Cortisol, Stress And Body Fat
It seems that every time science uncovers some type of association between body
fat and anything, opportunistic entrepreneurs are waiting in the shadows to
create a product and a marketing campaign around it. They ride the wave into the
multi millions, until the buzz dies down or until the Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) sues and slaps a padlock on their warehouse doors. Then, it’s on to the
“next big thing in weight loss,” because they know there will always be a
gullible crowd eagerly waiting for the next quick fix. The most recent example
is when researchers discovered a correlation between cortisol and abdominal body
fat. Cortisol was then blamed as the latest culprit in the obesity problem, and
cortisol-suppressing pills were touted as the “miracle solution.”
Big Claims, Little Proof
After a web search on the subject of cortisol, here are some of the claims you
may find:
Stress makes you fat
Cortisol is what makes you fat
Cortisol reducing supplements control stress
Cortisol reducing supplements reduce belly fat
Cortisol reducing supplements get rid of “stress fat”
Cortisol reducing supplements balance hormone levels that cause stress
Cortisol reducing supplements increase muscle growth
Cortisol supplements suppress appetite
Cortisol supplements speed up metabolism
The advertising claims include just enough scientific fact to make even the
savviest consumers say, “That makes sense, I think I’ll try that.” They also hit
home emotionally by focusing on common hot buttons such as stress (who isn’t at
least a little stressed in this day and age?) Brilliant marketing. Convincing.
Unfortunately, most of the claims being made are completely false, with only a
tiny thread of truth woven in.
Cortisol is a very important hormone that you must understand if you want to get
maximum results from your training and nutrition programs, but if you don’t
educate yourself, you may become one of the millions of victims to fall for this
latest fad. The answers to the frequently asked questions in this article will
arm you with the science-based facts, while helping you steer clear of the
hype-based scams.
What is cortisol?
Cortisol is a hormone produced by your adrenal glands. It falls into a category
of hormones known as “glucocorticoids”, referring to their ability to increase
blood glucose levels. Cortisol is the primary glucocorticoid.
Why does your body produce cortisol?
Cortisol is a stress hormone. Your body produces cortisol in response to stress,
physical, mental or emotional. This can include extremely low calorie diets,
intense training, high volume training, lack of quality sleep as well as common
daily stresses such as job pressures, fights with your spouse or being caught in
a traffic jam. Trauma, injury and surgery are also major stressors to the body
(Note: much of the research done on cortisol and stress has been done on
recovering patients, and such findings may not carry over to healthy, athletic
populations).
What does cortisol do?
Cortisol is part of the fight or flight response. Faced with a “life or death”
situation, cortisol increases the flow of glucose (as well as protein and fat)
out of your tissues and into the bloodstream in order to increase energy and
physical readiness to handle the stressful situation or threat.
How do you know whether your cortisol levels are high?
You can get your cortisol levels tested if you choose to. The most common method
of testing is a blood test (blood cortisol levels). Saliva and 24 hour urine
tests are also available.
What is a normal level of cortisol?
Cortisol levels are higher in adults than children and levels fluctuate
throughout each 24 hour period, so tests must account for the time of day.
Cortisol concentrations are highest in the early morning around 6 – 8 a.m. and
they are also elevated after exercise (a normal part of your body’s response to
exercise). The lowest levels are usually around midnight. According to the
Medline Encyclopedia, normal levels of cortisol in the bloodstream at 8:00 a.m.
are 6-23 mcg/dl.
Should you get your cortisol levels tested?
For serious competitive athletes, it may be worth the time, expense and
inconvenience to have cortisol tests done on a regular basis. Some strength and
conditioning coaches insist on it. For the average trainee, as long as you are
aware of the factors that produce excessive cortisol and take steps to keep it
in the normal, healthy range, then testing is probably not necessary.
Is cortisol related to abdominal obesity?
Yes. There is a link between high cortisol levels and storage of body fat,
particularly “visceral” abdominal body fat (also known as intra-abdominal fat).
Visceral fat is stored deeper in the abdominal cavity and around the internal
organs, whereas “regular” fat is stored below the skin (known as subcutaneous
fat). Visceral fat is particularly unhealthy because it is a risk factor for
heart disease and diabetes.
Does Cortisol Make you fat?
No, cortisol is not “the thing” that makes you fat. In fact, one of the effects
of cortisol is to increase the breakdown of stored adipose tissue into glycerol
and fatty acids where it can enter the bloodstream and then be used as energy.
High levels of cortisol are merely one contributing factor to storage of
abdominal fat, not the primary cause. An excess of calories from too much food
and not enough exercise is what makes you fat.
If cortisol is related to abdominal obesity, then will taking a cortisol
suppressing pill get rid of abdominal (belly) fat?
No. Just because there is an association between high cortisol levels and
abdominal body fat doesn’t mean that a taking a cortisol-suppressing pill will
remove abdominal body fat. The studies which showed a relationship between
cortisol and body fat did not test whether suppressing cortisol removes fat that
is already deposited on your body.
Does stress make you fat?
No. If it did, then everyone who is stressed would be gaining fat. Many people
lose weight while under stress. In some studies, test subjects with the highest
cortisol (and stress) levels lost the most weight. Stress, by itself, does not
increase body fat. However, if stress stimulates appetite and leads to
overeating, then the excess calories from “stress eating” can make you fatter.
Is cortisol is bad for you?
Cortisol is not “bad for you,” it is a hormone that is essential for life as
part of our natural stress response. There are many hormones in our bodies,
which in the proper amounts, maintain good health, but in excess or in
deficiency, have negative effects or even contribute to health problems or
diseases. Cortisol is no different. For example, Cushing’s syndrome is a disease
of high cortisol levels, while Addison’s is a disease of low cortisol levels.
You want to maintain a healthy, normal level of cortisol, not suppress your
cortisol to nothing or allow it to remain elevated.
Chronically elevated cortisol levels may have a variety of negative effects.
Cortisol is catabolic and elevated cortisol levels can cause the loss of muscle
tissue by facilitating the process of converting lean tissue into glucose. An
excess of cortisol can also lead to a decrease in insulin sensitivity, increased
insulin resistance, reduced kidney function, hypertension, suppressed immune
function, reduced growth hormone levels, and reduced connective tissue strength.
Chronically elevated levels of cortisol can also decrease strength and
performance in athletes.
Can suppressing cortisol improve your muscle growth and strength?
High cortisol levels can increase muscle protein breakdown and inhibit protein
synthesis (building up muscle proteins), so a chronically elevated cortisol
level is clearly counterproductive to building muscle. Bringing elevated
cortisol levels back to normal may improve recovery, strength, hypertrophy and
performance. However, there is no scientific evidence that reducing your
cortisol levels below normal will have any effect on increasing strength or
muscle growth.
Should you take a cortisol-suppressing supplement to help you lose weight?
In my opinion, no, absolutely not. Cortisol suppressing supplements are not a
valid solution for losing weight. The FTC has filed lawsuits against the makers
of Cortislim and Cortistress, charging them with making false and
unsubstantiated claims that their products can cause weight loss. Lydia Parnes,
acting director of the FTC’s bureau of consumer protection says, “The
defendant’s claims fly in the face of reality. No pill can replace a healthy
program of diet and exercise.” Reducing excessively high cortisol levels through
supplement use may prove beneficial in some ways for hard training athletes.
However, pills do not make you lose fat. Body fat is lost by creating a caloric
deficit through exercise and nutrition.
Should you take a cortisol-suppressing supplement to help control your stress
levels?
There are quite a few supplements, mostly herbs, which are reputed to have
“calming,” “relaxing,” “tranquilizing,” “stress-relieving” or “anti-anxiety”
effects. These include Magnolia bark, kava kava, valerian, L-theanine and too
many others to mention. However, very few studies exist which have directly
tested the effects of these herbs on cortisol levels. Although some people may
find value in these types of products, the ideal solution is to reduce the
stress or change your perception of the stress to lessen its physical effects.
Treating symptoms does not remove causes. It can be dangerous to “band-aid” the
effects of stress while the stress remains in place.
What should you do if you have a lot of stress in your life?
It makes sense to take steps to reduce stress in your life and lessen the impact
of stressors that cannot be avoided. Trying to avoid stress completely is not
possible, nor is it desirable. Stress is an important part of life because you
can’t achieve positive adaptations and growth without stress to trigger them.
It’s continuous stress that you want to avoid. It’s okay to expose yourself to
stress, provided there is a sufficient period of rest afterwards so you can
fully recover.
One of the best ways to keep cortisol in the normal range is to reduce stress
and allow time for recovery and renewal. There are effective and natural means
of reducing stress that don’t cost a penny, including getting out in nature,
deep breathing, enhancing sleep quality, relaxation exercises, meditation and
visualization-guided imagery. It's important to develop a calm mind and sense of
tranquility.
What’s in those cortisol pills anyway?
The ingredients can vary in type and quantity from one brand to the next. Some
ingredients are included in the formulations to have a relaxing or stress
reducing effect, some are included to reduce cortisol levels, while others are
aimed at insulin and blood sugar stabilization. Cortislim, for example, contains
Magnolia bark, beta sitosoterol, theanine, green tea extract, bitter orange peel
extract (source of synephrine), banaba leaf extract, vanadium, vitamin C,
calcium and Chromium.
Other ingredients that are often used in the various product formulations
include Epidemium, phytosterols, tyrosine, Branched chain amino acids, ginseng,
ashwaganda, astragalus, kava kava, St. John’s wort, Melatonin, SAM-e, Valerian,
Gingko Biloba, Phosphatidyl Serine (PS), Acetyl L-carnitine and Glutamine.
Reviewing all of these is beyond the scope of this article.
If you decide to take a cortisol suppressing supplement what should you look
for?
Before you even think about supplements (or drugs), keep in mind that unnatural
suppression of cortisol may not be wise or necessary, especially if you haven’t
used all the natural cortisol and stress management strategies at your disposal
first. Once your nutrition, training and recovery bases are covered, there is
some solid research showing that certain supplements may be beneficial,
especially for athletes engaged in extremely hard training.
Carbohydrate consumed with lean protein immediately after training has a
cortisol suppressing effect. High glycemic index (GI) carbs in particular, cause
an insulin spike, which not only helps restore muscle glycogen, stimulates
protein synthesis and kick starts the recovery process, it also helps lower the
exercise-induced rise in cortisol. The research supporting this practice is
substantial. (This should serve as a warning to people on low carb diets that
are so strict that they don’t even allow small amounts of carbs after workouts).
Rather than solid food, many athletes prefer a liquid “meal” using a commercial
post workout drink containing whey protein and maltodextrin plus dextrose or
glucose (fast acting protein and high GI carbs) because the rapid absorption
time may speed recovery.
Vitamin C, known mainly for cold or flu protection and antioxidant properties,
may decrease cortisol levels. A study by Marsit, et al showed a reduction in
cortisol levels in elite weightlifters taking 1000 mg. of vitamin C per day.
Other studies have reported similar findings.
Phosphatidyl serine (PS) is a phospholipid, which appears to have cortisol
suppressing properties. Studies by Fahey and Monteleone have shown that daily
doses of 800 mg can reduce cortisol. These studies did not conclude that PS
would help you lose weight or gain more muscle.
Glutamine is an amino acid, which in some studies, has been shown to decrease
cortisol and prevent a decrease in protein synthesis. Many strength athletes
swear by glutamine for improved recovery, but the research is still not
conclusive about efficacy or dosages for athletes or bodybuilders. Much of the
research on Glutamine was performed on patients recovering from surgery, burns
or traumas (severe stresses to the body).
Acetyl-L Carnitine (ALC) has been studied in Alzheimers patients as a method of
improving cognitive function. One study showed that long term use of Acetyl L
Carnitine lowered cortisol in the Alzheimers patients. Research on rats and mice
has shown that ALC increases luteinizing hormone, which may in turn elevate
testosterone. Whether these findings carry over to healthy athletes has yet to
be proven, but some coaches and athletes believe that ALC lowers cortisol and
elevates testosterone.
It’s important to note that the research on some of these substances is often
conflicting and inconclusive. It's also important to note that many of the
cortisol suppressing supplements which are marketed to athletes or to people
seeking weight loss do not contain doses anywhere near the amounts that were
used in the research. (Yet another way that supplement companies deceive
consumers).
How can you lower your cortisol levels naturally?
You can lower cortisol naturally. In fact, if you are overtrained, unnatural
cortisol suppression may be nothing more than a “band aid,” and continued
overtraining can lead to adrenal exhaustion, which could take months to remedy.
Sometimes the best thing you can do is take a rest or decrease your training
volume and intensity rather than artificially attempt to suppress cortisol.
Symptoms of overtraining include elevated resting pulse, sleep disturbances,
fatigue, decreased strength and decreased performance.
Avoid very low calorie diets, especially for prolonged periods of time. Low
calorie dieting is a major stress to the body. Low calorie diets increase
cortisol while decreasing testosterone.
Use stress reduction techniques (stress, anger, anxiety, and fear can raise
cortisol)
Avoid continuous stress. Stress is an important part of growth. It’s when you
remain under constant stress without periods of recovery that you begin breaking
down.
Avoid overtraining by keeping workouts intense, but brief (cortisol rises
sharply after 45-60 min of strength training)
Avoid overtraining by matching your intensity, volume and duration to your
recovery ability. Decrease your training frequency, and or take a layoff if
necessary.
Suppress cortisol and maximize recovery after workouts with proper nutrition:
Consume a carb-protein meal or drink immediately after your workout.
Get plenty of quality sleep (sleep deprivation, as a stressor, can raise
cortisol).
Avoid or minimize use of stimulants; caffeine, ephedrine, synephrine, etc.
Limit alcohol (large doses of alcohol elevate cortisol).
Stay well hydrated (at least one study has suggested that dehydration may raise
cortisol).
How do you spot a weight loss pill scam?
The cortisol pill is just one in a long string of bogus weight loss products,
and it won’t be the last! Why? Because weight loss supplements are big business!
Eight or nine figure fortunes have been made from the sales of a single product,
which was later proven to be a total farce.
How do you protect yourself? Do your homework! Don’t take anything unless you
know exactly what’s in the product, why it’s in the product and how much is in
the product. Review the scientific research. Don’t buy a weight loss product
just because a radio personality says it works! Don’t jump on the phone with
your credit card in hand after watching a thirty-minute infomercial! In this day
and age, you have to be smarter than that!
Conclusions
Excessive cortisol is not good. But cortisol is not inherently bad; it’s a
vitally important hormone and part of your body’s natural stress response.
Cortisol does not make you fat. Stress does not make you fat. Stress may lead to
increased appetite… Increased appetite may lead to eating too much… Eating too
much makes you gain fat. Make sense?
Cortisol suppressing agents may have some practical uses. But rather than
thinking of cortisol supplements as a weight loss miracle (which they most
surely are not), get yourself on a solid exercise and nutrition program and seek
natural ways to enhance recovery and reduce stress. By doing this first, you may
be pleasantly surprised to find that you’re losing fat and gaining muscle and
there isn’t a need to take supplements at all.
For more information on how to
lose body fat safely, permanently and naturally without supplements or pills,
check out my e-book,Burn
the Fat, Feed the Muscle.
Tom Venuto is a
lifetime natural bodybuilder, personal trainer, gym owner, freelance
writer and author of
Burn
the Fat, Feed the Muscle: Fat Burning Secrets of the World's Best
Bodybuilders and Fitness Models. Tom has written over 140 articles and has
been featured in IRONMAN magazine, Natural Bodybuilding, Muscular
Development, Muscle-Zine, Exercise for Men and Men's Exercise. Tom is the
Fat Loss Expert for
Global-Fitness.com and the nutrition editor for Femalemuscle.com and
his articles are featured regularly on literally dozens of other websites.