Wednesday, December 26, 2007

Skipping Meals and Metabolism

People often miss meals because they get busy or are trying to lose weight. But how you skip meals, and the amount you eat at your next meal, can affect your overall health.

The scientific data on skipping meals has been confusing. In some studies, fasting has resulted in measurable metabolic benefits for obese people, and in animal studies, intermittent feeding and fasting reduces the incidence of diabetes and improves certain indicators of cardiovascular health. Even so, several observational studies and short-term experiments have suggested an association between meal skipping and poor health.

In recent months, two new studies may help explain how skipping meals affects health.

The most recent study, published this month in the medical journal Metabolism, looked at what happens when people skip meals but end up eating just as much as they would in a normal day when they finally do sit down to a meal. The study, conducted by diabetes researchers at the National Institute on Aging, involved healthy, normal-weight men and women in their 40s. For two months, the study subjects ate three meals a day. For another eight-week period, they skipped two meals but ate the same number of calories in one evening meal, consumed between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m.

The researchers found that skipping meals during the day and eating one large meal in the evening resulted in potentially risky metabolic changes. The meal skippers had elevated fasting glucose levels and a delayed insulin response — conditions that, if they persisted long term, could lead to diabetes.

The study was notable because it followed another study earlier this year that found that skipping meals every other day could actually improve a patient’s health. In that study, published in March in Free Radical Biology & Medicine, overweight adults with mild asthma ate normal meals one day. This was followed by a day of severely restricted eating, when they ate less than 20 percent of their normal caloric intake, or about 400 or 500 calories a day — the equivalent of about one meal. Nine out of 10 study participants were able to stick to the eating plan.

After following the alternate-day dieting pattern for two months, the dieters lost an average of 8 percent of their body weight, and their asthma-related symptoms also improved. They had lower cholesterol and triglycerides, “striking” reductions in markers of oxidative stress and increased levels of the antioxidant uric acid. Markers of inflammation were also significantly lower.

The conclusion, say the authors of the more recent meal-skipping study, is that skipping meals as part of a controlled eating plan that results in lower calorie intake can result in better health. However, skipping meals during the day and then overeating at the evening meal results in harmful metabolic changes in the body.

Thursday, December 6, 2007

Developing Your Own Running Strategies

This recent article in the New York Times discusses disassociation. Others focus. I like my iPod while the distance runner I chatted with at a dinner party insists on listening to the cadence of her stride.

What works for you is ultimately about the fact that it works.

What keeps you going?

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Tis the season

Reports of your holiday weight gain have been greatly exaggerated. Media stories often suggest that the average person gains 7 to 10 pounds between Thanksgiving and Christmas. And in surveys, people say they gain, on average, about five pounds this time of year.

But several studies now show that the average weight gain during the winter holidays is just one pound.

The news isn’t all good. Most people don’t ever lose the pound of weight they put on during the holidays, according to a report in The New England Journal of Medicine. Since the average weight gain during adulthood is about one to two pounds a year, that means much of midlife weight gain can be explained by holiday eating.

For people who are already overweight, the holiday weight news is worse. Although the average gain is only one pound, people who are already overweight tend to gain a lot more. One study found that overweight people gained five pounds or more during the holidays.

And we start packing on that extra pound of holiday weight early in life. Researchers at the University of Oklahoma studied holiday weight gain among college students during the Thanksgiving break. The students were weighed the day before Thanksgiving, then weighed again about two weeks later. The average weight gain for the 94 students was about one pound. Students who were of normal weight gained about a half a pound during the period. Students who were overweight, meaning their body mass index was 25 or more, gained about two pounds.

Holly Hull, the lead researcher on the Oklahoma study, says Thanksgiving marks the beginning of a “high risk” time for the overweight. “I think the number of people who only overeat at the Thanksgiving meal is slim to none,'’ said Dr. Hull. “The holiday season doesn’t represent one day of overeating. You have this period that extends through the new year where there’s more alcohol, more snacks, more finger foods and appetizers that are energy dense.'’

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

Running Resources

If you're looking for a race, theschedule.com is the first place you should go. You can search it by location and race type.

To map your own running routes and gauge distance, visit walkjogrun.net.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Empty calories+empty glass= full sized

Nutritionists: Soda making Americans drink themselves fat


By Caleb Hellerman
CNN

(CNN) -- If you're searching for a villain in America's obesity epidemic, most nutritionists tell you to put one picture on the wanted poster: a cold, bubbly glass of soda pop.

"Liquid candy" to detractors, sweetened soft drinks are so ubiquitous that they contribute about 10 percent of the calories in the American diet, according to government data.

In fact, said Dr. David Ludwig, a Harvard endocrinologist whose 2001 paper in the Lancet is widely cited by obesity researchers, sweetened drinks are the only specific food that clinical research has directly linked to weight gain.

"Highly concentrated starches and sugars promote overeating, and the granddaddy of them all is sugar-sweetened beverages," said Ludwig, who runs the Optimal Weight for Life Program at Children's Hospital in Boston.

The rise in soft drink consumption mirrors the national march toward obesity. At the midpoint of the 20th century, Americans drank four times as much milk as soda pop. Today, the ratio is almost completely reversed, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Meanwhile, in the past 30 years the national obesity rate has more than doubled, and among teenagers, more than tripled, reports the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"Soda pop is a quintessential junk food," said Michael Jacobson, who heads the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which lobbies for government restrictions on foods it considers unhealthy. "It's just pure calories, and no nutrients. It's like a bomb in our diet."

Jacobson said the CSPI is pushing to require obesity warning labels on the sides of soda cans, like the surgeon general's warning on cigarettes.

While nutritionists are united in their dislike for nondiet soda, the "why" is controversial.

Some point a finger at high-fructose corn syrup, or HFCS, the sweetener used in most nondiet drinks. Last month, researchers at Rutgers University said they'd identified compounds in HFCS which may start a chemical chain reaction, leading to diabetes.

Most scientists, though, say there's little difference between HFCS and simple sugar, either in chemistry or the way they're handled by the body.

A bigger problem, doctors say, is simply the sheer number of calories. You'll find about 400 calories in a 32-ounce "extra-large" Coke, a fast-food staple. That's nearly a quarter of what the average adult woman needs in a whole day.

Scientists also say the body doesn't respond to liquid calories in the same way it would if those calories came in the form of French fries or chocolate cake. Appetite is controlled by a complex mix of hormones. Some signal the brain that your stomach is getting full. Others, including a hormone known as ghrelin, signal it's time to eat again.

If you eat a big burger, the level of ghrelin drops for a few hours. That drop doesn't happen if you drink a Big Gulp soda, even if it has more calories than the burger, according to Wayne Campbell, a professor in the Department of Foods and Nutrition at Purdue University.

"We're finding your hunger does not go down as far when you consume a beverage, as when you consume a solid," Campbell said. The result: Even with 400 liquid calories in your stomach, you polish off the burger too.

Campbell cautioned that the ghrelin theory isn't proven and that other factors -- such as a food's smell, or the sensation of chewing -- may affect appetite just as much, or even more. Our expectations also play a role.

"Soup is the anomaly to the liquid calorie research," he said. "People perceive soup as a meal, unlike drinking a Coke. So when we've done these types of studies, but used soup as the liquid, we don't see the same differences in [appetite] response."

The sugar in soda pop not only provides a massive dose of calories, but triggers a vicious appetite cycle, said Ludwig, who wrote "Ending the Food Fight," about healthy eating for children.

"It's rapidly absorbed, which raises blood sugar and in effect causes the body to panic." The body releases insulin to break down the sugar, "but the body overcompensates, and blood sugar drops below the fasting level," lower than it was in the first place.

Recognizing low blood sugar, the body releases ghrelin and other hormones, inducing hunger, inducing us to eat even more, Ludwig said.

The public is catching on, he said.

"In our obesity clinic, we used to routinely see patients coming in who were drinking four or five soft drinks a day. Now it's rare. That seems to be the first factor that comes to mind, when people are trying to lose weight."

Soft drink companies, under fire, are taking steps including a pledge last year to phase out nondiet soft drinks from America's schools.

A progress report issued Monday by the American Beverage Association said that shipments to schools of sweetened soda are down 45 percent since 2004, while shipments of bottled water are up 23 percent.

"There's no question the changes that are happening in schools are a mirror of what's happening in the larger marketplace," said Susan Neely, the ABA's president & CEO. "Adults, like kids, are reaching for lower-calorie beverages. ... As a consumer product company, we want to give consumers what they want."

While fighting obesity is complicated, Ludwig said, the first step is clear. "Giving up sugary soda for diet drinks, or water, will cause you to lose weight."

Thursday, September 6, 2007

Another Reason to Choose Whole Foods

Some Food Additives Raise Hyperactivity, Study Finds


Published: September 6, 2007

Common food additives and colorings can increase hyperactive behavior in a broad range of children, a study being released today found.

It was the first time researchers conclusively and scientifically confirmed a link that had long been suspected by many parents. Numerous support groups for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder have for years recommended removing such ingredients from diets, although experts have continued to debate the evidence.

But the new, carefully controlled study shows that some artificial additives increase hyperactivity and decrease attention span in a wide range of children, not just those for whom overactivity has been diagnosed as a learning problem.

The new research, which was financed by Britain’s Food Standards Agency and published online by the British medical journal The Lancet, presents regulators with a number of issues: Should foods containing preservatives and artificial colors carry warning labels? Should some additives be prohibited entirely? Should school cafeterias remove foods with additives?

After all, the researchers note that overactivity makes learning more difficult for children.

A mix of additives commonly found in children’s foods increases the mean level of hyperactivity,” wrote the researchers, led by Jim Stevenson, a professor of psychology at the University of Southampton. “The finding lends strong support for the case that food additives exacerbate hyperactive behaviors (inattention, impulsivity and overactivity) at least into middle childhood.”

In response to the study, the Food Standards Agency advised parents to monitor their children’s activity and, if they noted a marked change with food containing additives, to adjust their diets accordingly, eliminating artificial colors and preservatives.

But Professor Stevenson said it was premature to go further. “We’ve set up an issue that needs more exploration,” he said in a telephone interview.

In response to the study, some pediatricians cautioned that a diet without artificial colors and preservatives might cause other problems for children.

“Even if it shows some increase in hyperactivity, is it clinically significant and does it impact the child’s life?” said Dr. Thomas Spencer, a specialist in Pediatric Psychopharmacology at Massachusetts General Hospital.

“Is it powerful enough that you want to ostracize your kid? It is very socially impacting if children can’t eat the things that their friends do.”

Still, Dr. Spencer called the advice of the British food agency “sensible,” noting that some children may be “supersensitive to additives” just as some people are more sensitive to caffeine.

The Lancet study focused on a variety of food colorings and on sodium benzoate, a common preservative. The researchers note that removing this preservative from food could cause problems in itself by increasing spoilage. In the six-week trial, researchers gave a randomly selected group of several hundred 3-year-olds and of 8- and 9-year-olds drinks with additives — colors and sodium benzoate — that mimicked the mix in children’s drinks that are commercially available. The dose of additives consumed was equivalent to that in one or two servings of candy a day, the researchers said. Their diet was otherwise controlled to avoid other sources of the additives.

A control group was given an additive-free placebo drink that looked and tasted the same.

All of the children were evaluated for inattention and hyperactivity by parents, teachers (for school-age children) and through a computer test. Neither the researchers nor the subject knew which drink any of the children had consumed.

The researchers discovered that children in both age groups were significantly more hyperactive and that they had shorter attention spans if they had consumed the drink containing the additives. The study did not try to link specific consumption with specific behaviors. The study’s authors noted that other research suggested that the hyperactivity could increase in as little as an hour after artificial additives were consumed.

The Lancet study could not determine which of the additives caused the poor performances because all the children received a mix. “This was a very complicated study, and it will take an even more complicated study to figure out which components caused the effect,” Professor Stevenson said.


Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Q & A: Sore?

Q: What causes muscle soreness and how is it best relieved?

A: There are two types of exercise-related muscle soreness. Immediate muscle soreness quickly dissipates and is the pain you feel during, or immediately after, exercise. Delayed muscle soreness signals a natural adaptive process that the body initiates following intense exercise. This type of muscle soreness manifests itself 24 to 48 hours after the exercise session and spontaneously decreases after 72 hours.

Numerous studies have been conducted to determine the cause of delayed muscle soreness. The most current consensus attributes this condition to microscopic tears in the muscle and surrounding connective tissue following eccentric exercise. A muscle contracts eccentrically when it lengthens under tension during exercise. For example, during a biceps curl, the biceps muscle shortens during the concentric lifting phase and lengthens during the eccentric lowering phase. Eccentric contractions also occur during aerobic activity, such as downhill running, in which the quadriceps muscle repeatedly lengthens against gravity to lower the center of mass and aid in shock absorption.

Exercisers who experience delayed muscle soreness include conditioned individuals who increase the intensity, frequency or duration of their workouts, or participate in an activity with which they are unfamiliar. Beginning exercisers, or those who have undergone a significant lapse in training, frequently experience soreness when starting or re-engaging in an exercise regimen.

Studies attempting to identify the best methods to alleviate delayed muscle soreness are almost as abundant as the number of studies conducted to determine its cause. Cryotherapy (the topical application of ice), massage, stretching and the use of nonsteroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), among other less conventional approaches, have been evaluated to determine if they can prevent or effectively treat delayed muscle soreness. To date, a therapy that consistently relieves delayed muscle soreness has yet to be identified. On the other hand, a few of the aforementioned therapies may have a mild positive impact if initiated immediately after intense or unusual exercise.

Once an individual has experienced delayed muscle soreness at a specific exercise intensity, he or she shouldn't encounter that sensation again until the intensity level is increased. This is because delayed muscle soreness has been shown to produce a rapid adaptation response, which means that the muscles adapt to a given exercise intensity level. Until (or unless) the exercise intensity level is changed, soreness won't occur. This factor is the basis for the most widely recommended approach to preventing delayed muscle soreness: gradual progression and conservative increases in intensity, frequency and duration. Preliminary light exercise may prevent the onset of soreness following a heavy eccentric-exercise workout. Beginners should exercise with light weights, two to three times per week for one to two months, then gradually increase the intensity of their workouts. Conditioned exercisers who want to try a new workout or activity also should begin gradually, taking care not to be overzealous in how hard they exert themselves- particularly until their bodies adapt to the demands imposed upon them.
Source: Dr. Cedric X. Bryant, ACE's Chief Science Officer; ACE FitnessMatters, Jan/Feb 2007.

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Healthy Recipe: Shiitake mushroom & veggie stir-fry

Serves 4
Prep time: 10 minutes
Cook time: 10 minutes

Ingredients
2 T Asian (toasted) sesame oil
1 1/2 C (1/2 lb) shiitake mushrooms, stems removed and sliced
1 red or yellow bell pepper, cored and thinly sliced
1 t minced fresh ginger
1 clove garlic, minced
1/4 t red pepper flakes
2 carrots grated
1 c bean sprouts
1 1/2 c (1/2 lb) sugar snap peas, trimmed
4 scallions, thinly sliced
1 t cornstarch
1 1/2 t reduced-sodium soy sauce
1 c low-sodium chicken broth
1 c brown or wild rice, prepared according to package directions

Directions
  • In a large skillet or wok, heat sesame oil over medium-high heat. Add shiitake mushrooms, bell pepper slices, ginger, garlic, and red pepper flakes, stirring constantly so they don't burn. If they start to burn or brown, pour a little vegetable both into skillet. Continue to cook for about 5 minutes.
  • Add the carrots, snap peas, bean sprouts, and scallions to the skillet. Stir-fry about 2 minutes. In a small bowl, stir cornstarch into soy sauce, then add the mixture to the pan.
  • Pour in the vegetable broth cook for aout 2 minutes until the mixture comes to a boil and starts to thicken. Serve over rice.

Note: the calorie count for this recipe is based on a serving of 3/4 c veggies and 3/4 c rice, and, quite frankly, I'm a little irked at Shape Magazine. Flip a ahead five pages and you can read a great article about grains and healthy carbs and Shape correctly notes that 1/3 c of grains counts as a serving size. Do yourself a favor when serving this dish, use the standard 1/3 c serving of rice, and load up on extra veggies. To pack in more protein, chop up a block of pre-seasoned, baked tofu and add it to the first step. Have 1/2 or one whole block per serving. One block adds less than 100 calories and about 16 grams of protein.

Nutritional Information
based on 3/4 c veggies, 3/4 c rice
338 kcal
10g fat
1g saturated fat
54 g carbs
11 g protein
6 g fiber
97 g calcium
3 mg iron

To Medicate or Note to Medicate

The Worst Time to Pop A Pill
Yesterday's run has you feeling sore today, but don't reach for an over-the-counter pain reliever just yet. Anti-inflammatories may inhibit your muscles' rebuilding process, which means you might not get stronger, says Abigail Mackey, Ph.D., a researcher at the Institute of Sports Medicine Copenhagen in Denmark who studied the drugs' effect on long-distance runners. After taking a pain reliever daily for four days before and eight days after a 22-mile run, the athletes experienced no increase in the cells associated with muscle growth and repair. However, those who took a placebo had 27 percent more of those muscle-supporting cells, according to the study. It's okay to take an anti-inflammatory for occasional aches, just don't make it a habit. (An always-safe way to reduce stiffness: light exercise like walking.) And remember, mild soreness is your muscles' way of reminding you that they're getting toned.

Q & A: Hydration and Running


Q: Do I need to drink on runs that are less than an hour long?

A: It depends a lot on the weather. You can get by without fluids on easy runs on cool mornings, but go without during a hard, 50-minute effort on a midsummer afternoon, and you’ll likely pay a price. You may fatigue sooner, recover more slowly, or even temporarily put your body in “stress mode,” which affects the immune system. Studies repeatedly show that losing 1 to 1.5 percent of body weight through fluid lost can hinder performance, and it’s easy for most of us to lose that in warm conditions in less than an hour. Hydration needs vary from person to person, but a good rule of thumb is to drink about two ounces (a couple of mouthfuls) every 10 minutes during warm-weather runs. –John Seifert, Ph.D.

Use the same guidelines at the gym. If you are sweating a lot, you should be replacing fluids. Sports drink vs. water? If your workouts are of moderate intensity or less and under 2 hours long, water should be just fine.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Runners: Wait or Weight at the Gym




“Many runners don’t weight train out of fear of bulking up and slowing down, but if you focus on muscular endurance, it can help your running. I use light weight and high reps… I lift three times a week; it’s about quality, not quantity.”
Desiraye Osburn, eight in 2007 USA Cross-Country Championship

Zero Doesn't Mean Zero

(If you know me, you know how adamant, almost fanatical, I am about avoiding hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated oils. You've probably heard my warnings and, hopefully, have been reading food labels at my urging. If not, please read the below article. Hopefully, the recent media coverage will help convince you. For more information on hydrogenated oils and their health risks, please search my blog (label: "trans fat") or do your own online search.)

Zero Trans Fat Doesn't Always Mean Zero

Sunday, August 19, 2007

Stroll the aisles of any grocery store and you're sure to spot labels declaring "zero grams trans fat" on the front of snack foods, cookies and crackers. But does zero really mean there's NO artery-clogging fat inside?

Maybe, maybe not.

Federal regulations allow food labels to say there's zero grams of trans fat as long as there's less than half a gram per serving. And many packages contain more than what's considered one serving.

"The problem is that often people eat a lot more than one serving," said Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian of Harvard School of Public Health. "In fact, many people eat two to three servings at a time."

Those small amounts of trans fat can add up, said Michael Jacobson of the consumer advocacy Center for Science in the Public Interest. To find out if there might be some trans fat, he said shoppers can check the list of ingredients to see if partially hydrogenated oil — the primary source of trans fat — is included.

"When it says zero grams, that means something different from no trans fat," said Jacobson. His group has urged the government to bar food producers from using any partially hydrogenated oils at all.

The Food and Drug Administration began forcing food companies to list the amount of trans fat on nutrition labels of packaged foods in January 2006. That led many companies to switch to alternative fats.

Trans fat occurs naturally in some dairy and meat products, but the main source is partially hydrogenated oils, formed when hydrogen is added to liquid vegetable oils to harden them.

Consumer groups and health officials have campaigned to get rid of trans fat because it contributes to heart disease by raising levels of LDL or bad cholesterol while lowering HDL or good cholesterol. Fast-food restaurants are switching to trans fat-free oils and New York City and Philadelphia are forcing restaurants to phase out their use of trans fat.

The American Heart Association recommends that people limit trans fats to less than 2 grams per day.

Julie Moss of the FDA's Office of Nutrition, Labeling and Dietary Supplements, said the half-gram threshold for labeling was adopted because it is difficult to measure trans fat at low levels and the same half-gram limit is used for listing saturated fat. She said the FDA would soon be doing consumer research on trans fat labeling, including whether a footnote such as "Keep your intake of trans fat as low as possible" should be added to food labels.

Robert Earl of the Grocery Manufacturers Association said any trans fat in products labeled zero trans fat is likely to be far less than the half-gram threshold. For example, he said, a little partially hydrogenated oil might be used to help seasoning stick.

"I think the industry has been extremely responsive. Most of them were ahead of the curve to either remove or reduce trans fat in most food products," he said.

Earl said shoppers should be looking at the entire food label.

Jacobson is also concerned that people are focusing too much on the trans fat content alone, and not considering other ingredients such as saturated fat, which also raises the risk of heart disease.

"The bigger problem is foods that have no labels at all," Mozaffarian said, citing food served not only at restaurants, but at bakeries, cafeterias and schools.

New York resident Diana Fiorini said she's just recently started paying attention to labels. Holding a box of microwave popcorn at a Manhattan store, she scanned the label and was happy to see that it listed zero grams trans fat.

"I look at the labels. It's still hard to stop yourself when you know you should," she said.


Thursday, August 16, 2007

Food Spotlight: Berries



If you've eaten fresh berries over the past 9 months, chances are you paid too much and tasted too little. But with the rise in temps comes an end to sky-high prices and lackluster fruit. Berries are the ultimate summer superfood, dense with antioxidants and other powerful nutrients that defend against everything from cancer to memory loss. You've done smoothies, now try a simple compote: combine 2 cups of berries in a sauce pan with a splash of balsamic vinegar, and cook on low for 10 minutes. Serve warm over a scoop of ice cream or in place o syrup with your next batch of flapjacks. (whole grain, right?)

Calcium Intake and Nursing

Japanese researchers recently found that consuming too-little calcium while nursing could accelerate the progression of gum disease. "Fluctuating hormone elves during and after pregnancy makes women more vulnerable to inflamed, infected gums," explains Susan Karabin, D.D.S., president-elect of the American Academy of Periodontology. "This condition will only worsen if women don't get enough calcium to help build and maintain the bones surrounding their teeth." To avoid your own dental problems, aim for three servings of dairy, fortified juice, or leafy green vegetables, which will meet most of the 1,000-milligram minimum you need every day (though a 500-milligram supplement may provide extra stay-healthy insurance). And even when middle-of-the-night feedings leave you too exhausted to brush your hair, never skip the twice-daily teeth brushing and flossing sessions, says Karabin. This, along with frequent professional cleanings, will get rid of infection-causing plaque and safeguard your smile.

Like the Sensor, Hate the Shoe?

Envious of the Nike+Ipod Kit but can't bring yourself to part with your Saucony or New Balance shoes? Visit www.shoepouch.com for a handy little pocket that will let you use the Ipod Kit with the shoe of your choice.

Q & A: Out of breath...

Q: I've been running for a few weeks, but I still get winded easily. How can I avoid this?

A: Try a longer, more gradual warmup. Your heart, lungs, and muscles simply need a gentler introduction to running. First, walk for three to five minutes. When you start running, keep the pace easy--one or two minutes per mile slower than you usually run. Also, insert one-minute walk breaks every one or two minutes for about 15 minutes. After that you should be able to gradually increase to your normal training pace without getting winded.

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Useful Calculators

Go, Speedracer, Go!
If you don't own the Nike Sport Kit and would rather not break out your handy calculator to figure out how fast you're running, visit this Arkansasrunner.com . Caloriecontrol.org provides some easy calculators to estimate the amount of calories you burned. Ironmate.co.uk gives a good breakdown of calorie expenditure for the different triathlon components performed at different speeds. It also notes that the calories used "are based on economical efficient movements" and "calories estimates are [only] approximate. Please keep this fact in mind whenever you use calorie calculators/estimators.

The same holds true for the devises you use to keep track of your exercise, such as pedometers, treadmills, heart rate monitors, or the Nike Sport Kit. While my clients know that I'm not one to recommend unnecessary gear , I actually like the Sport Kit. While it isn't all that accurate when running steep hills (a definite minus in San Francisco), it does provide some good motivational tools: Nike website records your progress, speed, and accomplishments as well as plan virtual races with your friends. If that gets you moving, it's worth the $30.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

My Opinion: Obesity is Contagious?

Firstly, I would like to say that this is a gross misuse of the word "contagious," and to me the study seems to be anecdotal science at best.

Perhaps the article should have began: Bad habits can "spread from person to person, much like a virus, researchers are reporting today. When a person gains weight, close friends tend to gain weight, too."

Consider the following paragraphs, and how they fail to support the word choice "contagious":

There was no effect when a neighbor gained or lost weight, however, and family members had less influence than friends.

Proximity did not seem to matter: the influence of the friend remained even if the friend was hundreds of miles away. And the greatest influence of all was between mutual close friends. There, if one became obese, the odds of the other becoming obese were nearly tripled.

If "contagion" in the true sense was a concern, then wouldn't proximity matter? If only genetics were to blame, then family members would have more, not less, influence than friends. Contagion, hardly. Think instead of influence.

Our parents might have been on to something (shocking!) when they were concerned about whether or not we were hanging out with the wrong crowd. They did not want us becoming desensitized to the other teens' bad habits: smoking, drinking, &c. In the case of gaining weight, perhaps the bad habits off less fit friends that are easy to assume would be larger portion sizes, snacking, extra helpings, and tempting but unhealthy food choices. People who are friends with each other tend to share common interests which are reinforced through shared experiences. If you're trying to become healthier and spending a lot of time with an unfit friend whose favorite activities include watching a videos or playing x-box, it wouldn't be surprising if you gained weight. This influence works both ways. A client mentioned that one of the pluses of her work environment was that her coworkers are fit and like to partake in group activities such as kayaking, hiking, and sports.

So don't panic when you read the headline about obesity being contagious. If obesity was truly a matter of infection and not the result of more complicated factors, wouldn't doctors, dietitians & nutritionists, and personal trainers be the first to fall ill? If you have friends who are obese don't worry about catching obesity from them, but be open to exposing them your positive influence and healthy lifestyle choices. Fitness and health can be catchy too.









I've highlighted some parts of the article (which I've included in its entirety following this post) that are interesting.

Controversial New York Times Article On Obesity

Study Says Obesity Can Be Contagious

By GINA KOLATA

Published: July 25, 2007
Obesity can spread from person to person, much like a virus, researchers are reporting today. When a person gains weight, close friends tend to gain weight, too

Their study, published in the New England Journal of Medicine, involved a detailed analysis of a large social network of 12,067 people who had been closely followed for 32 years, from 1971 until 2003. The investigators knew who was friends with whom, as well as who was a spouse or sibling or neighbor, and they knew how much each person weighed at various times over three decades. That let them examine what happened over the years as some individuals became obese. Did their friends also become obese? Did family members or neighbors?

The answer, the researchers report, was that people were most likely to become obese when a friend became obese. That increased a person’s chances of becoming obese by 57 percent.

There was no effect when a neighbor gained or lost weight, however, and family members had less influence than friends.

Proximity did not seem to matter: the influence of the friend remained even if the friend was hundreds of miles away. And the greatest influence of all was between mutual close friends. There, if one became obese, the odds of the other becoming obese were nearly tripled.

The same effect seemed to occur for weight loss, the investigators say. But since most people were gaining, not losing, over the 32 years of the study, the result was an obesity epidemic.

Dr. Nicholas Christakis, a physician and professor of medical sociology at Harvard Medical School and a principal investigator in the new study, says one explanation is that friends affect each others’ perception of fatness. When a close friend becomes obese, obesity may not look so bad.

“You change your idea of what is an acceptable body type by looking at the people around you,” Dr. Christakis said.

The investigators say their findings can help explain why Americans have become fatter in recent years — each person who became obese was likely to drag some friends with them.

Their analysis was unique, Dr. Christakis said, because it moved beyond a simple analysis of one person and his or her social contacts, and instead examined an entire social network at once, looking at how a person’s friend’s friend’s friends, or spouse’s sibling’s friends, could have an influence on a person’s weight. The effects, Dr. Christakis said, “highlight the importance of a spreading process, a kind of social contagion, that spreads through the network.”

Of course, the investigators say, social networks are not the only factors that affect body weight. There is a strong genetic component at work as well.

Science has shown that individuals have genetically determined ranges of weights, spanning perhaps 30 or so pounds for each person. But that leaves a large role for the environment in determining whether a person’s weight is near the top of his or her range or near the bottom. As people have gotten fatter, it appears that many are edging toward the top of their ranges. The question has been why.

If the new research is correct, it may mean that something in the environment seeded what many call an obesity epidemic, leading a few people to gain weight. Then social networks let the obesity spread rapidly.

It also may mean that the way to avoid becoming fat is to avoid having fat friends.

That is not the message they meant to convey, say the study investigators, Dr. Christakis and his colleague, James Fowler, an associate professor of political science at the University of California in San Diego.

You don’t want to lose a friend who becomes obese, Dr. Christakis said. Friends are good for your overall health, he explains. So why not make friends with a thin person, he suggests, and let the thin person’s behavior influence you and your obese friend?

That answer does not satisfy obesity researchers like Kelly Brownell, director of the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University.

“I think there’s a great risk here in blaming obese people even more for things that are caused by a terrible environment,” Dr. Brownell said.

On average, the investigators said, their rough calculations show that a person who became obese gained 17 pounds, and the newly obese person’s friend gained 5. But some gained less or did not gain weight at all, while others gained much more.

Those extra pounds were added onto the natural increases in weight that occur when people get older. What usually happened was that peoples’ weights got high enough to push them over the boundary, a body mass index of 30, that divides overweight and obese. (For example, a six-foot-tall man who went from 220 pounds to 225 would go from being overweight to obese.)

While other researchers were surprised by the findings, Dr. Christakis said the big surprise for him was that he could do the study at all. He got the idea from talk of an obesity epidemic.

“One day I said, ‘Maybe it really is an epidemic. Maybe it spreads from person to person,’ ” Dr. Christakis recalled.

It was only by chance that he discovered a way to find out. He learned that the data he needed were contained in a large federal study of heart disease, the Framingham Heart Study, that had followed the population of Framingham, Mass. for decades, keeping track of nearly every one of its participants.

The study’s records included each participant’s address and the names of family members. In order for the researchers to be sure they did not lose track of their subjects, each was asked to name a close friend who would know where they were at the time of their next exam, in roughly four years. Since much of the town and most of the subjects’ relatives were participating, the data contained all that Dr. Christakis and his colleagues needed to reconstruct the social network and follow it for 32 years.

Their research has taken obesity specialists and social scientists aback. But many say the finding is pathbreaking, and can shed new light on how and why people have gotten so fat so fast.

“It is an extraordinarily subtle and sophisticated way of getting a handle on aspects of the environment that are not normally considered,” said Dr. Rudolph Leibel, an obesity researcher at Columbia University.

Dr. Richard Suzman, who directs the office of behavioral and social research programs at the National Institute on Aging, called it “one of the most exciting studies to come out of medical sociology in decades.” The institute financed the study.

But Dr. Stephen O’Rahilly, an obesity researcher at the University of Cambridge, said the uniqueness of the Framingham data will make it hard to replicate the new findings. No other study that he knows of includes the same kinds of long-term and detailed data on social interactions.

“I don’t want to look like an old curmudgeon, but when you come upon things that inherently look a bit implausible, you raise the bar for standards of proof,” Dr. O’Rahilly says. “Good science is all about replication, but it is hard to see how science will ever replicate this.”

“Boy, is the Framingham study unique,” Dr. O'Rahilly said.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

The Buzz: BMI

Some of my clients have asked me my opinion about BMI, or Body Mass Index. I don't mention it often or use it to measure their progress, but it's still making headlines in the news and magazines, nonetheless.

Fitness Matters, the American Council on Exercise's professional journal, does a great job of
describing the limitations of using BMI in its May / June issue.

BMI has several significant drawbacks. It can give a skewed result for some individuals and subgroups of the population. Jay Hoffman, a professor of health and exercise science at the College of New Jersey, says that BMI's main drawback is that "it just indexes height versus weight and doesn't take into account body composition."

Bodybuilders and elite athletes end up with a high BMI score because of the extra weight associated with muscle. So do fit civilians. (The article's author, Jim Gerard notes that while he is) hardly a body builder, but (he) work(s) out every day and at 6'2" and 210 pounds, (he has) a BMI result that puts (him) in the "overweight" category despite the fact that he has a 34" waist and a flat stomach. Conversely, taller people carrying a lot of fat may have a body mass index score that falls within the acceptable range.
BMI can also skew results in the opposite direction, as it does in the elderly, who tend to have scores that underestimate their excess weight or obesity because they have much less muscle than the average person.
Miller adds that BMI is not accurate when measuring the body composition of children or some small-boned women who, despite being petite, may have a small bone and muscle mass and a high percentage of body fat.
Another limitation of BMI is that it doesn't address the location of one's body fat, which is arguably a more telling indicator of overall disease risk. Abdominal fat in particular is linked o heart disease, poor lipid profiles and type 2 diabetes. And it's more likely to lead to changes in hormone levels that cause inflamed and eventually clogged arteries. Miller says, "The theory is that abdominal fat is more mobile and that it enters the circulation more readily to form arterial plaques."
Therefore, it's quite possible to have an acceptable BMI while carrying a potentially dangerous spare tire. And certain groups of people--those from Japan and south Asia, for example--that tend to stay relatively slender can still have an increased risk of heart disease from storing unhealthy amounts of abdominal fat.

Eat This, Heal... A Pulled Muscle

So you've pulled a hamstring.

Your body needs: protein and potassium for muscle repair; plus anthocyanins (plant compounds) and omega-3 fats to reduce inflammation.

Eat this: Grilled salmon over wild rice, 1-2 cups cooked broccoli. Or plain or vanilla yogurt topped with blueberries.

Skip the Soda


Study Links Diet Soft Drinks With Cardiac Risk

By Ed Edelson
HealthDay Reporter,
HealthDay
Posted: 2007-07-23 16:11:02
MONDAY, July 23 (HealthDay News) -- Drinking more than one soda a day -- even if it's the sugar-free diet kind -- is associated with an increased incidence of metabolic syndrome, a cluster of risk factors linked to the development of diabetes and cardiovascular disease, a study finds.

The link to diet soda found in the study was "striking" but not entirely a surprise, said Dr. Ramachandran Vasan, study senior author and professor of medicine at Boston University School of Medicine. There had been some hints of it in earlier studies, he said.

"But this is the first study to show the association in a prospective fashion and in a large population," Vasan said.

That population consisted of more than 6,000 participants in the Framingham Heart Study, which has been following residents of a Massachusetts town since 1948. When the soda portion of the study began, all participants were free of metabolic syndrome, a collection of risk factors including high blood pressure, elevated levels of the blood fats called triglycerides, low levels of the artery-protecting HDL cholesterol, high fasting blood sugar levels and excessive waist circumference. Metabolic syndrome is the presence of three or more of these risk factors.

Over the four years of the study, people who consumed more than one soft drink of any kind a day were 44 percent more likely to develop metabolic syndrome than those who didn't drink a soda a day.

The findings are published in the July 24 issue of the journal Circulation.

A variety of explanations, none proven, have been proposed for the link between diet soft drink consumption and metabolic syndrome, Vasan said. That association was evident even when the researchers accounted for other factors, such as levels of saturated fat and fiber in the diet, total calorie intake, smoking and physical activity.

One theory is that the high sweetness of all soft drinks makes a person more prone to eat sugary, fattening foods. Another is that the caramel content of soft drinks promotes metabolic changes that lead to insulin resistance. "These are hotly debated by nutritional experts," Vasan said.

Vasan, who noted that he is not a nutritional expert, said he leans toward the theory that "this is a marker of dietary behavior" -- that people who like to drink sweet soda also like to eat the kind of foods that cardiac nutritionists warn against.

"But we cannot infer causality," Vasan said, meaning there is no proof that soda itself is the villain. "We have an association. Maybe it is a causal one or maybe it is a marker of something else."

Carefully controlled animal studies might resolve the cause-and-effect issue, he said.

Dr. Elizabeth G. Nabel, director of the U.S. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, which funds the Framingham Heart Study, said in a prepared statement: "Other studies have shown that the extra calories and sugar in soft drinks contribute to weight gain, and therefore heart disease risk. This study echoes those findings by extending the link to all soft drinks and the metabolic syndrome."

Dr. Suzanne R. Steinbaum, director of Women and Heart Disease at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City, said, "There is no safe way of eating junk food, just as we learned the lesson from trans fats and partially hydrogenated oils often found in fat-free or low-fat cookies. Diet soda does not protect us from the development of what we are trying to avoid by consuming it."

More information

Learn more about metabolic syndrome at the American Heart Association.

SOURCES: Ramachandran Vasan, M.D., professor of medicine, Boston University; Suzanne R. Steinbaum, M.D., director, Women and Heart Disease, Lenox Hill Hospital, New York City; July 24, 2007, Circulation

Saturday, July 7, 2007



Eat This, Heal... A Broken Bone

Don't forget, a broken bone doesn't necessarily mean you can't work out at all. Talk with your doctor or physical therapist and see if you can get the green light to continue seeing your trainer.
Your body needs: Calcium, vitamin D, magnesium and phosphorus to help bone rebuild itself.

You should eat: A fruit smoothie made with 1 cup calcium- and vitamin-d- fortified orange juice, 1 tablespoon honey, 3/4 cup plain nonfat yogurt, and 1/2 cup chopped or slivered almonds.

Metabolism Booster

Tip: Maintain Your Metabolism

You've been reading about the benefits of exercise, but here's some news about diet. Lyssie Lakatos, R.D., co-author of Fire Up Your Metabolism reveals some interesting nutritional information in the June issue of Shape.

Are you getting enough selenium and vitamin D?
Research shows that a diet low in either of these nutrients may affect your thyroid's ability to produce metabolism-regulating hormones. You can get the recommended 55 micrograms of selenium a day with foods like tuna, turkey, and cottage cheese. You need a daily dose of 400IU of vitamin D, which is found in fortified lowfat milk and salmon.

Fitness and Parenting

All Child-Play and No Workouts Make Dad an Unfit Boy

Below is an excerpt for a great article in the NYTimes, which explores how becoming a parent can affect a person's workouts and fitness routines. Click here for the whole article.

THEY count among their ranks former marathoners and Ironmen, beached surfers and scuba divers. They lay off red meat and trans fats. They stay current on annual physicals and take their medications as prescribed.

And yet, this group of the once-fit finds itself at risk of becoming unhealthy and stacking on the pounds, because of one threat to their physical fitness: children.

...

Too many Americans have an all-or-nothing mentality toward fitness, said Dr. Harvey B. Simon, an associate professor at Harvard Medical School. If they can’t find a 45-minute window to bike, they don’t substitute by strapping on a BabyBjörn and taking a stroll.

“There is a very common misconception, one that is shared by physicians as well as by the public, that exercise requires a set amount of time and a formal program,” said Dr. Simon, who has two grown daughters. “I’m fond of saying that the aerobic exercise movement inspired the few and discouraged the many.”

Heart-healthy exercise can take many forms (gardening, car washing, stair climbing) and needn’t be done in continuous chunks to be beneficial, said Dr. Simon, the author of “The No Sweat Exercise Plan.”

Having three and a half hours of exercise to lose puts the study’s participants well above the norm, said Janet Fulton, an epidemiologist in the division of nutrition and physical activity at the Centers for Disease Control. After all, three-quarters of Americans don’t meet the minimum requirement of two and a half hours a week, she said.

Still, cutting back on exercise as a new parent has hidden costs. “Reducing their activity in this critical period of time is probably not going to help their adjustment in terms of a new person in their house,” Dr. Fulton said. “The long-term stuff, the chronic-disease risk reduction, is great, but immediately, they’re not getting the mental-health benefit.”

For those parents who can’t stomach exercise, however, their children serve as a bulletproof cop-out. When single or childless people say they have no time to exercise, it can ring hollow. But a mother of three? Watch those heads nod in sympathy.

Reluctant exercisers use parenthood as “an excuse to not do it at all,” said Dana Wood, a mother and the health and beauty director for Cookie, a parenting magazine.

Monday, June 18, 2007

Q & A: What does "working in" mean?

If someone at the gym asks you if he can "work in," don't glare at him for making an indecent proposal. He's just asking if he can share the equipment in between sets.

If someone inquires as to how many sets you have left, it's good manners to ask if he or she would like to work in. This shouldn't interfere with your workout, and it could be a great way to meet a potential gym buddy or workout partner.

Cut the Sliced Bread (Out)





Any way you slice it, white bread isn't a good choice. A new Italian study concluded that eating more than four slices of white bread a day doubles your risk of developing kidney cancer. The reason: "White bread, like other refined grains, has a high glycemic index," says study author Francesca Bravi, ScD. "That means it raises blood sugar and insulin levels, which may spur the growth of cancer cells." Consider this yet another to curb your carb intake, as well as to make sure the bread you do eat is made with 100 percent whole grains.

Drug Warning for Expectant Mothers

Drug Warning! Women who take anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) such as Aleve, Advil, Motrin, Celebrex or Vioxx, during their first trimester of pregnancy may be more likely to have babies with congenital defects, especially heart abnormalities. Previous studies have shown that taking NSAIDs late in pregnancy can cause circulatory defects. For relief of minor pain during pregnancy, most doctors recommend Tylenol.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

How Does Your Waistline Matter? Let Us Count the Ways.


NYTimes Explores Obesity



AT age 39, with diabetes and high blood pressure in her family, Linda M. was starting to worry about her weight and its health consequences. She was 5 feet 6 inches tall and weighed 170 pounds, which placed her in the overweight category, according to the standard definition. Although she was not officially obese, she said, “I realized I was not at my ideal weight.”

But Linda was in for a surprise during an appointment last fall with Dr. Judith Korner, an obesity specialist at Columbia University. Instead of weighing her, Dr. Korner whipped out a tape measure and measured her waist.

It was 35 inches, putting her in a danger zone, Dr. Korner explained. An overweight woman with a waist 35 inches or larger, or an overweight man with at least a 40-inch waist, is at increased risk for diabetes and heart disease.
“That was an education,” said Linda M., who did not want her last name revealed because of her weight. “I did not realize that my waist determined my future risk.”

Obesity specialists differ on what measurements are best.

Linda’s body mass index, or B.M.I., for example, was 27.4, far from the obesity category, which starts at 30. She would have to weigh 185 pounds to have a B.M.I. that high. (For comparison, a man who is six feet tall and weighs 221 pounds is considered obese.)

If a doctor were to use B.M.I. exclusively to evaluate Linda, the conclusion would be that her weight was not a serious health risk. She had only one risk factor for heart disease — a high level of triglycerides — and the guidelines for B.M.I. say that overweight people need two factors, like high triglycerides and a high cholesterol or blood pressure levels, to be considered at serious risk.

B.M.I. has limitations. Muscular men might have high B.M.I.’s, which make them seem fatter than they are. Old people often have deceptively low B.M.I.’s because they have lost so much muscle in the aging process.

In Linda M.’s case, adding her waist measurement to her B.M.I. indicates a high health risk, according to guidelines published by the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute. For Dr. Korner, the test is useful in assessing if people like Linda M. — overweight but in a gray zone — face a true health risk? If her waist had been less than 35 inches, Dr. Korner would have been less concerned.

Dr. Ned Calonge, chairman of the United States Preventive Services Task Force, said the panel preferred B.M.I. measurements to determine whether people are fat enough to place their health at risk. For most adults, he explained, B.M.I. “is more feasible or has better validity than other measures.”

But, Dr. Calonge added, it is not enough to simply diagnose someone as obese. The goal should be better health.

And the problem with testing for obesity, using B.M.I. or anything else, is that the sort of counseling most patients get from their doctors has not been shown to improve health, Dr. Calonge said.

“You now have a, quote, diagnosis,” Dr. Calonge said. And there is at least fair evidence from research that intense and expensive counseling about diet and exercise can help people lose weight and improve conditions that place them at risk for heart disease. But, he added, “it is uncertain whether less intense interventions have any impact at all.”

For Madelyn Fernstrom, the director of the Health System Weight Management Center at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, the goal of a medical exam is not to document how fat someone is but to rule out rare metabolic conditions that might be causing the weight problem. An exam also helps to determine whether there are associated medical conditions that should be treated, like diabetes or high cholesterol or blood pressure.

As for Linda M., waist measurement made the difference.

“After that, I got myself in gear,” she said. “I tried to eat less sugar and healthier snacks; I was more conscious of what I was selecting.”

She lost 20 pounds and a couple of inches from her waist. Her triglycerides are lower, yet still a bit high. But, she says, as she sees it, with a smaller waist, “I’m out of the danger zone.”
Talk To Your Doctor:

  • What is my body mass index?
  • What does it tell me about my health risk?
  • Does my waist size put me at higher risk for medical problems?
  • Are there metabolic conditions that might be causing me to gain weight?
  • Where can I go for practical advice on how to improve my diet and an exercise regimen to lose weight?

Eat This, Heal... Muscle Cramps

The most common cause of cramping is dehydration. Muscle twitches often indicate low potassium.

Your body needs: Fluid; plus electrolytes such as sodium, potassium, and chloride to maintain a balance in your muscles.

You should eat: Lots of melon. Try a quick salad made with 1 cup of chopped watermelon mixed with 1 cup of chopped cantaloupe.

(Personally, I like to drizzle a little balsamic on my watermelon. Also, I keep bananas handy in case of muscle twitches.)

Hot Topic


Research shows that a little spice can go a long way...

Prevent diabetes: Australian researchers found that women who ate chili sauce daily had lower spikes in their blood sugar (glucose) levels after meals than those with blander diets. More stable glucose levels reduce diabetes risk.

Stave off Alzheimer's: Curry contains tumeric, which is high in curcumin. According to a study published in Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, this antioxidant helps sweep away amino acids that can build up in your brain's blood vessels. Over time, these blockages can lead to dementia.

Protect against obesity: Early research from Taiwan found that chili peppers' capaicin may reduce the number of fat cells your body produces.

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Tip: Metabolism Booster

EAT MORE!
This doesn't mean you should heap more food on your plate. Eating more frequent but smaller meals increases RMR (resting metabolic rate) higher than eating the same amount of calories spread over fewer meals.
from Hers Muscle and Fitness

Healthy Recipe: Vietnamese Chicken Skewers



Serve these as appetizers or on top of a bed of stir fried veggies as a main course.


Ingredients:
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 small red onion, minced
1 stalk lemongrass, inner leaves only, minced
1 tablespoon fresh ginger, peeled and minced
2 jalapeno peppers, split, seeds removed
1 cup fish sauce
1 tablespoon cilantro, chopped
2 tablespoons sugar
juice of 1 lime
2 boneless skinless chicken breasts, cut into 1" cubes
wooden skewers, soaked in cold water for 30 minutes

Directions:

Combine the garlic, onion, lemongrass, ginger, peppers, cilantro, fish sauce, sugar, and lime in a saucepan. Slowly bring to a boil over medium heat, then take off the stove and cool. Toss the chicken into the marinate for 1-2 hours. Skewer the chicken cubes and grill them for 3-4 minutes a side until they're firm and lightly charred. Makes 4 servings.

Nutritional Information, per serving:
112 Calories 16 grams protein 11 grams carbohydrates 1 gram fat <1>

The Gall of Flab

If your belly keeps making a comeback, you may be gaining more than a few pounds: University of Kentucky researchers recently found that men who yo-yo diet are 76% more likely to develop galls tones than those who maintain consistent weight. In fact, the more frequent and severe your body-weight swings, the greater your risk. The scientists aren't sure why weight cycling causes gallstone formation but note that it was specifically related to fluctuating fat levels.

Food Spotlight: Red Bell Peppers


Red Bell Peppers taste best during the summer and early fall, so enjoy now!

1 Cup Contains:
39 calories 2 grams protein 9 grams carbs 3 grams fiber 0 grams fat

When you look at the nutritional information, it's clear to see why you need more of this tasty vegetable in your diet. Besides simply snacking on sliced raw peppers, here are some more suggestions: grilled; blended in a food processor with low fat sour cream, salt, and pepper for a tasty sauce or healthy dip; stuffed with low-fat ground beef and rice; on kebabs.

Facts:
Red peppers contain

  • nearly 20% of your daily requirement of Vitamin E, a powerful antioxidant that heads off cell damage by busting free radicals that roam your blood stream.
  • more immune-boosting vitamin C than oranges and almost twice the amount as their green cousins.
  • beta-carotene which your body uses to manufacture vitamin A, lycopene, which gives the red peppers their hue, has been shown to lower the incidence of certain cancers.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

Calorie Calculator

The New York Times has a feature that lets you estimate the number of calories you need to consume to reach your goal weight.

http://www.nytimes.com/ref/health/caloriecounter.html

Decode your Cravings

Nan Kathryn Fuchs, Ph.D., author of The Health Detective's 456 Most Powerful Healing Secrets, helps you understand your cravings in Shape magazine's June issue.

If you're craving: Gummy Bears
You may need: Protein
Why?: "Having a hankering for sugary carbs is a signal that your body wants energy," says Fuchs. For a longer-lasting boost, try to get at least 15 grams of protein at ever meal from fish, beans, or lean meat.

If you're craving: Chocolate
You may need: Magnesium
Why?: Chocolate is high in heart-healthy magnesium. "Levels dip during a woman's period," says Fuchs. Aim for at least 300 milligrams of the mineral a day, about the amount in a cup of black beans and a cup of cooked spinach.

If you're craving: French Fries
You may need: Good Fat
Why? Jonesing for greasy foods? Your likely coming up short on healthy fatty acids. Incorporate them into meals by drizzling a tablespoon of olive oil over your salad or veggies, or eat several servings of fish a week.

If you're craving: Salty Pretzels
You may need: B Vitamins
Why? When our adrenal gland, which produces stress hormones, goes into overdrive, so does your desire for salt. To avoid too much sodium, snack on bananas or whole-grain crackers, which contain stress-relieving B vitamins.

Healthy Recipe: Grilled Tuna Steaks with Pineapple-Chili Relish

Serves 4
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Cook Time: 15 minutes

Ingredients
1/4 cup plus 3/4 teaspoon white wine vinegar
1 tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons olive oil
1 tablespoon minced garlic, divided
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground pepper
4 6 ounce yellow fin tuna steaks, about 3/4 inch thick
1/4 cup chopped scallions
1 tablespoon chopped red chili with seeds (or less, to taste)
3 cups fresh diced pineapple (or 2 cups crushed pineapple canned in juice, drained)
3/4 teaspoon sugar

Preheat grill or broiler. In a large baking dish, combine 1/4 cup vinegar, 1 tablespoon oil, half the garlic, salt and pepper. Cover the tuna steaks with the mixture until well coated on each side. Set aside.
In a large stainless steel or nonstick skillet, heat remaining 2 teaspoons oil over medium heat. Saute scallions, chilies, and remaining garlic for 30 seconds. Add pineapple and stir for about 1-2 minutes, or until pineapple is thoroughly warmed through. Remove from heat, and stir in sugar and remaining vinegar. Set aside.
Place tuna steaks on preheated grill or broiler pan. Cook 4 inches from heat for 2-4 minutes on each side or until desired doneness. Top with relish and serve.

Nutritional Information, per serving (1 steak with 1/2 cup relish)
307 kcal
7 grams fat
18 grams carbohydrates
40 grams protein
2 grams iron
66 grams calcium

Can You Pinch More than an Inch?


The scale may say that you're slim, but your frame may still be carrying too much body fat, says Michele Olson, Ph.D., a professor of exercise science at Auburn University. "Women with little muscle tone may not be overweight but still have unhealthy levels of body fat," she explains. A new Italian study found that normal weight women with higher than 30% body fat are at greater risk for heart disease. To learn you fat level, try one of two tests available at many gyms: calipers, which assess skin thickness at key areas, and bioimpedance devices, which send an undetectable electrical current through the body to read the ratio of fat to other tissue. Both are reasonably accurate when used by a trained professional.

Diet and Infertility

The Diet News You Need To Know
Eating just 4 grams of trans fat a day--the amount you might find in a half of a medium serving of french fries or one Krispy Kreme glazed donut--can more than double your risk of infertility, according to a new study. "Trans fats increase insulin resistance, which has been show to negatively affect ovulation in some otherwise healthy woman, says study author Jorge Chavarro, M.D., a researcher at the Harvard School of Public Health. To reduce your intake of these artery clogging fats, look beyond the nutrition label. "A product can claim it has zero trans fats if it has anything less than half a gram," he say. To make sure a snack is really trans-fat free, double check that the ingredients list is clear of anything "partially hydrogenated" or "hydrogenated".

Strength training may reverse muscle aging

NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Strength training may not only make older adults' muscles stronger, but younger as well, a small study suggests.

It's well known that resistance exercises improve muscle strength and function in young and old alike, but the new research suggests that strength training also affects older muscles on the level of gene expression -- essentially turning back the clock on muscle aging.

The study, published in the online journal PLoS One, looked at whether strength training affects the "gene expression profile" in older adults' muscle. Genes hold the instructions from which the body manufactures proteins; gene expression refers to the processes that translate these instructions into proteins.

Analyzing small samples of muscle tissue from a group of healthy young and older adults, researchers found that older and younger muscle tissues differed significantly in their gene expression profiles. The difference indicated that older muscle tissue had impaired functioning in mitochondria -- structures within cells that act as the cell's "powerhouse."

That impairment was reversible, however. After 14 of the older adults underwent 6 months of strength training, the gene expression profile in their muscles showed a more youthful appearance.

"In a very real sense, the muscle was younger," said lead study author Dr. Simon Melov of the Buck Institute for Age Research in Novato, California.

Experts have long known that exercise is good for younger and older adults alike, Melov told Reuters, but the new findings suggest that it can "actually rejuvenate muscle" in older individuals.

The study included 25 healthy men and women older than 65, and 26 healthy adults ages 20 to 35 who had diet and exercise habits similar to the older group. By analyzing muscle tissue from each volunteer, Melov's team found age-related differences in the expression of hundreds of genes -- such that mitochondrial function in older adults appeared "dramatically impaired."

Fourteen of the older adults then went through a strength training program, working out two days a week for 6 months.

As expected, the researchers found that these volunteers boosted their muscle strength, coming closer to their younger counterparts' performance. But their muscle also showed a turnaround in gene expression that Melov described as surprisingly stark.

He said more studies are needed to see whether aerobic exercise, like walking or cycling, has similar effects on muscle -- and whether exercise might reverse molecular aging in other types of body tissue.

For now, the researchers say, their findings show that it's never too late to start exercising.

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Bounce Back from a Diet Slip

You may view missing a week of exercise or grabbing a doughnut when you've been trying to lose weight as a failure. But this all-or-nothing outlook can actually undermine your future success, says Carol Tavris, Ph.D., a Los Angeles-based social psychologist and co-author of Mistakes Were Made (But Not By Me). "When you feel disappointed in yourself, pay attention to the way you explain your behavior," she says. "Thoughts or statements like 'I have no willpower' or 'I knew I'd never stick to a diet' are self-defeating and could lead you to repeat the very actions you hoped to change." Instead, admit that you screwed up and take a moment to realize that doing so was natural. "When you make a mistake with a diet, an exercise plan, or for that matter any major decision, it doesn't mean that you're a bad person or that you'll never improve," says Tavris. "It simply means that you need to renew your motivation."