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Q&A: Cholesterol Lowering, Volume vs. Intensity For Hypertrophy Volume, Zone 2 Efficiency, and More

Q&A: Cholesterol Lowering, Volume vs. Intensity For Hypertrophy Volume, Zone 2 Efficiency, and More



Barbell Medicine Q&A: Cholesterol, Hypertrophy Volume, and Training Efficiency


Episode Summary


In this Q&A session, Dr. Jordan Feigenbaum addresses listener questions on optimizing training, managing health metrics, and navigating supplement use. Key topics include the latest evidence on cholesterol management (statins vs. PCSK9 inhibitors), why routine Vitamin D supplementation is usually unnecessary, and the mechanics of hypertrophy, emphasizing that volume is superior to intensity once a functional threshold is met. Dr. Feigenbaum also offers practical coaching advice on dynamic volume regulation, the importance of efficiency in the deadlift, and why training models like Pilates do not offer the same benefits as traditional strength work.

⏱️ Episode Timestamps

  • 00:00 Introduction
  • 00:43 Cholesterol Lowering Medication (Statins vs. PCSK9 Inhibitors)
  • 03:27 Volume vs. Intensity for Hypertrophy
  • 06:48 Regulating Training Volume and the 5% Rule
  • 11:43 Barbell Medicine Supplement Philosophy and Safety
  • 14:14 Pilates as a Training Modality
  • 16:31 Is Zone 2 Cardio Really That Amazing?

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⚕️ Section I: Clinical and Healthspan Optimization

Cholesterol Management: The Lower is Better Philosophy

The core principle of managing atherogenic risk is that the risk of heart disease is proportional to the overall lifetime exposure (level $\times$ duration) to atherogenic lipoproteins, specifically LDL, triglycerides, and particles tagged with Apolipoprotein B (ApoB). These particles constitute the "atherogenic load."

Lowering this load is beneficial, and the data suggests that lower is better for cardiovascular health. While powerful medications like PCSK9 inhibitors offer an immense magnitude of cholesterol lowering and are proven for both primary and secondary prevention of major adverse cardiac events, the general population will often achieve substantial risk reduction with statins or statin/ezetimibe combinations, which are more accessible and cost-effective.

This approach is validated by observing individuals with genetic mutations who maintain low cholesterol levels throughout their lives—they demonstrate the lowest risk of heart disease, period. Therefore, for active lifters seeking to optimize healthspan and longevity, the goal should be active management and mitigation of this exposure. This requires understanding how to interpret blood work for active lifters and working with a physician to find the most appropriate and sustainable treatment plan, which may include setting targets to lower LDL cholesterol to near-neonatal levels.


Vitamin D Supplementation: Questioning the Routine Recommendation

Routine, widespread Vitamin D supplementation for the general, otherwise healthy population is generally not recommended due to a lack of strong evidence showing that replacing low levels improves actual health outcomes. While low Vitamin D levels frequently coexist with various


Published on 1 month, 1 week ago






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