
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
📢 Dr. Bikman’s Community & Coaching Site, Insulin IQ: https://insuliniq.com
and/or
📢 Become an Insider, Ben’s website: https://www.benbikman.com
This Metabolic Classroom lecture explores the often misunderstood world of nitrates and nitrites—compounds historically feared due to their association with processed meats.
Dr. Bikman presents a balanced examination of their biological role, historical use, and potential risks and benefits. While concerns remain over their conversion into carcinogenic nitrosamines (mainly in animal studies), the real-world human data is inconsistent and largely correlational. In fact, vegetables are the largest dietary source of nitrates—not processed meats.
Far from being mere preservatives, nitrates and nitrites play a key role in converting to nitric oxide in the body, which supports vascular health, mitochondrial function, and even insulin sensitivity. Human and animal studies suggest nitrates can improve mitochondrial efficiency, promote blood flow, and enhance insulin signaling via cyclic GMP and PKG pathways. They may also encourage the browning of fat tissue, supporting metabolic flexibility.
Despite the correlation-based cancer fears often cited in media and observational studies, Dr. Bikman emphasizes the importance of context, dose, and confounding variables. He argues that nitrates and nitrites are bioactive compounds with legitimate metabolic benefits—far from the health villains they’re often made out to be.
Show Notes/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, ad-free podcast episodes, show notes and references, online Office Hours access, Ben’s Research Review Podcast, and a searchable archive that includes all Metabolic Classroom episodes and Research Reviews. Learn more: https://www.benbikman.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.8
164164 ratings
📢 Dr. Bikman’s Community & Coaching Site, Insulin IQ: https://insuliniq.com
and/or
📢 Become an Insider, Ben’s website: https://www.benbikman.com
This Metabolic Classroom lecture explores the often misunderstood world of nitrates and nitrites—compounds historically feared due to their association with processed meats.
Dr. Bikman presents a balanced examination of their biological role, historical use, and potential risks and benefits. While concerns remain over their conversion into carcinogenic nitrosamines (mainly in animal studies), the real-world human data is inconsistent and largely correlational. In fact, vegetables are the largest dietary source of nitrates—not processed meats.
Far from being mere preservatives, nitrates and nitrites play a key role in converting to nitric oxide in the body, which supports vascular health, mitochondrial function, and even insulin sensitivity. Human and animal studies suggest nitrates can improve mitochondrial efficiency, promote blood flow, and enhance insulin signaling via cyclic GMP and PKG pathways. They may also encourage the browning of fat tissue, supporting metabolic flexibility.
Despite the correlation-based cancer fears often cited in media and observational studies, Dr. Bikman emphasizes the importance of context, dose, and confounding variables. He argues that nitrates and nitrites are bioactive compounds with legitimate metabolic benefits—far from the health villains they’re often made out to be.
Show Notes/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, ad-free podcast episodes, show notes and references, online Office Hours access, Ben’s Research Review Podcast, and a searchable archive that includes all Metabolic Classroom episodes and Research Reviews. Learn more: https://www.benbikman.com
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
1,544 Listeners
782 Listeners
3,529 Listeners
1,118 Listeners
1,091 Listeners
476 Listeners
749 Listeners
456 Listeners
243 Listeners
173 Listeners
158 Listeners
1,140 Listeners
192 Listeners
100 Listeners
69 Listeners