about what are the biggest challenges facing us now, um, those aging muscle stats, which I think are The stats, they don’t have to be. And then energy, right? So we’re losing muscle strength and power. We’ve got energy problems. We’ve got immune problems. These are all mitochondrial problems.

These are all

mitochondrial problems.

And for the most part, the way that we eat and what we’ve done over the years with our microbiome has caused the problem. So Using urolithin A, what are people needing to do? Like what’s the, how do you dose it? And specifically, especially like with this podcast, we have a lot of people interested, um, some people on GLP 1s or using things that mimic GLP 1s like allulose, calicur, um, Or in caloric restriction, doing what I call re comping, where they’re dropping fat and holding onto or building muscle.

You know, where does this, how does this play a role and how much should they use?

Yeah. So our randomized trials and what we have been seeing is that you need a dose of about 500 milligram to maintain optimal cellular mitochondrial health. That’s where we start seeing benefits after two to four months on strength endurance, et cetera.

But, et cetera. The trials where we have upped the dose to a gram is where we start seeing the, the inflammation effects, the, the anti inflammatory and the immune effects because that dose starts to have, you know, bigger whole body effects. So I’ve been on a gram for, for a long time. I’ve only

been on 500, now I’m going

to the booth.

Time people who have fatigue issues or have whole body inflammation, they tell me that they have upped the dose and seen these effects. How does it all fit in into the story? I, again, back to your point, I think this is where I believe, even in the mitochondria field, there are other nutrients, right?

There’s NAD boosters, there’s other things that hit mitochondria, but what makes urolithin A very unique is that it’s a mitophagy inducer, which means that It’s hitting this autophagy pathway in the mitochondria, cleaning out the faulty stress mitochondria, and just giving space for more healthy mitochondria, more energy.

And that’s how it’s unique compared to other solutions.

Yeah. So, I mean, the other things could support, but you’ve got to have the mitophagy.

Yeah. And that’s what Slows down with aging. That’s probably what slows down with even in athletes with over training. Now that we are seeing the data from that trial inflammation accelerates even sort of this decline of autophagy.

So I think this is the kind of the tri triage that happens with aging.

So going up to that higher level of a thousand

mm-Hmm. .

Um, is that something that you would need to do? Long term, is this something if someone’s got inflammation and they’re now dropping fat and they’re getting control of it, they drop down to 500, where should the dosing ultimately be?

So, to be honest, we haven’t done these long term trials of, you know, upping the dose and then, but I do think from having Taking the product myself and done trials and about thousand participants and hearing from thousands more of customers. I think it’s really your perspective. If you feel you’re already doing things to maintain a healthy health span and things right, then 500 does, does a job.

It keeps your mitochondria happy. As I say, thousands of when you feel this, and a lot of people tell me, Oh, I take it when I take, go for. Transit landing flight and helps my jet lag. I’ve heard this from actually very recently, somebody telling, or when you feel your body’s inflamed, right? So I think that, and you can always go down to.

That’s a

great idea. Like I heard about, um, creatine for jet lag. So, and I, my, cause everyone here, they’re like, how was your jet lag? I don’t have jet lag. I didn’t do jet lag, but now I’m thinking I can even do it better by doing a creatine and might appear combo.

People don’t know it, but yeah, your whole circadian rhythm is controlled by the mitochondria as well, so it wouldn’t make sense, yeah.

Yeah. Oh, nice. I’ll do it on the way home.

Mm hmm.

Perfect.

Okay.

Um, so So, let’s slip over, there’s two things around skin. So first of all, this whole, like, conversation around a sempic face, um, which people are talking about it’s muscle loss, but it seems like to me it’s fat loss. What is it really a thing, um, or is it just, what is it?

And then I’d love to talk a little bit about, So,

I think if you look at the first things when the first few years these drugs came out that actually dermatologists and aesthetic medicine practitioners started seeing was that people who have been on this GLP 1, semaglutide, you know, all these are similar drugs.

They shrank the fat in their face as much as you said. To me, again, brings the starvation picture in mind. If you actually see a face of starvation, it’s very similar. The amount of fat you’re losing that short of time. And that’s what people have now coined as a zampic face.

I was reading something and they were like, Oh, it’s the loss of muscle.

I go, No, it’s not. No, it’s not the loss of muscle in your face. It’s the loss of fat in your face, which, you know, there was that famous actress, I think it was Rita Hayworth or something that said you can either keep your face or your butt as you age, pick one. I’m like, huh. So it’s loss of fat then.

It is loss of fat.

And what people, it is a classical facial expression that they have more wrinkles. They have a sort of this hollowed, you know, sunken face kind of, uh, and it’s basically, I think stress mitochondria and stress mitochondria results, stress Mitochondria results in poor collagen and kind of all coming together.

And so skin health is compromised. And, and that’s, to me is what Ozempic face is. And, uh, we’ve been working on it as well. We’ve been looking at how urethane is just not acting at a whole body level through nutrition, but how you can deliver it Directly to the skin because skin cells have mitochondria, which decline as well, and we’ve had some great data that it does what we know it does on muscle cells and now we know it does on immune cells and now we know it does on skin cells.

Really? So what have you found? So what we did was we again ran a number of randomized clinical trials in different age groups, uh, different skin types, uh, you know, people having wrinkles, people having more of a photo damaged skin. And we find exactly what we know the molecule does is two things. It improves mitochondrial health through mitophagy and it tones down inflammation.

So skin aging is really two, two parts, right? Intrinsic and extrinsic. Intrinsic is your decline of cellular health. Intrinsic is your decline of cellular health. An extrinsic, which is the main contributor, is the pollution. It’s the environmental stress of UV, harmful UV rays. And so we think it’s kind of the combined longevity solution of oral and topical together kind of is very synergistic.

And have you done any research on it? Like, what are you seeing with the use of these things?

Yeah. So what we see is basically we can recover this sort of wrinkle of, you know, people as they age, they have wrinkles and they have skin poor barrier and poor skin hydration. We see a lot of this come back. So we see about a 20 percent improvement in skin hydration, barrier of the skin is strengthened to fight, let’s say the environmental stressors.

And we see about a 10 to 12 percent lowering of the wrinkles after like eight weeks or two, two months of applying it. And we have tested different formulations, um, you know, things that you can put on your face in the day as a day cream or a night cream or even a serum. And they all tend to show the same effect.

Nice. Mm hmm. Very cool. Yes, I am. I ran out of the serum and and our buddy Ian has been like, I’ll send you some. I’m like, where is it? I’ve got the bottle. I’m like hammering the bottle. I’m like, don’t leave me stranded here now that you’ve got me hooked on it. Excellent. Any last Thoughts for, you know, our audience who again are like, we say well beyond 40, mainly female, really looking at how they can age powerfully.

Yeah. Yeah. I think back to what I say is, uh, the three pillars of optimizing your health. Eat right, eat protein, as you said, um, eat more antioxidants if you can, um, move more, because those two are the best medicines for your mitochondria. And, and if, even if you’re not on GLP 1 or on GLP 1 and worried about your metabolic health, do think about this sort of advanced nutritional supplementation protocol.

We talked about MitoPure being a very key element of that, by keeping your mitochondria in good shape, but Other things can be added, like creatine. And then you need to talk to your healthcare practitioners, your, you know, your nutritionist, dietician, and your, yeah. Do your conditioning strength, you know, conditioning.

And I think those together, even if you’re on these GLP 1, uh, medications and you wean out of them, you will be in this trajectory of good health longer.

I do see these, like I always had my foundation, which were things like magnesium and vitamin D with K2 and, and fish oil. And now I’m like, Creatine and urolithin A are definitely part of the foundation.

They’re not the, oh, nice to have, they are that you must have. You don’t have great mitochondrial health. You don’t have anything. So you’ve got to have it. And again, we talk so much about doing things for autophagy. This is cleaning out the cellular trash of the mitochondria. It’s super duper important. So I know that you guys are going to give us a 50 percent off a starter pack for timeline.

And we will put that at jjvirgin. com forward slash GLP one all together. And it’s number one. So everyone can go there to grab that special thing. And the big things you’re going to notice, I like, You’re gonna notice a difference in the gym, which I love. I’m always, you know, I’m so aware of, do I actually notice a difference?

And the two things that I’ve noticed a difference with are creatine and taking uly. And a, you just notice when you go to the gym, it’s awesome.

Mm-Hmm. .

And then I’m a really picky skincare person. Um, I get sent stuff all the time. Mm-Hmm, . And most of, I never use. And this is one that not only do I use, I take it with me everywhere.

That’s always the test. Did it get into the suitcase? And then did I freak out when I ran out of it? And that passes the test. So I’m hooked on the body lotion and the serum. I love them. So thank you so much for your time. I appreciate you.

Pleasure being in this podcast as always, JJ. Thank you for having me.

Be sure to join me next time for more tools, tips, and techniques you can incorporate into everyday life to ensure you look and feel great and are built to last. Check me out on Instagram, Facebook, and my website, jjvirgin. com, and make sure to follow my podcast at subscribetojj. com so you don’t miss a single episode.

And hey, if you’re loving what you hear, don’t forget to leave a review. Your reviews make a big difference in helping me reach more incredible women just like you to spread the word about aging powerfully after 40. Thanks for tuning in. And I’ll catch you on the next episode.

Hey, JJ here. And just a reminder that the Well Beyond 40 podcast offers health, wellness, fitness, and nutritional information that’s designed for educational and entertainment purposes only. You should not rely on this information as a substitute for, nor does it replace professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

If you have any concerns or questions about your health, you should always consult with a physician or other healthcare professional. Make sure that you do not disregard, avoid, or delay obtaining medical or health related advice from your healthcare professional because of something you may have heard on the show or read in our show notes.

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