A Public Service Announcement

TL;DR: If you are 50 or older, male or female, get a Cardiac CT Calcium Score Test done. This is a 5-minute non-invasive screening test for evaluating the probability and potential extent of plaque in your heart vessels. Plaque can cause heart attacks. If you are under 50 but have potential risk factors for calcification or cardiovascular disease, you should also consider it.

As some of you may know, on July 23, I competed/participated in Ironman Lake Placid. It was the first “Iron Distance” event I had done after an 11-year hiatus from triathlons. On July 26, I did a Cardiac CT Calcium Score test which is a screening test for potential calcification in your coronary arteries. Following the recommendation of my internist and another doctor, I did it solely as a “why not” test. While I had no history of high cholesterol or familial issues of high lipids, the test takes 5 minutes, is non-invasive, and costs only about $90 out of pocket (some insurers do cover the test). A result showing the absence of calcification for someone in their 50s and 60s provides some peace of mind as far as the probability of the absence of coronary artery disease. $90 seemed like a good investment for peace of mind. So, why not? A “score” of 0 is desirable.

My score came back over 2000.

Yikes!

This precipitated immediately being placed on a statin by the internist who had recommended the test. Some additional tests and a visit to a cardiologist focused on cardiovascular disease. An increase in the statin dosage by the cardiologist. A referral to an interventional cardiologist. A consultation with the interventional cardiologist who then scheduled a catheterization. Six weeks and one day after I completed my 2.4-mile swim and 112-mile bike, I had two stents inserted in two smaller arteries in my heart.

During a catheterization, an interventional cardiologist will do an angioplasty and insert stents if an artery has a 70% or greater narrowing. I had two arteries in this condition. The two narrowed arteries had not caused any symptoms to date. I had trained for and completed two-thirds of an Ironman. I had missed the bike-to-run cut-off, but that is a story for another day. Short digression: the missed cut-off resulted from my being slow – I can’t blame some physical ailment. Before this year’s Ironman training, I had done CrossFit or similar functional fitness training for approximately 10 years. The last 7 years of CrossFit were typically 4 to 5 days per week usually 60 minutes or so in duration with some other activity such as yoga on another day. Prior to that, I had done 12 years of triathlon, including completing two Ironman races and multiple half-iron events. I hiked, I snowshoed, I cross-country skied, and outside of the office, I was generally active.

For my entire life, my total cholesterol has ranged between 170 and 210, typically staying in the 180-195 range. My HDL and triglycerides always stayed in optimal ranges, with HDL always exceeding triglycerides by a 2:1 basis. LDL bounced around between 80 and 110, once hitting 120. Never higher. Glucose numbers are always good and in range. No sign of metabolic disease or otherwise in bloodwork.

I ate a relatively clean omnivore diet – although probably too much red meat. Actually, definitely too much red meat, at least in the period 2005-2015. Minimal processed food. Stayed away from added sugars. I have not had a sugary soft drink in probably over 15 years (not including Olipop). I take a fistful of supplements every day including Omega 3s, Vitamin D, magnesium, zinc, curcumin, CoQ10, and quercetin, among others to limit inflammation in the body. For the last 18 months, I dry sauna 3 to 5 times per week at 175 degrees or higher for 20 minutes a session. I cold plunge multiple times per week.

To my knowledge, no genetic factors indicated that I was at risk for cardiovascular disease.

This is not to say everything was perfect. I did have hypertension due to an overactive adrenal gland, which produced too much aldosterone (a hormone central to the regulation of blood pressure). I had this for 20 years, but this was resolved through surgery in 2022 (also a discussion from another day). I have been overweight. Sometimes more. Sometimes less. But this has also been heading in the right direction for the last several years.

All of this represents a long-winded way of saying, I thought I had limited my risk for ASCVD and otherwise had my health dialed in. NOT! The CT Calcium Test only alerted me to the high probability that I had calcification in my coronary arteries, from which bad things can and will occur if left untreated. From there, I had to follow my instincts and chase down an answer. Be aware, this is not easy in our medical system. Over the course of the 6 weeks I sought an answer, I was denied appointments; told that I did not need certain appointments; or given appointments 2 to 3 months in the future. Told that my insurance company may not cover a certain test unless I did another test first. The takeaway from this is that you need to be your own health advocate. No one else will take on that role for you. Thankfully, through persistence and getting in contact with the right people, I connected with great caregivers who worked within the system to find the answers and get me the necessary treatment before anything adverse occurred. I do not think about the outcome had I been passive.

Where does this leave me? As my cardiologist told me: take my medicine (i.e., statin) and exercise as hard or harder than I did before. Meanwhile, eat more plants. And live my life. All good advice for anyone.

So, I am eating more plants and getting back in the swing of my training regimen. Many hills remain to be conquered. And I have an appointment with a Bike to Run cut-off that I need to make in the future. But there will be a next time.

To anyone who has read this far, do not think that you are immune from cardiovascular disease. You can think you are doing everything correctly. Or at least pretty much correct (the old 80/20 rule), where I thought I had existed. For whatever reason, that may not be the case. So, take this as a public service announcement. Spend the $90. Take the 5 minutes. Get a CT Calcium Score done if you have not. Trust me. It’s worth it.

Peace.

Preparing For the Second Half: v2.0

“If I knew I was going to live this long I would have taken better care of myself.”

Mickey Mantle

A 60-year-old American male in just average health could currently expect to live to age 81, while an average American 60-year-old female could expect to live to 84 ½.  If an individual makes it past 70 years old, life expectancy increases to 84 for a male and 86 ½ for a female.

As current medicine and pharmacology continue their pace of advance, these numbers should continue to rise.  This overlooks the question as to what individuals these ages could be doing on their own to extend not only their life span but their health span.

No one speaks to the demographic of people in the second half.  No one translates the body of knowledge gained and applied to younger people on health span and longevity.  No one speaks to actionable protocols for the second half.  While many of the principles may be similar, protocols applicable to a 30-year-old do not always transfer directly to a 70-year-old.  Additionally, the method of communicating potential protocols has flaws.  The message needs to be delivered to the demographic through channels where it can be easily communicated and consumed. 

A universe of functional medical physicians, biohackers, and fitness influencers, as well as a host of charlatans, have sprung up over the past 5 to 10 years focused on health, wellness, fitness, and extending lifespan as well as health span.  The bulk of this advice and information (and in certain cases misinformation) has been targeted at folks in their 30’s and 40’s.

But, what about those folks who have passed their 50th birthday?  How much of this advice applies to the 50-year-old? The 60-year-old?  The 70-year-old and beyond? How should some of the most actionable advice be modified for this growing demographic?  Clearly, as you reach and surpass any of these milestones, all is not hopeless.  Life and health can still be improved and optimized.  Health optimization does not stop in the second half.  Science supports this. Even a 90-year-old (or older) can achieve benefits from implementing modest lifestyle and behavioral changes.  You can teach an old dog new tricks – or, at least, I, as a 62-year-old male (and aging by the minute), would like to test that hypothesis.

This blog and whatever else develops out of it will seek out research, scientific leaders, and actionable protocols for those in the second half.  Some of these protocols I will try myself, or some variations.  Some, I will attempt to shoot down. 

Using some of these strategies, I am currently pursuing a personal short-term challenge this July, completing Ironman Lake Placid on July 23, 2023.  More on that in a subsequent post.  This entry focuses on the re-launch of this blog and its goals for the future: to Ironman…and beyond.

My Daily Process

Part One – The Morning (or thereabouts)

I thought it would be useful to post my morning ritual. This process has evolved over the years. I implemented the latest iteration about 6 months ago. I will continue to update this post as my process evolves and I make changes. Philosophically, I think of this process as something I live within. Not something I follow mechanistically. Living within this process helps center me. It provides me direction and yields rewards such as reducing anxiety on days when it seems the world is swirling around me while also giving me an infrastructure for promoting my own health and wellness. I welcome any feedback or comments on the process.

Wake time: Most weekdays at 6 AM.

Bathroom time, collect Weight, CGM (Continuous Glucose Monitor) at Levels Health, and Oura ring data.

Consume 1 g of Resveratrol mixed with 3 ml of olive oil, 12 ozs of water mixed with fresh squeezed lime juice and pink Himalayan sea salt, 1 g NMN, 800 mg Fisetin, 400 mg Spermidine, and 800 mg Quercetin.

Most days I will also grab a cup of either Pu’Er Fermented Black or Green tea from Pique to sip during after workout. I also sip Xendurance Hydro Stix during and after workout. It has only one gram of carbohydrates and I take the view that it doesn’t break my morning fast — at least for my purposes. Depending on the anticipated workout, particularly if it’s going to be a long chipper or a long aerobic grinder, I will take one or two Santa Cruz Medicinals CBD Infused Adaptogenic Mushroom caps. I have found them to be really useful for these types of workouts — or at least my mind believes that.

After that, it’s off to either a 6:30 or 7:15 AM Crossfit Class at @Veracity.Athletics. I usually do crossfit 4 to 5 times per week. I vary it on Saturdays with a hot powerflo yoga session @leapfrogpoweryoga. Some weeks I try to squeeze in a second yoga session in the evening.

Post-workout I grab a shot of double espresso. My favorite currently is Blue Jaguar from Redbird Coffee in Bozeman, MT.

If it is warm enough I take my double espresso out to my Zen grotto under the Tibetan Prayer Flags for 10 minutes of Mindfulness meditation using the @wakinguppapp. Otherwise, I do this from a quiet place indoors.

Following the 10-minute meditation, I try to journal for anywhere between 5 and 15 minutes. Periodically, this is interspersed with some reading from Stoic philosophy. I recently completed the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius and have begun working through the Discourses of Epictetus. The unstructured journaling picks up on anything that has crossed my mind that morning, prior evening, or that otherwise requires working through mentally.

I recently added a sauna session to the morning ritual — after using outside cold plunges throughout the winter.

I try to do five twenty-minute sauna sessions per week — 20 minutes per session at 175 degrees or higher.

If I cannot fit in the sauna session in the morning routine, I will try to add it at some point in the day.

Following meditation and sauna, if it’s cold enough (as I mentioned above), it’s time for a 3 to 5 minute cold plunge in my 150 gallon stock tank which is cooled by Mother Nature. Otherwise, it’s time for a shower. At the end of the shower I will turn the water all the way to cold for 2-3 minutes. It’s important that cold follows the hot — and not vice versa. #soebergprinciple

Following an after-shower espresso shot, It’s time for work. If I have a busy day and need immediate focus, I will also throw down one or two capsules of Santa Cruz Medicinals CBD Infused Nootropics Caps.

In future posts regarding my ritual, I will explore what processesI have for the remainder of the day — particularly around the breaking of my fast midday. I try to limit eating to an 8-hour window each day. The purpose of doing so is primarily to promote longevity and wellness. I am not pursuing any direct caloric restriction through the limited feeding window. I do, however, count macros in an effort to live in a caloric deficit. This has had mixed results.

Note: I have no economic or commercial relationship with any of the products mentioned in this post.

Finally…My First Post

A word.  It all begins with a single word.  I have struggled to write this first word for over 18 months now. I have finally broken through. Better this day, than waiting until tomorrow or even later. When I set up this blog site I was 56.  Now, I am 58.  I guess I didn’t follow Warren Miller’s mantra after setting up this blog.  “If you don’t do it this year, you will be one-year older when you do.”  Actually, it is even worse than Warren had contemplated.  I am two years older.

Preparing for the Second Half.  What does that mean?  As I said above, I am 58 years old.  I am a male.  I think I am relatively fit and in excellent health.  I frequently wander around podcasts, blogs, Twitter posts, and newspaper and magazine articles dedicated to health, fitness, living your best life, aging, and longevity but these posts and articles are predominantly written by and for people in their 20s, 30s, and maybe, just maybe, someone in their 40s.  While I typically find the information useful, it leaves me wanting for more.  The discussion or information often lacks, or completely ignores, the perspective of someone in my age bracket.  BUT, there are a lot of us and that number is only increasing.  Indeed, you will all be here sooner or later.  Hopefully.

I believe that I am Preparing for the Second Half.  That I have just as much living in front of me as I have in the rear view mirror.  Because of this philosophy, I believe that I have to have a different frame of mind than people typically have had at my age.   I also feel that I have a perspective to offer to others older and younger than myself.  A perspective which will hopefully lead to a dialog with others and further growth for myself and others.  Hopefully, it will also lead to an evolution as to how people approach both halves of the game.

The concept of a growth mindset still applies to how I approach life.  That is why I am Preparing for the Second Half.   The concept of retirement needs to evolve.  Better yet, it needs to disappear.  I do not look at life as disparate segments.  Education. Growth.  Accumulation. Run-off.    That makes no sense to me.  So, I reject it.  Education and Growth are ongoing.  I want to get rid of Accumulation and Run-off.  The only thing I am looking to accumulate is health and fitness, which I want to bank indefinitely. More importantly,  I am not looking to put either of those into run-off.  Everything else can be looked at from a just-in-time financing approach.  It has gotten me this far.  If anything,  given the power of information technology and social media, it should empower me well into the future.

In the days and weeks ahead, I will look to lay out my philosophy.  I will seek to comment on things that I find important to me and others Preparing for the Second Half.  I am not sure where this is going, but that is no different than when I entered this game and the first half started. Perhaps, my dialog will be limited to this medium.  Or perhaps, it will find fertile ground and expand into other forms of discussion.

At  least, the first word has been written.  I have overcome my fear of launching this and I can say the Second Half has truly begun.  Whether or not it will be longer than the first half, we shall see.

DMC