Cortisol
262 sourcesRay Peat viewed cortisol as one of the key stress hormones whose chronic elevation drives aging and disease. While cortisol serves essential functions in acute stress (mobilizing fuel, suppressing inflammation), Peat emphasized that chronically elevated cortisol — driven by inadequate nutrition, thyroid deficiency, PUFA consumption, and other stressors — breaks down muscle and bone, promotes fat storage, suppresses immune function, and damages the brain.
Peat noted that cortisol and thyroid hormone have opposing actions: cortisol promotes gluconeogenesis (making glucose from protein), while thyroid supports efficient glucose oxidation. When thyroid function is low, the body relies more on cortisol to maintain blood sugar, creating a destructive cycle. He recommended addressing cortisol excess through frequent eating (sugar + protein), thyroid support, adequate sleep, and avoiding PUFAs.
Key Positions
- Chronic cortisol elevation breaks down muscle, bone, and brain tissue for gluconeogenesis
- Cortisol rises when blood sugar drops — frequent meals with sugar and protein prevent this
- Hypothyroidism forces greater reliance on cortisol for blood sugar maintenance
- Cortisol promotes fat storage (especially abdominal) while breaking down lean tissue
- Pregnenolone and progesterone oppose cortisol's catabolic effects
- Nighttime cortisol surges cause sleep disturbances and night waking
- DHEA and cortisol have an inverse relationship; the DHEA/cortisol ratio indicates stress status
Sources
262 items-
Phosphate, activation, and aging
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Physiology texts and the real world
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Pregnenolone
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Preventing and treating cancer with progesterone.
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Progesterone
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Progesterone Deceptions
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Progesterone Pregnenolone & DHEA - Three Youth-Associated Hormones.
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Progesterone Summaries
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Progesterone, not estrogen, is the coronary protection factor of women.
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Prostate Cancer
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Protective CO2 and aging
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Protective CO2 and aging
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RU486, Cancer, Estrogen, and Progesterone
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Regeneration and degeneration: Types of inflammation change with aging
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Rosacea, inflammation, and aging: The inefficiency of stress
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Ruolo Fisiologico del Sale (Na-Cl +)
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Salt, energy, metabolic rate, and longevity
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Serotonin, depression, and aggression: The problem of brain energy
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Serotonin: Effects in disease, aging and inflammation
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Slim birdy
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Stem cells, cell culture, and culture: Issues in regeneration
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Sugar issues
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TSH, temperature, pulse rate, and other indicators in hypothyroidism
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The Great Fish Oil Experiment
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The dark side of stress (learned helplesness)