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Monday, April 28, 2008
Body Mass Index (BMI) Calculator
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Enter your gender, height, weight, age, activity level and calculate your daily calorie needs.
Sedentary:Little or no Exercise - sitting, standing, and driving .
Lightly Active: Cooking, light cleaning, light yard work, slow walking, most major activities involve sitting. Walking on a level surface, carpentry, housecleaning, child care, golf.
Moderately Active: An occupation that includes lifting, lots of walking, or other activities that keep you moving for several hours.
Very Active: Heavy manual labor, a very active lifestyle, very active sports played for several hours almost daily, carrying a load, cycling, skiing, tennis, dancing.
Extremely Active: An athlete in training, or an extremely active lifestyle . Sports or activity last for several hours, almost daily. Carrying a load uphill, heavy manual digging, basketball, climbing, football, soccer.
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Cari Hartman Loses the Diet

See her inspirational weight loss story here.
The photo of a portable lunch is by moira.
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Book Review: Blood Sugar 101
She begins by explaining in detail how blood glucose is controlled by the body. The pancreas releases basal amounts of insulin to make glucose available to tissues between meals. It also releases insulin in response to carbohydrate intake (primarily) in two bursts, phase I and phase II. Phase I is a rapid response that causes tissues to absorb most of the glucose from a meal, and is released in proportion to the amount of carbohydrate in preceding meals. Phase II cleans up what's left.
In a person with a healthy pancreas, insulin secretion will keep blood glucose under about 130 mg/dL even under a heavy carbohydrate load. The implications of this are really interesting. Namely, that blood glucose levels will not be very different between a person who eats little carbohydrate, and one who eats a lot, as long as the latter has a burly pancreas and insulin-sensitive tissues.
Most Americans don't have such good control however, hence the usefulness of low-carbohydrate diets. This begs the question of why we lose blood sugar control. Insulin resistance seems like a good candidate, maybe preceded by leptin resistance. As you may have noticed, I'm starting to think the carbohydrate per se is not the primary insult. It's probably something else about the diet or lifestyle that causes carbohydrate insensitivity. Grain lectins are a good candidate in my opinion, as well as inactivity.
Diabetics can have blood glucose up to 500 mg/dL, that remains elevated long after it would have returned to baseline in a healthy person. Ruhl asserts that elevated blood sugar is toxic, and causes not only diabetic complications but perhaps also cancer and heart disease.
Heart attack incidence is strongly associated with A1C level, which is a rough measure of average blood sugar over the past couple of months. It makes sense, although most of the data she cites is correlative. They might have seen the same relationship if they had compared heart attack risk to fasting insulin level or insulin resistance. It's difficult to nail down blood sugar as the causative agent. More information from animal studies would have been helpful.
Probably the most important thing I took from the book is that the first thing to deteriorate is glucose tolerance, or the ability to pack post-meal glucose into the tissues. It's often a result of insulin resistance, although autoimmune processes seem to be a factor for some people. Doctors often use fasting glucose to diagnose diabetes and pre-diabetes, but typically you are far gone by the time your fasting glucose is elevated!
I like that she advocates a low-carbohydrate diet for diabetics, and lambasts the ADA for its continued support of high-carbohydrate diets.
Overall, a good book. I recommend it!
Kilogram < > Pound Conversion
1 kg | = | 2.20462262185 lbs |
1 lb | = | 0.45359237 kgs |
Kilogram < > Pound Conversion | |
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Chicken with Mushrooms and Cream Sauce
Saturday, April 26, 2008
Calorie Calculator - Running Calculator
This calorie calculator will calculate the amount of calories burned from running.
Enter your weight, miles run and click on the Calculate button.
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