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Andrew Huberman · 2025-03-13 · 30m

Boost Your Energy & Immune System with Cortisol & Adrenaline | Huberman Lab Essentials

Huberman explains how to time and control cortisol and adrenaline to boost daytime energy and strengthen your immune system.

Boost Your Energy & Immune System with Cortisol & Adrenaline | Huberman Lab Essentials
The guest

Andrew Huberman (solo) — Professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine and host of the Huberman Lab podcast. This is a solo 'Essentials' episode revisiting his earlier work on stress hormones.

The gist

This Huberman Lab Essentials episode reframes cortisol and adrenaline (epinephrine) not as inherently bad stress hormones but as tools for energy, focus, and immunity that depend on timing, intensity, and duration. Huberman explains the brain-body pathways that release each hormone and gives protocols for timing cortisol with early-morning sunlight and deliberately raising adrenaline with cold exposure, breathing, or high-intensity exercise. He highlights research showing that short bouts of stress can actually enhance immune function, while chronic elevation harms the immune system, drives comfort-food cravings and fat storage, and even accelerates graying hair. The core skill he teaches is learning to turn these hormones on and off, staying calm in the mind while the body is activated. He closes with circadian eating, fasting, and supplement options for regulating stress.

Big reveals

  • Reframes cortisol as a 'hormone of energy' rather than a stress hormone, and says you don't want cortisol too low.
  • Core tool: get sunlight outside within 30 minutes of waking (no sunglasses) to time your cortisol peak to the morning.
  • Claims the body can't tell the difference between a troubling text, an ice bath, and HIIT, it's all just stress.
  • Key mechanism: train adrenaline release from the adrenals while keeping the mind calm, since cortisol crosses the blood-brain barrier but epinephrine does not.
  • Counterintuitive finding: brief 1-4 day bouts of stress can boost immune function instead of harming it.
  • Cites the 2014 Kox et al. PNAS Wim Hof study where deliberate breathing attenuated fever and vomiting from injected E. coli.
  • Reveals chronic sympathetic activation depletes melanocyte stem cells in hair, so stress literally turns hair gray.
  • Personal protocol: takes 50 mg of apigenin (from chamomile) before bed to calm the nervous system.

Things worth remembering

  • Cortisol is a steroid hormone made from cholesterol and competes with testosterone and estrogen for that cholesterol when you're stressed.
  • A sunny morning sky is ~100,000 lux, a cloudy day ~10,000 lux, bright artificial light ~1,000 lux, and room light only 100-200 lux, so phones and bulbs can't time cortisol.
  • Light exposure guidance: ~10 minutes outside on a clear day, 10-20 minutes with broken clouds, ~30 minutes on dense overcast days.
  • Dopamine is the precursor to epinephrine, so telling yourself you enjoy a stressor can chemically increase adrenaline output.
  • Chronic stress (more than 4-7 days) can flip cortisol's negative feedback loop into a positive one, making stress cause more stress.
  • In studies of chronic corticosterone, animals ate more sugar and fat, even lard, leading to type 2 diabetes.
  • Ashwagandha is reported to reduce cortisol by 14.5 to 27.9% in otherwise healthy but stressed humans.
  • Huberman's own routine: skips breakfast, delays caffeine 90 minutes to 2 hours, and eats first meal around 11:30-noon, keeping carbs low to maintain high epinephrine.
  • The classic stress-immunity research is based largely on the work of Bruce McEwen at Rockefeller University.

Recommended in this episode

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RecommendedProduct

Apigenin

various supplement brands (inferred)

“the other compound that I think deserves attention is appenine ... which is what's found in chamomile I take it before bedtime 50 milligrams” — Andrew Huberman 00:25:30
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