Navigate Select ESC Close

Cognitive Decline Expert: The Disease That Starts in Your 30s but Kills You in Your 70s

2026-02-05 People & Blogs
498.6k
17.9k
2.0k
The Diary Of A CEO
The Diary Of A CEO
17.1m subscribers

Unlock all features

FREE: Get instant access to 10 AI summaries, chats, or transcripts per day.

Description

Alzheimer’s expert LOUISA NICOLA explains early Alzheimer’s risk, why creatine fuels brain energy and memory, deep sleep hacks, and why sitting is a silent killer! Louisa Nicola is a leading neurophysiologist and human performance coach who studies the brain and nervous system. She is the founder of Neuro Athletics, a consulting firm that provides scientific strategies for cognitive performance, and is also currently finishing her PhD at the University of Washington. She explains: ▪️Why 70% of Alzheimer's patients are women ▪️The "leaky brain" warning signs you are ignoring ▪️Why menopause triggers a 30% drop in brain energy ▪️How 20 minutes of Zone 5 training reverses heart aging ▪️Why your "willpower muscle" shrinks without hard challenges 00:00 Intro 02:28 Why I’m on a Mission to Prevent Alzheimer’s for Millions 02:55 The Real Reason Alzheimer’s Is More Preventable Than You Think 04:31 How Lifestyle Choices Quietly Lead to Dementia 08:40 Why Some Older Adults Stay Mentally Sharp — and Others Don’t 12:32 How Short-Form Content Might Be Damaging Your Brain 13:44 The Surprising Way Exercise Boosts Cognitive Function 16:28 What Strong Legs Reveal About Your Brain’s Health 17:20 How Resistance Training Powers Up Your Brain 21:05 Can Exercise Actually Help Prevent Cancer? 22:55 The One Exercise Every Brain Needs 25:39 How Aerobic Training Could Help Prevent Alzheimer’s 28:44 The Brain-Heart Connection: Reducing Cardiovascular Disease 32:12 Why VO2 Max Might Be the #1 Predictor of How Long You’ll Live 34:42 The Best Exercises for Long-Term Brain Health and Longevity 41:42 What to Do Immediately After an Alzheimer’s Diagnosis 45:02 Why the Ketogenic Diet May Be Crucial for Women in Perimenopause 50:09 What You Need to Know About Hormone Replacement Therapy 52:28 The Truth About Finding the Best HRT Option 01:00:21 Ads 01:01:53 The Hidden Link Between Sleep Deprivation and Alzheimer’s 01:03:39 Why You Need to Fix Your Sleep Routine Now 01:06:58 Can Ashwagandha and Rhodiola Really Help with Stress? 01:09:59 The Most Powerful Supplement for Brain Health 01:14:01 How Vitamin D Plays a Role in Living Longer 01:15:00 The Most Affordable Way to Boost Your Brain and Body 01:34:31 Ads 01:36:24 Why Doing Hard Things Is Literally Growing Your Brain 01:43:25 What Brain Rot and Chatbots Are Doing to Us 01:49:00 The Truth Every Woman Deserves to Hear 01:57:36 Do You Ever Wish You Weren’t So Obsessed With Your Mission? Enjoyed the episode? Share this link and earn points for every referral - redeem them for exclusive prizes: https://doac-perks.com Independent research: https://stevenbartlett.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Copy-of-DOAC-Louisa-Nicola-Independent-Research-further-reading.pdf Follow Louisa: Instagram - https://linkly.link/2ZgsR YouTube - https://linkly.link/2ZgsW X - https://linkly.link/2Zgsa Neuroathletics - https://linkly.link/2Zgsf Podcast - https://linkly.link/2ZmIF You can learn more about ‘BRAIN CODE’, here: https://linkly.link/2ZmIC The Diary Of A CEO: ◼️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ◼️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ◼️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ◼️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ◼️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ◼️Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Apple Card - https://Apple.co/get-daily-cash Apple Card issued by Goldman Sachs Bank USA, Salt Lake City Branch. Offer may not be available everywhere. Terms and limitations apply. Wispr - Get 14 days of Wispr Flow for free at https://wisprflow.ai/DOAC Ketone - https://ketone.com/STEVEN for 30% off your subscription order

Top Comments (10)

@imrannazir6931 2026-02-05

I'll save you two hours of your lives. - exercise regularly - sleep well - sort out your stress - eat a good diet.

8.3k 589 replies
@ManishSharma-kc6zi 2026-02-06

Love the show, Steven. One thing that would take it to the next level: linking mentioned studies in the description. It’s easy for guests to say 'a study shows X,' but having the link makes the claim undeniable. It would protect the show's integrity and keep it ahead of the curve as listeners get more skeptical of unsourced claims. Would love to see this happen!

1.8k 58 replies
@mikheilg 2026-02-05

The most terrifying part of this interview isn't the statistics about Alzheimer's. It is the realization that we are treating our brains like rental cars instead of the only vehicle we will ever own. We think we can negotiate with biology later, but the debt is compounding daily. The tragedy is that we are sleepwalking into a preventable nightmare because it feels inconvenient to wake up.

1.4k 39 replies
@playpal001 2026-02-05

Who else immediately stood up and did 10 air squats? 🙋‍♂😂

1.4k 110 replies
@TheDiaryOfACEO 2026-02-05

Do you like these types of convos? If so please hit the like button on the vid - that’s the best way to vote for more like this ❤ also, would be doing me a big favour if you could subscribe - its free 🙏🏾appreciate you! - SB

1.1k 103 replies
@inner.shift.psychology 2026-02-08

I’m a scientist (MSc Psychology), but I’m feeling a bit skeptical about the helpfulness of science when it becomes this specialized, precise and insistent. We have these 500 things we are supposed to do every day in order to not get 500 diseases. But I highly doubt the centenaries are doing weight training. They’re not on keto diets. They’re not taking 80 supplements a day. It feels like we’re really missing something on a holistic level when we find these ‘do this precise unsustainable routine or else’ mentalities. Also when we suggest that one supplement is the best all and end all (don’t forget that 10 years from now we could find evidence that a supplement was actually killing us). I guess my message is: eat things that are good for you. Exercise. Use your mind. Learn. And don’t necessarily obsess over those must-dos and cure-alls because they’re going to cause you anxiety and pressure, and we all know stress is a big cause of disease. Anybody feel what I’m saying ?

1.0k 78 replies
@bassdojo 2026-02-05

The video you provided, "Cognitive Decline Expert: The Disease That Starts in Your 30s but Kills You in Your 70s," features neuroscientist Louisa Nicola and explores the lifestyle factors and interventions that can prevent Alzheimer's disease and improve brain health. ​Key Insights and Statistics ​The Disease of Midlife: Alzheimer's disease typically starts developing in your 30s, even though symptoms often don't appear until your late 60s or 70s [05:47]. ​Preventability: Approximately 95% of Alzheimer's cases are driven by lifestyle factors rather than genetics [04:21]. ​Gender Risk: Women are disproportionately affected; 70% of Alzheimer's patients are women. This is largely due to the "metabolic crisis" the brain faces during perimenopause and menopause when estrogen levels drop [00:44], [04:09]. ​Core Prevention Strategies ​1. Resistance Training ​Heavy Lifting: Strength training is the most potent stimulus for brain health. Nicola recommends lifting at about 80% of your one-rep max to trigger "myokines"—signaling molecules that cross the blood-brain barrier to help grow new neurons in the hippocampus [13:58], [17:39]. ​The Deadlift: If you can only do one exercise, she suggests the deadlift because it engages the most muscle groups and requires the most "neural real estate" [22:58]. ​2. Aerobic Exercise & VO2 Max ​Norwegian 4x4: To improve cardiovascular health (which is directly linked to brain health), she recommends the "Norwegian 4x4" protocol: 4 minutes of high-intensity effort (90-95% max heart rate) followed by 4 minutes of rest, repeated four times [33:06]. ​Heart Reversal: Structured aerobic exercise (about 4 hours per week) has been shown to remodel a 50-year-old heart to the state of a 30-year-old heart if started before age 65 [31:57]. ​3. Sleep & The "Glymphatic System" ​The Brain's Washing Machine: During deep sleep, the glymphatic system washes out amyloid-beta plaques. Just one night of sleep deprivation can increase amyloid-beta levels by 4-5% [55:40], [01:02:13]. ​Training for Sleep: Nicola treats sleep like a marathon, suggesting "warming down" starting at 8:00 PM by dimming lights and avoiding hard conversations [01:05:31], [01:08:16]. ​Recommended Supplements ​Creatine: Described as "the most widely studied supplement on the market," Nicola recommends higher doses for brain health (up to 20g/day) to help the brain produce energy more effectively [01:15:12], [01:17:14]. ​Omega-3 (DHA/EPA): Essential for cell membrane fluidity and reducing neuro-inflammation. She advises keeping fish oil in the fridge to prevent oxidation [01:10:03], [01:11:55]. ​Vitamin D: Low levels are linked to a 40% increased risk of all-cause dementia [01:14:37]. ​GABA & Glycine: Helpful for sleep; GABA calms a racing mind, while glycine helps lower core body temperature [01:04:48], [01:06:27]. ​Immediate Bio-Hacks ​10 Air Squats per Hour: For those with a sedentary lifestyle (sitting 10+ hours a day), performing 10 air squats every hour can help compensate for the negative effects on metabolic health [24:28]. ​Cognitive Drills: Simple activities like throwing a tennis ball against a wall while standing on one leg can improve hand-eye coordination, processing speed, and cognitive reserve [01:31:54]. ​Do Hard Things: Challenging yourself (cold plunges, difficult workouts) grows the "Anterior Mid-Cingulate Cortex" (AMCC), which is linked to willpower and longevity [01:37:03], [01:39:49]

938 47 replies
@si_is_si 2026-02-05

health is forgotten until its the only thing that matters

379 11 replies
@SaleenS351R 2026-02-16

Just have to put this out there, though it will fall on deaf ears, let’s stop with the “saving you time” and putting out a summary. Listening to these interviews in full, is how you learn. More than just wash rinse repeat… These interviews are very informative. Keep at it!

96 3 replies
@savanna.kwieran 2026-02-10

I was DXed with full-blown menopause at 39YO. Now 45YO, I have been suffering with a permanent brain fog that behaves like ADHD, and I haaaate it more than words can say -- I don't feel like myself. I started taking creatine a month ago, after listening to Benjamin Bikman episode of DOAC, and it's changed my life. I can focus on tasks, I feel less fatigued and more motivated, I experience less racing thoughts, I can recall things with ease, and just have more of a kumbayah response to life in general. I'm so grateful to have DOAC as a resource, and that this guest builds up the knowledge base that Bikman started. It's like your choosing your guests directly for me... many thanks!

45 3 replies

Unlock the Data Inside
Turn Videos into Knowledge

  • Get FREE 10/day: transcripts, summaries, chats
  • Chat with videos, export text & PDF
  • $1 free API credit for RAG, chatbots & research

Free forever plan • All features unlocked

App screenshot