The Metabolic Classroom with Dr. Ben Bikman Podcast By Insulin IQ cover art

The Metabolic Classroom with Dr. Ben Bikman

The Metabolic Classroom with Dr. Ben Bikman

By: Insulin IQ
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Welcome to The Metabolic Classroom, a nutrition and lifestyle podcast focused on metabolism, which is how our bodies use energy, and the truth behind why we get sick and fat. Every week, Dr. Ben Bikman shares valuable insights that you can apply in your own life and share with friends and loved ones. The Metabolic Classroom is brought to you by BenBikman.com and InsulinIQ.com.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Copyright © Insulin IQ. All rights reserved.
Biological Sciences Hygiene & Healthy Living Science
Episodes
  • Ivermectin Explained: The Science Behind the Controversy
    Mar 23 2026

    📢 Ask Dr. Bikman’s Digital Mind (multilingual):

    https://benbikman.com/ben-bikmans-digital-ai-mind


    📢 Dr. Bikman’s Community & Coaching Site: https://insuliniq.com


    Topic:

    Ivermectin is a Nobel Prize-winning drug with emerging evidence showing it influences mitochondria, inflammation, and metabolic signaling pathways such as AMPK and FXR. While most data is still preclinical, its consistent mechanisms and strong safety record make it a compelling candidate for further research in cancer and metabolic disease.


    Summary:

    Ivermectin has become one of the most controversial drugs in recent years, but beneath the political noise lies a compelling scientific story. In this lecture, Dr. Ben Bikman examines ivermectin strictly through the lens of peer-reviewed research, highlighting its origins as a Nobel Prize-winning antiparasitic drug and exploring its expanding role in metabolism, mitochondrial function, inflammation, and cancer biology.


    A central theme of the lecture is ivermectin’s impact on mitochondria, particularly its ability to inhibit complex I of the electron transport chain. This disruption creates an energy crisis within cells, activates AMPK, suppresses mTOR signaling, and can ultimately trigger apoptosis in cancer cells. Notably, these effects appear to be selective, with cancer cells showing greater sensitivity than healthy cells. Additional mechanisms—including inhibition of PAK1 and synergy with existing chemotherapy agents—further support ivermectin’s potential as a therapeutic candidate in oncology.


    Beyond cancer, ivermectin demonstrates meaningful metabolic effects. It reduces inflammation through suppression of NF-kappaB, activates AMPK, and influences glucose metabolism via FXR signaling. Preclinical studies show improvements in insulin sensitivity, glucose control, liver health, and even adipocyte behavior. While human data is still limited, Dr. Bikman emphasizes that the mechanistic consistency across pathways warrants serious clinical investigation rather than dismissal.


    References:

    For complete show notes and references, we invite you to become an Insider subscriber. You’ll enjoy real-time, livestream Metabolic Classroom access which includes live Q&A with Ben after the lecture, unlimited access to Dr. Bikman’s Digital Mind, ad-free podcast episodes, show notes and references, and Ben’s Weekly Research Review Podcast. Learn more: https://www.benbikman.com


    NOTE: The information presented is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Dr. Bikman is not a clinician—and, he is not your doctor. Always seek the advice of your own qualified health providers with questions you may have regarding medical conditions.


    Ben’s favorite yerba mate and fiber: https://ufeelgreat.com/usa/en/c/1BA884


    Exogenous ketones: A high-quality option is the NSF-certified goBHB from Clean Form Nutrition, where you can use the code BEN10 for a 10% discount: https://cleanformnutrition.com/products/go-bhb


    Ben’s favorite meal-replacement shake: https://gethlth.com (discount: BEN10)

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    29 mins
  • How Sleep Loss Rewires Your Hunger Hormones
    Mar 16 2026

    📢 Ask Dr. Bikman’s Digital Mind (multilingual): https://benbikman.com/ben-bikmans-digital-ai-mind


    📢 Dr. Bikman’s Community & Coaching Site: https://insuliniq.com


    Topic:

    Sleep loss alters key hunger hormones—reducing leptin and increasing ghrelin—while simultaneously activating reward pathways that increase cravings for calorie-dense foods. Because sleep and appetite hormones influence each other in both directions, improving sleep quality may be one of the most powerful tools for regulating hunger and metabolic health.


    Summary:

    Sleep is often treated as a simple lifestyle choice, but in reality it is one of the most powerful regulators of appetite and metabolic health. In this lecture, Dr. Ben Bikman explains the intricate hormonal relationship between sleep and hunger, highlighting how even short periods of sleep deprivation can dramatically alter the body’s appetite signals. Key hormones such as leptin and ghrelin shift in opposite directions during sleep restriction—satiety signaling declines while hunger signaling increases—creating a biological drive to eat more food.


    Ben also explores how sleep deprivation affects additional systems involved in appetite regulation, including the endocannabinoid system, cortisol rhythms, and the brain’s orexin neurons. These changes don’t just increase hunger—they specifically increase cravings for energy-dense, rewarding foods like chips, sweets, and other highly palatable options. Together, these hormonal changes create what researchers describe as an “obesogenic environment,” where the body becomes biologically primed to overeat.


    Importantly, the relationship works both ways. Hormones such as leptin and ghrelin also influence sleep quality, while melatonin plays a coordinating role in regulating the entire circadian system. Dr. Bikman concludes by emphasizing that optimizing sleep—especially protecting early-night deep sleep and minimizing artificial light at night—may be one of the most effective interventions for regulating appetite and improving metabolic health.


    References:

    For complete show notes and references, we invite you to become an Insider subscriber. You’ll enjoy real-time, livestream Metabolic Classroom access which includes live Q&A with Ben after the lecture, unlimited access to Dr. Bikman’s Digital Mind, ad-free podcast episodes, show notes and references, and Ben’s Weekly Research Review Podcast. Learn more: https://www.benbikman.com


    NOTE: The information presented is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Dr. Bikman is not a clinician—and, he is not your doctor. Always seek the advice of your own qualified health providers with questions you may have regarding medical conditions.


    #SleepAndMetabolism #SleepAndHunger #Ghrelin #Leptin #SleepDeprivation #MetabolicHealth #CircadianRhythm #EndocannabinoidSystem #SleepScience #HormonesAndSleep #InsulinResistance #AppetiteHormones #SleepAndWeightGain #CortisolRhythm #MelatoninScience #SleepQuality #MetabolismMatters #DrBenBikman #MetabolicClassroom #SleepForHealth


    Ben’s favorite yerba mate and fiber: https://ufeelgreat.com/usa/en/c/1BA884


    Exogenous ketones: A high-quality option is the NSF-certified goBHB from Clean Form Nutrition, where you can use the code BEN10 for a 10% discount: https://cleanformnutrition.com/products/go-bhb


    Ben’s favorite meal-replacement shake: https://gethlth.com (discount: BEN10)

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    22 mins
  • Why Alzheimer’s May Be a Metabolic Disease
    Mar 9 2026

    📢 Ask Dr. Bikman’s Digital Mind (multilingual):

    https://benbikman.com/ben-bikmans-digital-ai-mind


    📢 Dr. Bikman’s Community & Coaching Site: https://insuliniq.com


    Topic:

    Alzheimer’s disease has traditionally been explained by the buildup of amyloid plaques in the brain, but growing evidence suggests this theory does not fully account for the disease or lead to effective treatments. A metabolic perspective proposes that Alzheimer’s may instead be driven by brain insulin resistance, which disrupts neuronal energy metabolism—while the brain’s ability to use ketones as an alternative fuel remains intact, offering potential strategies for prevention and support.


    Summary:

    For decades, Alzheimer’s disease has largely been understood through the lens of the amyloid plaque hypothesis, which proposes that sticky protein deposits in the brain trigger neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. In this Metabolic Classroom lecture, Ben explains why that theory is increasingly being questioned. He reviews the historical origins of the plaque hypothesis and the repeated failure of drugs designed to remove amyloid plaques to meaningfully improve patient outcomes. The controversy surrounding manipulated data in influential Alzheimer’s research further highlights the need for a new framework to better explain the disease.


    Ben then presents a compelling alternative: Alzheimer’s disease as a metabolic disorder driven by brain insulin resistance. Drawing from mechanistic studies, epidemiological data, and genetic insights, he explains how impaired insulin signaling in the brain can disrupt neuronal energy metabolism, increase tau tangles, impair amyloid clearance, and ultimately contribute to neurodegeneration. This concept has led some researchers to refer to Alzheimer’s as “Type 3 diabetes.”


    The lecture also explores a hopeful implication of this metabolic framework. While glucose metabolism is impaired in Alzheimer’s brains, research shows that the brain’s ability to use ketones remains intact. This suggests that strategies that improve insulin sensitivity or increase ketone availability—such as carbohydrate restriction, fasting, exercise, or exogenous ketones—may offer promising avenues for prevention or metabolic support.


    References:

    For complete show notes and references, we invite you to become an Insider subscriber. You’ll enjoy real-time, livestream Metabolic Classroom access which includes live Q&A with Ben after the lecture, unlimited access to Dr. Bikman’s Digital Mind, ad-free podcast episodes, show notes and references, and Ben’s Weekly Research Review Podcast. Learn more: https://www.benbikman.com


    NOTE: The information presented is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Dr. Bikman is not a clinician—and, he is not your doctor. Always seek the advice of your own qualified health providers with questions you may have regarding medical conditions.


    #AlzheimersDisease #Type3Diabetes #BrainInsulinResistance #MetabolicHealth #InsulinResistance #BrainHealth #CognitiveDecline #DementiaPrevention #KetonesForBrain #KetogenicScience #LowCarbScience #APOE4 #Neurodegeneration #BrainEnergy #MetabolicDisease #PreventAlzheimers #DrBenBikman #MetabolismMatters #Ketones #BrainMetabolism


    Ben’s favorite yerba mate and fiber: https://ufeelgreat.com/usa/en/c/1BA884


    Exogenous ketones: A high-quality option is the NSF-certified goBHB from Clean Form Nutrition, where you can use the code BEN10 for a 10% discount: https://cleanformnutrition.com/products/go-bhb


    Ben’s favorite meal-replacement shake: https://gethlth.com (discount: BEN10)

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    30 mins
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I love listening to this podcast. It makes the science of metabolism accessible to a much wider audience. If you want true health, I highly recommend you listen to this podcast and begin to apply the principles to your life.

Making the science of metabolism accessible

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Thank you for helping us listeners put the pieces of the metabolism puzzle together.

Excellent, accessible information

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I just recently found this podcast. It is already become my #1 favorite. Top notch research. Engaging top notch presentation and explanations. Superb!

top notch health info

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Easily understood with research to back it up and easy to listen, well spoken. Thank you.

Excellent information on metabolism

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I listen regularly to your podcast. thanks for your time. education is the key to better health

excellent

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