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Andrew Huberman · 2025-09-25 · 36m

Using Your Nervous System to Enhance Your Immune System | Huberman Lab Essentials

Huberman explains how your nervous system can switch your immune system on, using breathing, sleep position, mindset, and spirulina.

Using Your Nervous System to Enhance Your Immune System | Huberman Lab Essentials
The guest

Andrew Huberman — Andrew Huberman, professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine, hosting a Huberman Lab Essentials episode that revisits past science-based tools.

The gist

This Essentials episode gives an immune-system primer (skin/mucus barrier, the fast innate response, and the antibody-making adaptive system) and then explains how the nervous system can deliberately tune immunity. Huberman details 'sickness behavior' (lethargy, lost appetite, photophobia, sleepiness) as a motivated state driven from the body to the brain via the vagus nerve and inflammatory cytokines. He then flips the equation, covering zero-cost tools to fight infection: elevating the feet during sleep to boost glymphatic clearance, cyclic hyperventilation (Wim Hof-style) breathing shown in a PNAS study to raise adrenaline and lower inflammation, positive mindset/hope acting through dopamine, and electroacupuncture of fascia driving a vagal-adrenal anti-inflammatory reflex. He closes with spirulina as an alternative to decongestants for nasal congestion.

Big reveals

  • Calls the popular idea that the vagus nerve mainly calms you down 'more or less a myth' — it is the fast pathway signaling body infection to the brain.
  • Breaks down a PNAS study where people injected with E. coli had fewer flu-like symptoms after Wim Hof-style breathing.
  • Identifies adrenaline/epinephrine release as the mechanism that reduces inflammation during the breathing protocol.
  • Explains the 'you get sick after you finally stop/rest' phenomenon as adrenaline boosting immune defense during stress.
  • Personal admission: Huberman uses cyclic hyperventilation breathing himself whenever he feels a bug coming on, for 4+ years.
  • Cites Asya Rolls' lab showing mindset and a 'sense of hope' (via dopamine) can shrink tumors and speed wound healing.
  • Cites Qiufu Ma's Harvard study mapping how electroacupuncture of fascia drives a vagal-adrenal anti-inflammatory reflex.
  • Offers spirulina (2 grams) as an alternative to Sudafed-type decongestants for nasal congestion.

Things worth remembering

  • The body's defense has three layers: physical barrier (skin/mucus), the fast innate immune system, and the antibody-making adaptive immune system.
  • IgM antibodies appear early (recent infection) while the more stable IgG comes later — 'IG' stands for immunoglobulin.
  • You have distinct microbiomes in your eyes, mouth, nose and gut — not just one gut microbiome.
  • Two to four daily servings of low-sugar fermented foods (sauerkraut, natto, kimchi, pickles) support the gut microbiome and reduce cytokine activity.
  • Nasal breathing filters viruses and bacteria far better than mouth breathing.
  • Fever is the body deliberately raising temperature because many viruses and bacteria don't survive well at elevated heat.
  • Elevating your heels about 12 degrees during sleep increases glymphatic washout that clears brain debris during infection.
  • The breathing protocol: 20–30 deep breaths, then exhale fully and hold 15–60 seconds, repeated for 3–4 rounds.
  • Randomized double-blind human trials found 2 grams of spirulina reduced nasal obstruction, itching and inflammatory cytokines while improving smell and sleep.