What it takes to be “Young Forever!” | Mark Hyman

Dave Asprey

23 dic 2025

Episode description

Most conversations about longevity focus on tactics. This episode breaks down the biology underneath them. You’ll hear a systems level analysis of how insulin signaling, mTOR, mitochondrial function, inflammation, and nutrient sensing interact to determine biological age, disease risk, and long term human performance. This is not surface level biohacking. It is a deep dive into the mechanisms that actually control aging, metabolism, muscle preservation, and brain optimization, and why most anti aging strategies fail when they ignore these foundations. 



This all-time classic episode from 2024, has host Dave Asprey joined by Mark Hyman, a practicing physician and one of the most respected leaders in functional medicine. Dr. Hyman is the founder and senior advisor of The UltraWellnessCenter, the founder and former head of strategy and innovation at the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine, and a long time advocate for treating root causes instead of managing disease. With over 30 years of clinical experience, his work focuses on restoring mitochondrial health, optimizing metabolism, reversing chronic disease, and slowing biological aging using science backed interventions.  



Together, Dave and Mark dismantle common myths around protein, carnivore diets, ketosis, fasting, supplements, and longevity drugs. They explain why sugar accelerates aging faster than protein, how mTOR must cycle instead of staying suppressed, and why muscle, mitochondria, and metabolic flexibility matter more than calorie restriction. The conversation also covers nootropics, sleep optimization, neuroplasticity, AI driven diagnostics, and how functional medicine reframes aging as a reversible biological process rather than an inevitable decline.  



You’ll learn: 

• How insulin and nutrient sensing control aging speed 

• Why mitochondria sit at the center of longevity and disease 

• The truth about mTOR, fasting, and protein intake 

• How ketosis and metabolic flexibility protect long term health 

• Where supplements and nootropics actually fit in brain optimization 

• Why functional medicine outperforms symptom based care 

• How AI and advanced testing are reshaping modern medicine 



Thank you to our sponsors! 

- MASA Chips | Go to https://www.masachips.com/DAVEASPREY and use code DAVEASPREY for 25% off your first order.  

-ARMRA | Go to https://tryarmra.com/ and use the code DAVE to get 15% off your first order. 

-OneSkin | Try OneSkin for 15% off with code DAVE at https://www.oneskin.co/DAVE



Dave Asprey is a four-time N

Episode description

Most conversations about longevity focus on tactics. This episode breaks down the biology underneath them. You’ll hear a systems level analysis of how insulin signaling, mTOR, mitochondrial function, inflammation, and nutrient sensing interact to determine biological age, disease risk, and long term human performance. This is not surface level biohacking. It is a deep dive into the mechanisms that actually control aging, metabolism, muscle preservation, and brain optimization, and why most anti aging strategies fail when they ignore these foundations. 



This all-time classic episode from 2024, has host Dave Asprey joined by Mark Hyman, a practicing physician and one of the most respected leaders in functional medicine. Dr. Hyman is the founder and senior advisor of The UltraWellnessCenter, the founder and former head of strategy and innovation at the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine, and a long time advocate for treating root causes instead of managing disease. With over 30 years of clinical experience, his work focuses on restoring mitochondrial health, optimizing metabolism, reversing chronic disease, and slowing biological aging using science backed interventions.  



Together, Dave and Mark dismantle common myths around protein, carnivore diets, ketosis, fasting, supplements, and longevity drugs. They explain why sugar accelerates aging faster than protein, how mTOR must cycle instead of staying suppressed, and why muscle, mitochondria, and metabolic flexibility matter more than calorie restriction. The conversation also covers nootropics, sleep optimization, neuroplasticity, AI driven diagnostics, and how functional medicine reframes aging as a reversible biological process rather than an inevitable decline.  



You’ll learn: 

• How insulin and nutrient sensing control aging speed 

• Why mitochondria sit at the center of longevity and disease 

• The truth about mTOR, fasting, and protein intake 

• How ketosis and metabolic flexibility protect long term health 

• Where supplements and nootropics actually fit in brain optimization 

• Why functional medicine outperforms symptom based care 

• How AI and advanced testing are reshaping modern medicine 



Thank you to our sponsors! 

- MASA Chips | Go to https://www.masachips.com/DAVEASPREY and use code DAVEASPREY for 25% off your first order.  

-ARMRA | Go to https://tryarmra.com/ and use the code DAVE to get 15% off your first order. 

-OneSkin | Try OneSkin for 15% off with code DAVE at https://www.oneskin.co/DAVE



Dave Asprey is a four-time N

Mindsip insights from this episode:

Utilize hyperbaric oxygen therapy to eliminate zombie cells

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy has been shown to be more effective at reducing senescent 'zombie' cells than any other known treatment.

Adopt bison-rich diet for longevity like Plains Indians

At the turn of the century, the Plains Indians had the largest population of centenarians, and their diet consisted mainly of bison.

Avoid muscle loss with Ozempic for healthy aging

A major concern with Ozempic for weight loss is that up to 40% of the weight lost is muscle, which is detrimental to healthy aging.

Prioritize protein over sugar to manage mTOR activation

If you restrict animal protein due to mTOR concerns but still consume sugar, you are prioritizing incorrectly, as sugar is a more potent mTOR activator.

Mimic calorie restriction with rapamycin for life extension

The drug Rapamycin is named after Rapa Nui (Easter Island) and is one of the few interventions shown to extend life by up to a third in animals by mimicking calorie restriction.

Consume 40 grams of high-quality protein in a fasted state to maximize muscle synthesis

To maximize muscle synthesis, consume a large load of high-quality protein (around 40 grams) in a fasted state, such as for your first meal of the day.

Prioritize lifestyle changes over metformin for diabetes prevention

In the Diabetes Prevention Trial, a simple lifestyle intervention was nearly twice as effective at preventing diabetes (58% reduction) as metformin (31% reduction).

Monitor fasting insulin level to assess biological aging rate

Your fasting insulin level, an inexpensive test most doctors don't order, is arguably the most important metric for determining your rate of biological aging.

DESCARGA LA APLICACIÓN

Descubre la sabiduría de la longevidad

DESCARGA LA APLICACIÓN

Descubre la sabiduría de la longevidad

DESCARGA LA APLICACIÓN

Descubre la sabiduría de la longevidad