PodClips Logo
PodClips Logo
The Peter Attia Drive
AMA #24: Deep dive into blood glucose: why it matters, important metrics to track, and superior insights from a CGM
AMA #24: Deep dive into blood glucose: why it matters, important metrics to track, and superior insights from a CGM

AMA #24: Deep dive into blood glucose: why it matters, important metrics to track, and superior insights from a CGM

The Peter Attia DriveGo to Podcast Page

Bob Kaplan, Peter Attia
·
14 Clips
·
Jun 14, 2021
Listen to Clips & Top Moments
Episode Summary
Episode Transcript
0:11
Hey everyone, welcome to a sneak peek. Ask me, anything or am a episode of the drive podcast? I'm your host Peter attea. At the end of this short episode. I'll explain how you can access the AMA episodes in full along with a ton of other membership benefits. We've created or you can learn more now by going to Peter Atia, m.com.
0:30
R /, subscribe. So without further delay, here's today's sneak peek of the ask me. Anything
0:35
episode,
0:39
everyone. Welcome to am a number 24 in this episode. I am joined as usual by Bob Kaplan and we devote the entire episode to a series of questions that Focus around glucose homeostasis, we Center the discussion. Basically around the idea of why one would wear a CGM, especially
1:00
Someone who does not have type 2 diabetes or type 1 diabetes and we get into the really deep nitty-gritty around. What is it about glucose that matters so much with respect to health. Why is it that I make such a stink about having lower average, blood glucose fewer, peaks of glucose less, glucose variability and all of the associated things that go with it. So, I hope you'll check out AMA number 24 and without further delay, here it is.
1:31
Hello Peter. Hey Bob, how's it going? It's going well man. Ready for an AMA ready, as always. Alright. So in this case we got great questions about glucose and we aggregated bunch of the get to be good to do a deep dive. I'm going to go through a couple of the questions here, see what you think. So the first question is more of a statement than a question. I've heard Peter talked.
2:00
How fasting glucose and even hba1c measurements can often be misleading and how he favors o GT, which is short for Original Gangster time trial. That's right. Yeah. Okay, perfect. They can might be oral glucose tolerance, test with insulin measurements and also wearing a CGM to get a better sense of glucose homeostasis. My understanding is that oh GTS and see, GM's are typically reserved for people with diabetes so he's got the following questions.
2:29
Why does Peter find these tests useful? In quote, unquote, healthy people, what is Peter looking for when assessing someone's glucose levels, what does he like and hate to see, how does Peter Define normal versus abnormal control of glucose? If I'm not diabetic, do I have anything to worry about here? And there's another question that was, are you able to do a breakdown of what you look for on different? People, CGM data, and what you would advise to improve their numbers. Similar to the AMA. You did on lat.
3:00
Yes. All right. So I'm gonna pause you right there. Bob, and I want you to answer this question for me, honestly, did you pay this person to ask these
3:07
questions, asking for a
3:11
friend? I mean, seriously, these are the perfect questions. The most Salient questions, the most important questions, and this might become by extension, then one of the most important amas we do in terms of the aggregate.
3:29
Impact, it could have on Health and Longevity because these questions really get at the root of where I think I hate to use this term, but for lack of a better word where the mainstream medical system is just so out of sync with what I believe the future of medicine is going to be. So let's take a step back on all of this, for a second type, two diabetes has a definition and it is defined as having a hemoglobin A1c concentration greater than 6,
4:00
Five percent and that corresponds to an average blood glucose. Got, I should know this, but the fact that I pay so little attention to it, tells you, I don't even know it. I believe it corresponds to an average blood glucose of approximately 130 milligrams per deciliter and of course, the way it works, is it measures the concentration of glycosylated hemoglobin so it's taking out red blood cells and it's looking at how much glucose is
4:29
Talk to them and obviously the more glucose that is stuck to them. The more you can infer that the average concentration of glucose is higher During the period of a red blood cells life. But of course, this is potentially misleading because if a red blood cell has a very short life. For example, see this in a couple of my patients, including a patient who's recovering from prostate cancer, who still has some GI bleeding issues patients with gastritis Etc.
4:59
Women with a heavy menstrual period. So people who are losing significant amounts of blood have a higher turnover, red blood cells. They're going to have an artificially low hemoglobin A1c. Conversely, people who have red blood cells, that stick around a very long time, people with a microcytic pattern, meaning they have very small, red blood cells that are less likely to get chewed up in the splenic system, which is where we ultimately break down red blood cells. They're going to have an artificially elevated hemoglobin,
5:29
See, because their red blood cells are living longer on average than the typical person, which is about 90 days. So, that's one reason why I'm not a huge fan of hemoglobin A1c. But the broader Point here is that I find it on helpful to Simply say, if your hemoglobin A1c is above 6.5 and you have type 2 diabetes, you have quote-unquote a disease. If it is below 6.5, you are normal or even if we go one step further and say, well, there's a pre-diabetic
5:59
Biddies which is defined as 5.7 26.4. And those people we have to watch out for. But anybody at 5.6 and down is completely normal. As though, there's some enormous difference between five point six and five point seven or six point, four and six point five. So while on the one hand, I understand the need to simplify things, I think over simplification is erroneous. And I think we should view these as a Continuum. So, glucose at the average level is a continuum
6:29
Mmm. And as the person who asked the question noted, I am a far greater proponent of CGM. Now Bob I don't know if you're wondering what this thing on my arm is, but in case you are, this is a CGM. This is a continuous glucose monitor and as its name suggests, it measures glucose continuously and while I do not have diabetes. And while most of my patients don't have diabetes, many of them along with, I wear this device and I think what we'll get into
6:59
Is the Y. So what are the metrics? We're tracking here. And what are we describing as ideal and optimal as opposed to acceptable along those metrics anything else? I can say broad Strokes before we jump into the nuts and bolts of this Bob,
7:15
I think that covers it. Other question about the continuous glucose monitor wondering if it's like streaming or does it actually take measurements every certain period of time
7:26
ESO? Actually thought it would be helpful Bob to just sort of show you and obviously
7:29
Earners kind of what this looks like. So it connects to your phone and every five minutes it is spitting out a number. If you look at it in a 24-hour fashion, when you turn your phone on your side, you get sort of a 24-hour tracing. So for my last 24 hours, I've averaged about 90 milligrams per deciliter and my variability has been about nine or ten milligrams per deciliter or by standard deviation. My peak level has been let me see.
7:59
To go back and look, my Peak was 102. And by extension, then I've had no Peaks above 140, that's going to come up later on. So obviously, if my Peak was 102, I was never above 140 and my Nader was 77 so range of 77 to 102. So anyway, that's the kind of data you get out of these things. And obviously, they have reports that will spit out your average blood glucose over one day seven day, 14 days, 30 days, 60 days, 90 days, it's
8:29
cetera along with the standard deviation and things like that. And the way these things work, of course, is they're not actually measuring in the blood. They're measuring in the interstitial fluid and that, of course, is the remarkable technology, right? It's that. It's able to impute what the glucose level is in the blood without actually having to sample the blood. That's the magic of these
8:49
things knowing you. I suspect I already know the answer but I'll ask it anyway. Have you looked at your CGM and compared say like your three-month data to an HBO your age?
8:59
A1C of course. See how to yeah, yeah. And there's no comparison so because I actually have something called beta thalassemia, minor, or I carry the trait for beta thalassemia. I have tiny little red blood cells or as my roommate in med school. Matt McCormick used to call it shite for blood, the size of my red. Blood cells is very small. So my mean, corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hematocrit are very low. I'm not anemic because I make up for it by having a lot of them. So I have a lot of red blood cells. They're just
9:29
All very small. So I have normal hemoglobin hematocrit, oxygen, carrying capacity, but my hemoglobin, A1c always runs high. I've measured it as high. As 5 point 8, the lowest I've ever had measured as 5.1, but anytime I've measured it because I've been wearing CGM for almost six years. Now, if I go and check my A1C versus my trailing 90-day CGM, it
10:00
Almost always suggest that the hemoglobin A1c is higher by Point, 5 2 .8. If I measure a 5.7 on the hemoglobin A1c, it's overstating, my blood glucose and it should really be about a 5.1, or a 5.2 and we see the opposite. In some people, we have some patients where their CGM is actually showing us a much higher level of average blood glucose than what.
10:29
R hemoglobin A1c predicts. So it's important to understand hemoglobin A1c is a measurement that predicts average blood glucose CGM. Actually gives you average blood glucose and you can reverse engineer an imputed A1C. It's obviously the latter that is much more interesting because you're directly measuring the variable of
10:50
interest. Yeah, it's amazing, it's amazing technology. It's the difference between like a snapshot
10:56
and movie. Yeah. Entirely and from when I started wearing these,
10:59
Things nearly 6 years ago. I thought I don't know why everyone in the world isn't wearing it. Notwithstanding the cost and the logistics of it and the obvious reason why everyone wasn't wearing it was their cost prohibitive and certainly back then they were quite involved but they're getting better and better and better. And I'd like to believe that there will be a day. When you go to your first visit at your doctor, or prior to your first, visit with your doctor, they mail you a CGM and you wear it for 30 days and that data is looked at by your doctor and your doctor by the time you arrive in
11:29
The office he or she has that information. And instead of looking at an A1C or a fasting glucose, they can really look at what your glucose Excursions have looked like over a period of time in the real world,
11:41
they do that with. Like I said things, look fishy, but they'll do it with sphygmomanometer. They'll send you home with a blood pressure monitor and you'll take it every so often maybe three times a day or whatever it is to get a look at your blood pressure that way,
11:53
right. We do that. With our patients, most of our patients, there's a particular blood pressure monitor we fancy and
11:59
Have them, keep it at home. We have a special log. We have a method that we want them to go about doing it recording it and we'll track that as well. Unfortunately, in the wearable space, blood pressure is still far from prime time. We've tried a bunch of the wearables in that space and have not been impressed yet. I think there's going to be wearables in the blood pressure space soon. Okay. So where do you want to start on this? Because I know that part of the question that was posed is what are the metrics that we track? I want to go back.
12:29
And state my thesis right or call it my hypothesis. I guess my hypothesis is that outside of the formal diagnosis of type 2 diabetes. So now I'm referring to what the person asking the question called, as quote, unquote normal people, it's important that we leave quotes on that because I'm going to argue that that term has no meaning, but in the non-diabetic, which may be a better way to describe it population. What is my argument? My argument is the following.
13:00
Lower average, blood glucose is better. A hemoglobin A1c of 5.1, is better than a hemoglobin A1c of 5.5, even though neither of those people are anywhere near having type 2 diabetes to a more. You can minimize glucose variability, the better. And of course, glucose variability is very difficult to measure without a CGM using a CGM. The standard deviation is the obvious mathematical tool to do that and lower is better state.
13:29
Another way, if you have two people who both have an average glucose of 100 milligrams per deciliter, which by the way, corresponds to about a hemoglobin A1c of five to five point one, which would be excellent. And one of them has a standard deviation of 10 milligrams per deciliter, and the other one has a standard deviation of 20. The person with the lower one is better off third, minimizing glucose Peaks is important. Irrespective of the first two things I said,
13:59
Average, glucose and variability. Although obviously the more Peaks you have, it's going to All Things equal, push up glucose and it will certainly increase variability, but I would argue specifically that glucose Peaks are problematic and that we want to minimize them getting a little bit ahead of myself. What are the three metrics? We are constantly tracking in our patients. And what am I constantly tracking in myself. Thank you for listening to today's sneak peek AMA episode of the drive. If you're interested in hearing the complete version,
14:29
None of this am a you'll want to become a member. We created the membership program to bring you more in-depth, exclusive content without relying on paid ads membership benefits from many and Beyond the complete episodes of the AMA. Each month, they include the following ridiculously comprehensive podcast show notes. That detail every topic paper person, and thing we discuss on each episode of the drive, access to our private podcast feed the qualities, which were a super short podcast typically less than
14:59
Five minutes released every Tuesday through Friday, which highlight the best questions topics and tactics discussed on previous episodes of the drive. This, particularly important. For those of you who haven't heard all of the back episodes, becomes a great way to go back and filter and decide which
15:16
ones you want to listen to in
15:17
detail really steep. Discount codes for products I use and believe in, but for which I don't get paid to endorse and benefits that we continue to add over time. If you want to learn more and access, these member-only benefits
15:29
Head over to Peter, Atia, MD.com forward, slash subscribe. Lastly, if you're already a member, but you're hearing this, it means you haven't downloaded Our member only podcast feed where you can get the full access to the AMA, and you don't have to listen to this. You can download that at Peter. Atia em, d.com. /members. You can find me on Twitter, Instagram and Facebook all with the ID. Peter, Atia, MD, you can also leave us a review on Apple podcast or whatever podcast
15:59
Are you listen on this? Podcast is for General informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine nursing or other professional health care services including the giving of a medical advice. No, doctor-patient relationship is formed, the use of this information and the materials link to this podcast, is at the users own risk. The content on this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis or treatment users should not disregard
16:29
Or delay in obtaining, medical advice from any medical condition they have, and they should seek the assistance of their Health Care Professionals for any such conditions. Finally, I take conflicts of interest, very seriously for all of my disclosures in the company's I invest in or advise please visit Peter. Atia MD.com forward slash about where I keep an up-to-date and active list of such
16:53
companies.
ms