Metabolism
347 sourcesFor Ray Peat, metabolism was not simply about 'burning calories' but about the fundamental processes of energy production that determine the health or disease of every cell. He drew heavily on the work of Albert Szent-Györgyi, Otto Warburg, and others who understood life as an energetic process. Healthy metabolism, in Peat's view, means efficient mitochondrial oxidation of fuel (primarily glucose) to produce CO2 and water, with high ATP output.
Peat argued that many modern diseases are fundamentally metabolic — the result of cells shifting from efficient oxidative metabolism to inefficient stress metabolism (glycolysis and fat oxidation). Factors that suppress metabolism include polyunsaturated fats, excess estrogen, endotoxin, serotonin, and darkness. Factors that support it include thyroid hormone, adequate glucose, saturated fats, light, warmth, and carbon dioxide.
Key Positions
- Healthy metabolism means efficient mitochondrial oxidation, primarily of glucose
- The shift from oxidative to glycolytic metabolism is a hallmark of cancer and aging
- Metabolic rate can be assessed by body temperature, pulse, and CO2 production
- Polyunsaturated fats damage mitochondria and suppress oxidative metabolism
- Sugar (glucose + fructose) supports metabolic rate; starch may not
- Carbon dioxide is a product of healthy metabolism and has protective effects
- Thyroid hormone is the primary regulator of metabolic rate
Sources
347 items-
Herb Doctors: Weight Gain TRANSCRIPTION
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Hot flashes, energy, and aging
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I Choose Ice Cream - Geneviève
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Immunodeficiency, dioxins, stress, and the hormones.
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Intelligence and metabolism
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Interview Repository - Andrei Pozolotin
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Intuitive knowledge and its development
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Jay Feldman
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Lactate vs. CO2 in wounds, sickness, and aging; the other approach to cancer
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Leakiness, aging, and cancer.
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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Membranes, plasma membranes, and surfaces
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Menopause and its causes.
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Milk in context: allergies, ecology, and some myths
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Mitochondria and mortality
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Multiple Sclerosis and other hormone related brain syndromes
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Multiple Sclerosis and other hormone-related brain syndromes
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Multiple sclerosis, protein, fats, and progesterone
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Natural Estrogens
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Nutrition by Nature - Kate Skinner
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Oils in Context.
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Osteoporosis, aging, tissue renewal, and product science
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Osteoporosis, harmful calcification, and nerve/muscle malfunctions.
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PaleoGo - Rami Adada
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Pathological Science & General Electric: Threatening the paradigm