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Power Protein
By Carl Lowe
Protein, the stuff that muscles are made of, has become the mainstay
diet ingredient of today's with-it dieters. In the wake of this
hot trend, marketers have begun to trumpet the benefits of eating
a high-protein diet to lose weight.
Have you joined the high-protein generation yet? If you're still
sitting on the dietary fence, a modicum of knowledge about the ins
and outs of this macronutrient can help you add muscle and better
health to your weight-loss efforts.
Traditionally, many experts have argued that when you diet and
try to lose weight, a calorie is a calorie is a calorie.
In other words, this conventional weight-loss philosophy maintains
that you have to limit calories, the energy contained in your food,
in order to drop pounds. By cutting calories, all calories, this
argument goes, your body has less material it can use to make fat.
Translation of this attitude: Just eat less food and you'll weigh
less.
But scientists who have studied high-protein diets argue that not
all calories on your dinner plate are created equal. While cutting
calories overall isn't a bad idea, when those energy units enter
the digestive tract and are used to make more fat cells, some calories
are more equal than others.
Metabolic Pathways
Research now shows that when you eat a high-protein meal, less of
the protein calories are converted into fat than are carbohydrate
calories when you consume a high-carb meal.
For instance, in a study done at the University of Cincinnati College
of Nursing, women who dieted by cutting carbs and focusing on protein
lost twice as much weight after six months than women who merely
cut calories (ADA annual meeting, November 2002).
In this research, about 50 women between the ages of 30 and 60
were divided into two groups. One group ate a diet that limited
fat to 30% of calories. The other women ate a very-low-carbohydrate
diet that was high in protein.
Ketone Effects
The women who barely touched carbs for six months went into what's
called a state of ketosis. Ketosis occurs when your blood-sugar
level goes so low that your body fat is broken down by your liver
and changed into ketone bodies. Ketone bodies are chemicals that
the body makes when insulin, a hormone-like substance involved in
carbohydrate metabolism, drops very low and fat is mostly burned
for energy.
When ketones build up in the blood they can end up in urine or
be released in the lungs making your breath smell fruity. (Blood
tests of these dieting women confirmed that the bodies of those
on a high-protein diet had entered a state of ketosis.)
The result: high-protein dieters in this research lost an average
of 18.5 pounds after six months. Just as important is the fact that
10 of those pounds were fat. The other group of women only lost
about nine pounds each, five of which were fat. (Each of the women
in both groups ate between 1200 and 1500 calories a day.)
Protein Basics
Obviously, protein plays a more basic role in the body than just
helping to spur weight loss. Actually, it's the body's second most
abundant substance (after water), used to build the "stuff"
of which skin, muscles and other organs are made. Hair and nails
are also primarily built of protein.
But protein is much more than a simple bodily scaffold. Enzymes,
substances vital to chemical reactions within the body, depend on
protein, as do disease-fighting antibodies and message-carrying
hormones.
Protein is also required to make brain chemicals called neurotransmitters,
particularly dopamine and norepinephrine, both of which help improve
alertness and concentration. "If you're feeling lackluster
and not up to speed, you may need protein foods," says Molly
Siple, MS, RD, author of Healing Foods for Dummies (IDG Books).
Protein needs do change throughout life. Pregnant and breast-feeding
women need more protein to support fetal growth and milk production,
and children need protein to power their growing bodies. Older people
often need more protein to keep up their immune defenses. In addition,
your protein needs will increase if you are sick or injured.
Whence Protein?
When many folks think of protein, they envision a thick steak, hardboiled
egg or fish filet. And animal-based foods, including dairy foods,
are excellent sources of protein. "Eggs are one of nature's
finest products," Siple says.
But plant-based foods can also provide plenty of protein. For example,
while half a chicken breast contains a respectable 31 grams of protein,
a cup of soybeans isn't far behind, with 29 grams. Similarly, a
cup of whole milk contains 8 grams of protein; a cup of soymilk,
7 grams.
Getting the protein you need from plants is easy if you eat a variety
of foods throughout the day; you don't need to worry about eating
specific combinations of foods at each meal. "A well-balanced
diet of vegetables, fruits, grains and legumes supplies an ample
amount of protein to meet [the] body's needs," says Jay Solomon,
author of Seven Pillars of Health: Nutritional Secrets for Good
Health and Long Life (Prima Publishing).
Protein Protects Your Bones
As high-protein diets have gained in popularity, some experts have
cautioned that these diets may compromise bone strength. But new
research shows that eating extra protein strengthens bones instead
of weakening them.
A study done by researchers from the Bone Metabolism Laboratory
at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging
at Tufts University shows that eating more protein and cutting back
on carbohydrates, like those in wheat, does not cause the body to
take calcium out of the bones but actually slows what's called bone
resorption (a process that would otherwise weaken bones).
Consequently, when you eat more protein and hold back on carbohydrates,
according this research, bones get stronger (Journal of Clinical
Endocrinology & Metabolism 3/04).
The scientists found that people who boosted their daily protein
intake by 58 grams a day had 25% more bone growth factor, along
with lower levels of natural chemicals that show bone is being lost.
(Fifty-eight grams is about an eighth of a pound, so the extra protein
was the equivalent of about three small pieces of steak.)
Losing More Body Fat
One reason more and more researchers are looking into the benefits
of following a high-protein diet to lose weight is the fact that
this diet apparently preserves more muscle tissue and encourages
the loss of more body fat.
For instance, a study performed by researchers at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign found that giving women dieters
more protein made them less hungry between meals and also lowered
their triglyceride levels (blood fats that have been linked to heart
disease risk).
In 10 weeks, these women lost about 10 pounds; in addition, they
took off significantly more body fat than other women who ate more
carbohydrates (Journal of Nutrition 2/03).
Staying Satisfied
The high-protein approach to eating has an additional advantage:
you tend to feel more satisfied, which keeps you from raiding the
fridge and consuming needless calories.
When researchers from Arizona State University assigned people to
eat either a high-protein or a high-carbohydrate diet-both with
restricted calories-for six weeks, they found that both groups of
dieters lost weight. However, the folks on the protein-rich eating
plan "reported more satisfaction and less hunger in month one
of the trial" (Journal of Nutrition 3/04).
The lesson of this continuing research is that while all calories
count, if you make more of your daily calories protein calories,
you can count on losing a few extra pounds.
Building the Burn
By Marjorie Flakowitz
When was the last time you exercised? During the past decade, the
number of obese Americans has jumped by 50%. A big factor in this
increase: lack of physical activity.
Today, technological society seems to make everyday life effortless:
car windows retreat at the push of a button, remote controls keep
couch potatoes from budging off the cushions and video games have
replaced non-cyber ball playing. Americans don't move around and
burn off the calories they eat. Instead, our sedentary ways are
causing big stomach bulges and a big bulge in health problems linked
to being overweight.
Want to lose those pounds? Consuming the right nutrients and pounding
the pavement are a great start.
Number of Large Americans Grows Larger
Fifty-five out of every 100 Americans are now overweight. And the
numbers continue to surge.
To take yourself out of these alarming statistics, plan a consistent
exercise program.
If the thought of sweating during strenuous workouts at the gym
scares you, relax. You don't have to do that much. According to
a long list of research, a few half-hour walks a week can put you
on the road to weight loss.
For instance, researchers at Duke found that walking a total of
only 12 miles a week can help you control your weight even if you're
not dieting (Archives of Internal Medicine 1/12/04).
Of course dieting and taking the right supplements will help you
lose weight a little faster, but walking burns off the pounds.
In the study at Duke, scientists gathered about 180 overweight,
sedentary people and assigned them to one of four groups. The first
group had to jog about 20 miles a week. The second group jogged
12 miles a week. The third group walked 12 miles, and the last group
didn't do a thing.
"We found that the two low-exercise groups lost both weight
and fat, while those in the more intensive group lost more of each
in a 'dose-response' manner," says Cris Slentz, PhD, one of
the researchers.
"Simply put, the more you exercise, the more you benefit.
Just as importantly, the control group of participants who performed
no exercise gained weight over the period of the trial."
Everybody who was exercising lost weight; their stomachs and hips
shrank. The folks who did nothing didn't just stay at the same weight;
their weight went up.
Dr. Slentz adds, "From the perspective of prevention, it appears
that the 30 minutes per day will keep most people from gaining the
additional weight associated with inactivity. Given the increase
in obesity in the US, it would seem likely that many in our society
may have fallen below this minimal level of physical activity required
to maintain body weight."
Enzyme Help
Of course, limiting the carbohydrates you consume and eating more
protein at the same time as you exercise can help you lose weight
more effectively. To help your body utilize protein more fully to
fuel your exercise, many experts recommend taking enzyme supplements.
One of the most valuable enzyme combinations in this process is
Aminogen®, an all-natural, patented plant enzyme that assists
the digestive tract in liberating the amino acids that are the building
blocks of dietary protein.
By helping separate these amino acids, absorption is boosted through
the walls of the small intestines and your metabolism is better
able to take up proteins and use them.
Add Chromium to Exercise
The mineral chromium is another supplement found helpful in aiding
weight loss.
An eight-week study at the University of Texas, Austin, compared
weight loss among obese women who exercised and took chromium with
the number of pounds that were lost by women performing the same
amount of exercise without taking supplements (Medicine & Science
in Sports & Exercise 1997; 29:992-8).
The result: women taking chromium lost a significantly greater
amount.
How does chromium work? A study at the University of Vermont found
that chromium may help muscles take blood sugar (glucose) out of
the blood more effectively by improving what's called insulin sensitivity
(18th International Diabetes Federation Congress, Paris, 8/03).
Sensitizing Insulin
Insulin is released by the pancreas to help cells take in glucose.
By exercising and keeping your weight down, and becoming more insulin
sensitive, you potentially reduce your chances of getting diabetes.
The cells quickly respond to insulin and blood sugar stabilizes.
On the other hand, when insulin sensitivity drops significantly,
the body may suffer what's called insulin resistance, a pre-diabetic
condition that complicates and slows the removal of sugar from the
blood.
The Vermont researchers found that chromium increases the activity
of a protein called Akt phosphorylation. This is a natural substance
made by the body that makes cells more sensitive to insulin and
speeds the movement of blood sugar into cells, where it can be burned
for energy.
So, in combination with exercise, which also helps the body become
more responsive to insulin, chromium may help keep blood sugar under
control.
As Sandra Woodruff points out in her book Secrets of Good Carb,
Low Carb Living (Avery/Penguin), "[P]hysical activity boosts
the body's ability to process carbohydrate and helps reduce insulin
resistance.
Exercise acts much like an insulin-sensitizing
drug to make the body's cells more responsive to insulin, which
enables them to remove sugar from the blood more efficiently."
The results of exercise and getting sufficient chromium can help
support weight loss and healthy blood sugar levels. The Vermont
research team found that the exercising chromium takers boosted
their insulin sensitivity by almost 9%.
Building a Lean Body
A prime benefit of exercising while you lose weight is that physical
activity builds muscle tissue. Muscle tissue, even at rest, burns
more calories than fat cells, so having extra muscle means you can
eat more and still maintain or lose weight.
An aid in this process is Coleus forskohlii root, Benth., a plant
that originated in India. Research shows that forskohlii furthers
molecular energy processes within cells that support the development
of lean body tissue (muscle) and the enzymatic reactions that break
down fat.
In a study of about two dozen women who took forskohlii extract,
researchers found that taking this supplement was associated with
feeling more energetic and less hungry (Experimental Biology meeting,
2002).
According to Vladimir Badmaev, PhD, who has studied forskohlii,
this herb's help in supporting lean body tissue is crucial to maintaining
a healthy weight.
"In highly overweight individuals, fat tissue can constitute
up to 70% of body weight. The remaining proportion of body composition
corresponds to the lean body mass. Lean body mass is composed of
muscle, vital organs, bone, connective and other non-fatty tissues
in the body," says Dr. Badmaev.
"The body's metabolic rate is in direct proportion to the
amount of lean body mass. Therefore, safely maintaining or increasing
lean body mass is an important consideration for any weight-loss
strategy."
The Skinny on Calcium
Calcium, long known for its ability to strengthen bones, is now
turning out to play a key role in weight maintenance as well.
In one study, obese mice who were put on calorie-restricted diets
lost body fat when fed extra calcium (Experimental Biology meeting
2000). Both supplemental calcium and low-fat dairy proved effective.
What's more, low-fat dairy's ability to burn fat and provoke fat
loss have been confirmed in additional research (Obesity Research
4/04; 12:582-90).
Fat cells contain calcium, and scientists believe that the more
of this mineral a fat cell contains, the more fat will be burned
off. This action is especially important when you cut back on calories,
since that often gives your body the idea that it's starving, leading
your metabolism to slow and making weight loss extremely difficult.
A Complete Program
To lose weight efficiently, stay in top shape and retain your feelings
of energy, you also have to make sure you get enough of the vitamins
and minerals necessary for good health.
For those eating a high-protein diet who are limiting their fruits
and vegetables, taking a supplement that incorporates nutrients
from fruits and vegetables can help restore your feelings of well-being
and help maintain your motivation for dieting and losing weight.
(Supplements are available that deliver these nutrients without
carbohydrates.)
In addition, supplements of what are called ketogenic amino acids-the
natural substances that form protein's building blocks-can also
help fuel your weight-loss program. These special nutrients can
be efficiently used for the body's energy needs, a process that
helps you lose weight.
And don't forget to keep moving! Soon you may have the kind of
results researchers produced at the University of Pittsburgh when
they studied women who exercised 40 minutes, five times a week (Journal
of the American Medical Association 9/10/03). Those women lost 25
pounds in six months.
Your results may be just as good or better!
Clean and Lean
By Phyllis D. Light, RH
Been there, done that with weight-loss programs? Fed up with weight
that comes off and then goes back on? Wondering what it will take
to find that svelte, healthy you you've been looking for?
Detoxification-an internal cleansing-could be the missing link
in your quest to shed pounds.
Fact is, your weight problem may be linked to our ubiquitously
toxic environment. Cleaning out those toxins that have found a home
in your body's tissues may help you boost your health while aiding
in your quest to get your weight under control.
According to Elson M. Haas, MD, author of the book The Detox Diet
(Celestial Arts), "Detoxification is an important component
in treating obesity. Many of the toxins we ingest or make are stored
in the fatty tissues: hence obesity is almost always associated
with toxicity."
In Dr. Haas' view, the stressful release of toxins from body fat
is an important reason why people get jittery and headachy while
dieting. Other possible discomforts can include persistent tiredness,
disturbing dizziness, nausea and a racing pulse.
Because the body releases toxins when you diet and break down body
fat, you should protect yourself from cellular havoc by taking in
plenty of phytonutrients and antioxidants. (Many of these are available
as supplements.)
Membrane Protection
According to researchers, under conditions of dietary restriction
and adjustments, your cell membranes can be subject to large amounts
of damage when they are engaged in fighting off the caustic molecules
known as free radicals (Free Radical Biology & Medicine 1988;
5(3):165-76).
A further complication: When the body is taking in fewer antioxidants
from food, the detoxification pathways in the liver may function
improperly.
On top of all that, what Dr. Haas calls "false fat" caused
by sensitivities to various foods contributes to weight gain.
False fat results from excess bloating and water retention. Once
you identify foods you are sensitive to and that make you bloat
(hint: often these are the very foods that you crave), taking them
out of your diet leads to almost immediate weight loss.
Keeping a food journal can help you identify these foods. In the
journal you should carefully note your reactions to various foods.
Then you can eliminate them one by one and see if abstaining helps
to shrink your waistline.
Dr. Haas believes that the removal of foods that cause these false
fat problems is one of the reasons people lose weight quickly at
the beginning of many diets.
The Organs of Detoxification
For traditional healers, the liver and bowels are key for toxin
elimination. But the kidneys, lymph, lungs and skin are also considered
primary organs that help regulate the body's intricate network of
detoxification processes.
The colon plays a dual role in that it both absorbs nutrients and
eliminates waste. This complex section of the gastrointestinal tract
houses a delicate terrain whose ecosystem is home to friendly probiotic
bacteria necessary for effective digestion, absorption and elimination.
When the organisms within the colon are out of balance, you can
suffer bloating, fluid retention, abdominal distention, indigestion
and dysfunctional elimination.
Stress can also play a role in disrupting the proper functioning
of the colon.
When you're stressed out, constipation or, conversely, loose bowels
may be the result. A consistent program of exercise or meditation
can be used to defuse stress and keep your digestion and waste elimination
processes behaving satisfactorily.
As one of its many roles in cleansing the blood and regulating
much of its contents, the liver is responsible for metabolizing
fat-soluble toxins.
According to Christopher Hobbs, LAc, respected herbalist and author
of Foundations of Health (Botanica Press), "Certain toxins
dissolve only in fatty or oily solutions, not in water."
It is the liver's job to release enzymes that break down fat-soluble
toxins into water-soluble compounds.
Once this process takes place, these toxins are converted into
chemical forms that can then be released through the kidneys or
bowels and evade storage in the body's fatty tissues.
On the other hand, body fat and liver cells can store up toxins
for extremely long stretches of time. Frequently, these toxins are
then released into the bloodstream when you start to lose weight.
Sweating Out Toxins
The skin is the largest organ designed to eliminate toxins and waste
products. Heavy metals such as mercury are frequently released through
the skin when you sweat.
By increasing your body temperature and boosting the amount of
perspiration released by your body, saunas have been shown to significantly
reduce the discomforts associated with rheumatoid arthritis, help
lower blood pressure and aid lung functioning (American Journal
of Medicine 2001 Feb 1; 110(2):118-26).
Of course, climbing into a foggy, damp sauna does not represent
the only effective way to encourage your sweat glands to help you
detoxify.
Hot baths, cardiovascular exercise and hydrotherapy can also eliminate
a wide range of toxins by improving circulation in the skin and
lymph system.
Increase Your Fiber
Fiber, carbohydrate that resists absorption within the intestines,
helps the body detox by speeding the passage of wastes through the
digestive tract.
Fiber can reduce what is called the leaky gut syndrome, an inflammatory
condition in which chemicals from food can cross through the walls
of the intestines and cause allergic reactions. When these relatively
large molecules enter the circulatory system, this undesirable process
may cause a chain of events that motivates the body to manufacture
antibodies against these allergens and inflame mucous membranes.
Fiber can offset some of this inflammation. Its action in loosening
stools and moving waste along the colon reduces the risk that toxins
stay in the digestive tract long enough to cause trouble.
Bulking Up
Fibers such as psyllium seed, flax seed or bran act as bulking agents
in the intestines. They perform their duties by absorbing water
and swelling up like a sponge dipped in water. That bulk consequently
stimulates bowel action.
To facilitate this process, drink plenty of water. Otherwise that
bulk can cause problematic constipation. (Drinking large amounts
of water is always a good idea for weight loss. Like fiber, water
can make you feel full on few calories.)
Toxin Elimination
For the most efficient elimination of toxins, your diet should contain
what are called soluble and insoluble fibers.
Soluble fiber, which is soluble in water, is found in oats, rice,
barley, beans and peas. Contained in apples and citrus fruits, a
soluble fiber called pectin may help the immune system eliminate
toxins and protect the body against cancer (Journal of the National
Cancer Institute 12/18/02).
Insoluble fiber, which is not soluble in water, is found primarily
in whole grains, such as wheat bran. This type of fiber is particularly
useful in lowering the risk of heart disease (Archives of Internal
Medicine 2004; 164:370).
Cleansing Time
Alan Keith Tillotson, PhD, author of The One Earth Herbal Source
Book (Twin Streams Health), recommends short fasts as an aid to
detoxification.
"A short fast (3-5 days) can be implemented on a Wednesday
or Friday to allow for rest on the weekend," he notes.
"Drink only spring or distilled water during the fast. Rest
as much as possible
.Bathe frequently, but only using warm
water, not hot
.
"Break the fast with only fruit on the first meal, followed
by vegetable soups the rest of the day."
He warns, though, people who are weak and very ill should not fast
at all. In addition, if you have a serious health problem, have
an eating disorder, are pregnant, or taking prescription medication,
consult a knowledgeable health care provider before attempting a
fast.
Vitamin C Clean Up
Vitamin C, a potent antioxidant, plays a vital role in preserving
the health of your digestive tract, as well as helping protect other
organs during detoxification and in the course of everyday exposure
to pollutants.
Two circumstances can significantly increase your oxidative stress
and boost your need for vitamin C: Being overweight (Arterioscler
Thromb Vasc Biol 2003 Mar 1; 23(3):434) and getting older (Sci Exp
2/19/04).
Antioxidant nutrients like vitamin C and natural vitamin E support
the body's efforts to fight off the effects of oxidation throughout
the body and may play a key role in protecting the colon.
Researchers at the University of Colorado are currently investigating
the notion that oxidative stress can also slow your resting metabolism
and make it harder to lose weight. When your resting metabolism
slows, you burn fewer daily calories and your body is more likely
to store extra calories as fat.
As a result, taking vitamin C may help you burn more calories by
offsetting these effects of free radicals (caustic molecules that
can damage cell structures). Researchers believe that increasing
your vitamin C levels produces this outcome through cellular channels
that are not yet completely understood.Vitamin C may also lower
your risk of stomach ulcers and stomach cancer.
Research at the San Francisco VA Medical Center (SFVAMC) demonstrates
that the more vitamin C you have circulating in your blood, the
lower your risk of infection by Helicobacter pylori, a type of bacteria
that is linked to both peptic ulcers and stomach cancer (Journal
of the American College of Nutrition 8/1/03).
Triphala
Triphala, a traditional combination of three Indian fruits, helps
tone the bowels, remove toxins, lower cholesterol, improve digestion
and regulate metabolism.
Containing a high amount of vitamin C, linoleic acid and absorbable
minerals, triphala possesses an important collection of nutrients
that support the body during detoxification.
In India, triphala has long been considered a reliable and effective
bowel aid, one that can be taken over an extended period of time
without the side effects of harsher purgatives. Part of its benefits
is triphala's action in reducing blood sugar levels (Journal of
Ethnopharmacology 7/02/81; (2):155-60).
Vying for Victory
Aside from improving your health, turning to short fasts and detoxifying
herbs (see "Herbal Detox Aids" on page 48) may prove to
be the perfect game plan for your weight-loss efforts.
In a world filled with toxins, cleaning up your act offers an increased
possibility of long-range victory against poor health and obesity.
That kind of result offers the very best of both worlds: A proudly
sleek, trim body that enjoys great health.
Picking Your Game Plan
By Larry C. Baker
In a world where fast-food restaurants reside on every block and
even gas stations are as ready to fill you up with sweets as they
are to fill up your car with unleaded, losing and keeping off weight
is a challenge. Because of our toxic food environment, losing weight
requires a cogent plan, a series of actionable events.
Picking your game plan for weight loss entails deciding which diets
and exercise programs are best for you as an individual. Focus on
a diet that's good for the long run. Pick out a plan you can stick
to, that fits your personal style and preferences, and then follow
it consistently. Then you can win the diet game and keep on winning!
Today, many observers have noted that the sport of creating weight-loss
programs runs rampant.
Frequently, a pushy announcer appears on early morning TV promoting
a new, improved slant on losing weight. Then, even before the next
commercial break, at least five other nutritionists begin promoting
variations on the new dietary theme.
But the overweight situation in the US today is truly reaching
a desperate state, and public medical officials believe that we
face a rapidly developing crisis inextricably linked to America's
growing weight problem.
So the most important measure for improving your health is to pick
a dependable weight-loss plan and stick to it until you reach a
healthy goal weight.
Then, you'll need to modify your diet so you can stay at that healthy
weight for the rest of your life.
The most popular lose-weight variations can be generally classified
as:
* Carbohydrate counting
* Calorie counting
Which diet is right for you? You make the call.
Counting Carbohydrates
Seems like counting carbs to control weight has become a national
pastime. Experts estimate that up to two out of three Americans
are now counting carbs.
While some critics feel the carb obsession is just a new hot trend,
others point to it as a health and weight control revolution. And
carb counters testify to its effectiveness. Many point to their
significant long-term success at taking weight off, and to feeling
more energetic and healthier than they have felt in many years.
As a result of these low-carb developments, food makers, supermarkets
and restaurants have hurried to make enough low-carb products available
to fulfill consumers' dieting desires.
In the meantime, food labels everywhere now loudly proclaim the
absence of carbs, and wary consumers are poring over package labels
to make sure that goods they contain are low in sugars and starch.
Simultaneously, in the search to hold down their carbohydrate consumption,
folks concerned about their health are cutting way back on starchy
breads, carb-filled potatoes, spaghetti, rice, soft drinks and many
different types of fruit.
To initially launch a low-carb diet, or keep on course for your
long-term weight maintenance, keeping careful count of carbs is
crucial for reaching and staying at your goal weight.
Weight-Loss Process
In this weight-loss process, you have to be sure of, and keep daily
track of, your carbs.
After calculating your daily carbohydrate needs, it's a relatively
simple manner to stay within your predetermined carb boundaries
and keep on shedding pounds.
That's a big reason why counting carbs has been such remarkably
successful game plan for so many dieters: Simply counting carbs,
these dieters have found, keeps them right on track for taking off
pounds and getting down to their desired weight.
A side benefit of losing these pounds is a sense of renewed energy,
health and vitality when carbs are limited in this fashion. (Of
course, taking up a consistent exercise program at the same time
doesn't hurt, either.)
Tooling Up
A factor that feeds into the popularity of carb counting are the
tools available to help dieters stay on the tried-and-true path
of carbohydrate limitation.
Yes, many folks do check food labels and add up their daily carbohydrate
intake. But many have found that so-called carb counters make keeping
track of carbs very simple.
These counting devices are also handy for revealing the hidden
carbs in foods like beans, which may have 50 grams of carbs in a
cup; dried fruit, which has 50 grams in half a cup; and some forms
of squash, which contain practically 11 grams of carb in half of
a cup.
For many people the thought of independently keeping track of these
carbohydrates is daunting. Luckily, the modern-day carb counter
doesn't have to do it all by herself. Quite a few easy-to-use calculators
can be had to assist in the counting, usable even for those unable
to count on their fingers and toes. With the use of these tools,
you can very accurately add up your daily carbohydrate totals and
ensure that you are locking in your best low-carb dieting results.
For instance, a tool called KetoCounter, located at www.ketocounter.com,
totals up carb counts and contains a myriad of nutrition information
on thousands of different foods.
At this website, carb counters can roam through a wealth of food
categories, feed in their serving sizes and have KetoCounter calculate
their carb counts. Even if you are math phobic, KetoCounter makes
sure you come up with the right total.
To keep your low-carbohydrate diet on track nutritionally, tools
like KetoCounter help you make sure that your meals don't dip too
low in certain nutrients. (If they do, you can make up the difference
with the right supplements.)
Accurate Counting
The utility of KetoCounter is its ability to help dieters perform
more accurate dietary analyses than they can do on their own.
The advantages of counting carbs in this way: Careful daily carb
counts ensures weight loss. Analyzing your nutritional intakes allows
you to figure out what kind of dietary supplements you may need.
Your digestion may also be improved by getting the right nutrients
in this way.
Another advantage to this type of carb counting is the extra help
dieters receive to make sure they don't get hung up in the weight-loss
doldrums. By carefully adding supplements, lags in weight loss can
usually be overcome.
Most importantly, proper supplementation enables you to stay healthy
even as you lose weight: you don't have to sacrifice your health
for a low-carbohydrate diet. KetoCounter can serve as a warning
flag, alerting dieters when their nutritional intake is simply not
adequate.
It is easy to calculate carbohydrates for packaged foods, once
you know how to properly read a nutrition label. With the aid of
a nutrition calculator like KetoCounter, tracking carbs is easier
than ever.
Proof is in the Loss
Research is starting to pile up that proves counting carbs and eating
more protein is one of the most effective way to maintain a healthy
weight.
When researchers in Germany, for example, put lab animals on a
variety of diets, they found that those eating more protein had
more antioxidants in their bodies. That kind of extra help against
free radical buildup produces a potentially stronger resistance
to life-threatening diseases (Journal of Nutrition 2000; 130:2889).
Meanwhile, when scientists at Duke University put 50 volunteers
on a low-carbohydrate, high-protein diet, the researchers found
that four out of five of them stayed on the diet for six months
and lost an average of 20 pounds each. None of these dieters felt
deprived as they lost weight.
In the Duke research, people ate as much meat and eggs as they wanted
plus a couple of cups of salad and a cup of low-carb vegetables
like broccoli every day, and they still lost weight.
Soft Drinks
Counting carbohydrates helps health because it limits consumption
of simple sugars. How dangerous to our health are simple sugars?
Well, according to experts, the fact that we are drinking vastly
more soft drinks and fruit juices than we used to is a major contributor
to our obesity epidemic and our diabetic dilemmas.
"Over the past several years, a number of studies have emerged
that indicated how soft drink and fruit drink intake are adversely
linked with adolescent and adult weight gain in the United States
and Europe," notes Dr. Barry Popkin, PhD, professor of nutrition
at the University of North Carolina.
In the decades since 1977, Dr. Popkin's research shows that sugary
drinks alone have added 66 calories a day from sugar to the average
American's diet. During that time period, American citizens, on
average, increased their daily intake of sugar calories by 83 calories.
"When the results of this study are coupled with earlier studies,
we can clearly see the pronounced shift in the [US and the] world's
diet toward increased consumption of caloric sweeteners and away
from higher-fiber foods," the researchers note. "Thus,
we are increasingly consuming foods that provide energy but few
other nutrients."
Counting Calories
A calorie-counting program is appealing to many people because of
its simplicity: it limits food (calories) but doesn't require you
to pay that much attention to what kinds of foods you consume.
As part of this effort, most experts recommend strict portion control.
Don't serve yourself overly large amounts of food, and limit the
amount of food you have available in your house. Be especially vigilant
when eating out; restaurants tend to fill plates with way too much
food.
Eating Habits
Limiting portions is crucial because people tend to eat the food
put before them. For instance, when Penn State scientists served
sandwiches of various sizes to 75 people once a week for a month,
they offered sandwiches that were six, eight, ten or twelve inches
long each time. The people in the study could eat as much or as
little as they desired.
The results weren't surprising. While not all the food was eaten,
being served larger portions led to more consumption (Journal of
the American Dietetic Association March 2004).
The researchers conclude that having less on the plate in front
of you means you eat less and, therefore, should weigh less.
Simple Concept
Counting calories, while relatively simple in concept, may not be
for everyone.
This approach to weight loss entails knowing and calculating how
many calories are in the food you eat and then tracking your daily
totals. This effort can be time consuming: a pound of body fat equals
about 3,500 calories, so if you cut back your food intake by 100
calories a day, it will take you more than a month to lose a pound.
To maintain a weekly weight loss of about one pound, you need to
eliminate 500 calories a day.
Make Your Calories Count
Cutting down on your calorie intake requires that you get the biggest
nutritional bang for your buck from the calories that are left.
That means eating complex carbohydrates, such as vegetables and
whole grains. These foods contain an impressive array of vitamins,
minerals and phytonutrients usually missing from more refined foods.
Another advantage of complex carbs on a calorie-counting diet lies
in their high fiber content. Fiber is considered a big help to dieters
since it makes you feel full but, because it is not absorbed by
the body, cannot be a source of calories used to create new body
fat. Fiber also helps keep your intestines in peak condition, and
helps hold your cholesterol down, to boot.
How do you make room for complex carbohydrates when you cut calories?
One of the best ways is to avoid empty sugar calories.
According to Sandra Woodruff, RD, author of The Best Kept Secrets
of Healthy Cooking (Avery), "[S]ugary foods are typically eaten
in place of nutritious foods
.sugary foods are usually loaded
with calories, making them a real menace if you're watching your
weight."
Sugar Control
If you are cutting calories and worried about the sugar in your
meals and in your blood, researchers who have studied people with
diabetes have noted 12 good eating habits to keep sugar under control
and three bad habits you should avoid.
The habits to embrace, says Carla Miller, PhD, Penn State nutrition
professor, include: Strictly curtail your consumption of high-sugar
foods; limit all your food portion sizes; cut way back on desserts;
ease off the fatty foods; eat complex carbs for breakfast.
Dr. Miller says you should eat three meals a day (don't skip!)
and take a shopping list to the health food store. And while you
can eat two vegetables with dinner, limit your starchy carbs, like
bread, pasta, rice, crackers or potatoes.
When you go out to eat, don't eat at buffets, which encourage overconsumption
of all foods, and stay away from fast food joints and large chain
restaurants. The choices there often contain way too much sugar.
Burning More
To burn more calories as you diet, increasing the amount of time
you spend exercising is crucial. Some experts recommend wearing
a pedometer (which counts your steps) and trying to take at least
10,000 steps a day. That kind of activity can burn up to 3,000 calories
a week.
This kind of dieting can help control weight, although whether
it is effective over a long period of time is open to question.
Counting calories all the time can become boring and oppressive
after awhile.
Living Longer
However, an advantage to calorie cutting is the possibility that
limiting your food this way may help you live longer.
An impressive amount of research in laboratories has shown that
when lab animals eat less (but still receive adequate nutrition
in terms of vitamins and minerals) their life expectancy increases.
However, no one has ever shown that eating less extends lifespan
among humans.
Nevertheless, investigations with mice do show that taking in fewer
calories-about a third less food than normal-does extend life significantly,
at least if you are a mouse.
Can the same technique work for you?
Well, in larger animals, researchers have found that cutting back
on food seems to lower so-called biomarkers of aging: substances
in the blood that show the aging-related breakdown of organs (American
Journal of Physiology 1994; 266: E540-7).
Studies show that eating a tiny amount of food (while taking supplements
to fill in your missing nutrients) can possibly keep your nervous
system from deteriorating, preserve the function of your reproductive
organs and keep hormones at younger levels. In laboratory tests,
food restriction helps the immune system; in addition, it seems
to postpone the development of some cancers (Journals of Gerontology:
Biology Sciences and Medical Sciences 1999; 54:B89-96).
Vegetarian Dieting
Whether or not you count carbohydrates or calories, eating a vegetarian
diet can help you keep off the pounds.
Vegetarian diets, of course, are different things to different
people. For some, it's a moral choice not to consume animal products.
For others, it's a health decision to lower their risk of cancer
and heart disease while staying slender.
Sticking to vegetarian foods can help you lose weight, since it
can be an effective way to cut calories without having to count
them.
Unfortunately, merely cutting out animal products from your diet-if
you're a typical American-may leave you deprived of nutrients like
iron and protein. The healthiest way to eat as a vegetarian and
still eat a nutritious diet is to utilize recipes and dishes from
other cultures in which people have traditionally dined on vegetarian
foods.
Traditional Meals
As Madhur Jaffrey points out in World Vegetarian (Clarkson Potter),
"Vegetarian traditions have existed in China and India for
thousands of years, and like the dietary rules and restrictions
of Islam and Judaism, have been prompted by the strong religious
beliefs of large numbers of people. There is, thus, a deep core
to them that explains their endurance. The great variety in eastern
vegetarian dishes may be explained by their slow evolution as they
were tested and added to over time."
Today, about 3% of Americans are vegetarians. In general, those
3% weigh less than the average American.
"Vegetarians have been reported to have healthier body weight
than non-vegetarians, as well as lower rates of death from heart
disease, lower blood cholesterol levels and lower rates of high
blood pressure, type 2 diabetes and prostate and colon cancer,"
says Cynthia Sass, RD, a spokesperson for the American Dietetic
Association.
"Planning a healthy vegetarian diet doesn't need to be complicated,
but steps should be taken to ensure the diet is nutrient-dense,"
she notes. "Just as with a meat-based diet, the key to ensuring
the body meets all its nutritional needs is to choose a wide variety
of foods."
Pick a Plan, Any Plan
No matter which diet plan you pick, if you lose weight and exercise,
you are sure to improve your health.
Certainly, the evidence is clear about which eating plan not to
choose: Research shows that the typical fat-filled fast-food meal
produces unfortunate effects on both your weight and body.
A study at the State University of New York at Buffalo found that
eating a breakfast of Egg McMuffin and hash browns releases a flood
of oxidants (free radicals) that may damage blood vessels (American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition April 2004).
"Eating that 900-calorie, high-fat meal temporarily floods
the blood stream with inflammatory components, overwhelming the
body's natural inflammation-fighting mechanisms," warns Ahmad
Aljada, PhD, research assistant professor in the Division of Endocrinology,
Diabetes and Metabolism, at Buffalo's School of Medicine and Biomedical
Sciences.
So stay away from those fast-food binges and start walking every
day. Your body, freed from the ravages of free radicals, may shrink
radically, but your good health will have every opportunity to expand.
Reasons to Diet
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC),
approximately 130 million Americans, or 64% of the population, are
overweight or obese.
Linked to this weight gain is an epidemic over the past ten years
of type 2 diabetes. Your chances of this type of diabetes is greatly
increased when you gain weight and you don't exercise.
The CDC figures that more than 18 million people in the US now
suffer from diabetes, and more than nine of ten of them have type
2.
Frighteningly, the proportion of adults with diabetes jumped 65%
from 1990 to 2001.
"Statistically, adults in the US have gained 2 billion pounds
over the past decade, which is an average of one pound per year
per person. This is true for both men and women," says C. Ronald
Kahn, MD, president and director of the Joslin Diabetes Center.
"For every one-pound increase in [your] weight, [you have]
a 3% to 4% increase in [your chances] of type 2 diabetes. [That
translates into]...about 800,000 new cases. We urge individual Americans
to take steps to reduce their own risk of diabetes, but I also believe
prevention must be a priority for the healthcare industry, the food
industry and the government."
Picking a Diet
The most important weight-loss question for every overweight American,
according to Dr. Kahn, is not whether a low-fat diet or a vegetarian
diet works better or worse than low-carbohydrate diets, but the
simple fact that you have to do something, go on a diet and exercise,
to lose pounds and control your weight.
"It boils down to how much we eat and how active we are,"
he warns.
Weighty Factors
Despite what many people believe, a large body of research shows
that a majority of the factors that determine how much you weigh
are in your control, says Dr. Kahn.
"While research performed at Joslin and elsewhere has shown
that genetics and metabolic factors both play key roles in body
weight, we know that Americans' expanding waistlines can be tightened
with at least two simple changes-portion control and increased physical
activity," he says.
"No matter what diet regimen you advocate, a calorie is a
calorie," Dr. Kahn adds. "The overall caloric intake in
the US is simply too high. Americans are eating too much. If you
regularly eat more calories than you burn, you will become overweight."
Lose a Little
Research into how your weight affects your health demonstrates that
small losses in weight can have big benefits on your well-being.
Losing a moderate amount of weight-on the order of a 10-pound reduction-and
moderate exercise, such as walking a mere 30 minutes a day, can
drop your risk of developing type 2 diabetes by almost 60%.
"However," Dr. Kahn warns, "I believe we can accelerate
our efforts to decrease obesity and type 2 diabetes if the government,
the food industry and the health care industry partner for prevention."
Restaurant Visits
No matter what diet you are on, be careful about what you order
in restaurants.
"More restaurants," says Dr. Kahn, "both fast food
and fancy food, should re-examine their offerings as McDonald's
did...when it an-nounced plans to eliminate its supersized offerings.
The food industry needs to boost its efforts to clearly label nutrition
facts and cut marketing of unhealthy, high-calorie snacks to kids.
"Too often are consumers fooled by foods that look healthy
but are excessively calorically dense, like mixtures of yogurt and
fruit whips, or by misleading caloric information, like reporting
calories on a giant cookie snack assuming the portion eaten will
be only one quarter of the cookie.
"And the health care and health insurance industries must
not only increase study of the fundamental mechanisms of obesity
and diabetes, but also focus on public education."
Kid Weight
Meanwhile, kids need to lose weight, too.
Schockingly, rates of obesity among this nation's children have
tripled since the 1970s. The CDC estimates that nearly one in six
American children and adolescents-about nine million in total-are
either overweight or obese.
"This is truly a time bomb for further fueling the epidemic
of type 2 diabetes. And we must remember that people with diabetes
are at risk for serious long-term complications, including heart
disease, blindness, kidney disease and amputations," Dr. Kahn
warns.
The consensus among the experts has rarely been so clear-cut and
noncontroversial: The time to start a weight loss and exercise program
is today. The future of your health, your good looks and, yes, the
nation's health depends on your food choices.
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