Altitude
119 sourcesRay Peat was fascinated by the health effects of altitude and frequently referenced epidemiological data showing that people living at higher altitudes tend to have lower rates of cancer, heart disease, and obesity. He attributed this to the mild hypoxia at altitude stimulating protective metabolic adaptations — increased CO2 retention, improved mitochondrial efficiency, and enhanced thyroid function.
Peat noted that the 'altitude effect' mirrors many of the metabolic improvements he advocated through other means: increased CO2, reduced lactic acid production, and a shift toward oxidative metabolism. He saw altitude research as powerful evidence supporting his broader views on the importance of CO2 and oxidative metabolism for health.
Key Positions
- Higher altitude populations show lower rates of cancer, heart disease, and obesity
- Mild hypoxia at altitude stimulates protective metabolic adaptations
- Altitude increases CO2 retention, which Peat considered broadly protective
- The altitude effect supports Peat's emphasis on oxidative over glycolytic metabolism
- Reduced oxygen pressure at altitude can paradoxically improve mitochondrial efficiency
- Altitude research parallels the benefits Peat attributed to thyroid optimization and CO2 therapies
Sources
119 items-
Buteyko Breathing — Bud Weiss
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Politics & Science: Fats
Ray Peat interview/radio show on Mon Jul 21 2008 from Politics & Science -
nervous system protect and restore
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nutrition and the endocrine system
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Adaptive substance, creative regeneration: Mainstream science, repression, and creativity
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Altitude and Mortality.
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Alzheimer's: The problem of Alzheimer's disease as a clue to immortality - part 1.
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An Interview With Dr. Raymond Peat Part I & II - by Karen Mcc et Matt Labosco, Greg Waitt, Wayde Curran, and Mariam
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Autonomic systems.
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BSE ("mad cow"), scrapie, etc.: Stimulated amyloid degeneration and the toxic fats.
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Cataracts: water, energy, light, and aging
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Cholesterol, longevity, intelligence, and health.
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Energy, structure, and carbon dioxide: A realistic view of the organism
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Epilepsy and Progesterone.
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Estriol, DES, DDT, etc.
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Fatigue, aging, and recuperation
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Functional Performance Systems Blog - Rob Turner
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Glucose and sucrose for diabetes
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Herb Doctors: Serotonin, Endotoxins, Stress TRANSCRIPTION
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Interview Repository - Andrei Pozolotin
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Meat physiology, stress, and degenerative physiology
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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, protein, fats, and progesterone
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Osteoporosis, aging, tissue renewal, and product science