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The Peter Attia Drive cover image

#194 - How fructose drives metabolic disease | Rick Johnson, M.D.

The Peter Attia Drive

NOTE

Bears and Hibernation: Metabolism, Urine, and Vasopressin

Hibernating bears have high vasopressin levels while storing fat, but these levels plummet during hibernation, allowing them to burn fat. While they do produce some urine, their bladders stay permeable and they reabsorb some of it due to their low metabolism. Vasopressin levels are typically turned off during hibernation. Animals in desert environments also have high vasopressin levels as they use fat as a source of water. The breakthrough was realizing vasopressin is not just for holding onto water.

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