Friday, November 12, 2010

Clean Up Your Life And Feel Better Fast

Have you already purged those out-of-date clothes from your closet? Turns out there are a few household items and everyday behaviors you may need to ditch as well. These smart strategies are guaranteed to help you sleep easier, sniffle less, and even lose a few pounds.

  1. CLEAR OUT Expired Meds

         Before you reach for that econo-size bottle of ibuprofen, check the date on the label: Nearly two-thirds of people take expired drugs on occasion, finds a survey from Medicine Shoppe Pharmacies. “The danger with old medications is that they may not be effective,” says Deanna Gohil, the supervising pharmacist at the University of Rochester’s Strong Health Pharmacy. “With allergy medication, you may sneeze and wheeze unnecessarily; with blood pressure medication, you could put your heart at risk.”

         Go Through your medicine cabinet and discard any bottles or pills past their prime. “Instead of dumping them down the drain re flushing them, which can contaminate drinking water, put them in a sealable plastic bag and throw it in the trash,” says Gohil. After you’re through, stock up on a few staples you know you’ll use regularly, such as antibacterial cream. (It’s also a good time too replenish your sunscreen supply, as you need a new bottle every three years, or sooner if it smells funny, changes color, or separates.) You may want to get over-the-counter allergy meds and poison ivy treatment too if you spend time outdoors. “Opt for smaller packages of thing you use less frequently, such as cough syrup, so you’ll use them before they expire,” says Gohil. Because many medicines degrade much faster in hot, moist conditions, don’t store them in the bathroom medicine cabinet or kitchen (where about 80 percent of people keep theirs). You’re better off keeping them in a bedroom drawer.




  2. CLEAR OUT Heavy-duty spray cleaners

         Those gleaming counters and floors may come at the expense of breathing easy if you use industrial-strength products. Researchers from the Centre for Research in Environmental Epidemiology in Spain found that people who scrubbed their homes with aerosol or spray cleaners at least once a week were nearly 50 percent more likely to develop asthma symptoms, like shortness of breath, than those who didn’t. “Breathing in the chemicals found in furniture and glass cleaners, along with air fresheners, can cause inflammation in the lungs,” says study author Jan-Paul Zock, Ph.D.

         To safeguard your airways, switch to non-spray liquid cleaner (this minimizes the amount of chemicals you inhale) or choose a spray that’s free of artificial substances, such as those from Method, Ecover, and Seventh Generation.




  3. CLEAR OUT Last week’s leftovers

         When was the last time you saw the back of your fridge or picked through your pantry? Hanging on to those week- or several-months-old leftovers may raise your risk of becoming one of the 76 million people who suffer from food-borne illness every year. According to a new study in the Journal of Consumer Research, subjects were up to three times more likely to drink a smoothie past its expiration date if they already owned it. People place extra value on things they possess, so they tend to downplay potential risks, explain the researchers.

         After you throw away expired products and leftovers that are more than three days old, make sure your refrigerator thermostat is set to 40 F. “Anything warmer increases the odds that any bacteria in food can reach harmful levels,” says Catherine Donnelly, Ph.D., a professor of food science at the University of Vermont.

         When it comes to the freezer or pantry, the concern is more about food quality than safety. Some foods--like steaks or chicken—are fine for up to a year, but most leftovers and frozen meals will start to get freezer burn after six months, which affects flavor and texture. Canned foods can last for years, but if you haven’t used them in a year, chances are you never will; donate your nonperishables to a food bank.




  4. CLEAR OUT Cold-weather bedding

         When it’s chilly outside, there’s nothing cozier than snuggling beneath a thick blanket. But using the same sheets year-round can disrupt your snooze time, according to research from Cornell University Medical Center. “You start feeling sleepy when your body temperature drops,” says Patricia Murphy, M.D., the study’s author. “Raising may interrupt your natural circadian rhythms, making it harder to nod off.”

         For a better night’s slumber, trade in your flannel sheets and heavy comforter for cotton sheets and a lightweight duvet.

         Replacing flat pillows may also lead to sweeter dreams. Pillows lose elasticity over time, which means less support for your head—and potentially more tossing and turning. Synthetic ones last about two years, while feather versions, like those with goose down, need to be replaced every five. A good test: Fold your pillow in half. If it just lies there rather than springing back to the open position, toss it.




  5. CLEAR OUT Those 3-pound dumbbells

         “If you’ve been working out with light weights for years, you may not reap the results you want,” says Jessica Matthews, a continuing education coordinator for the American Council on Exercise. “Varying your workouts will help build lean muscle mass, which boosts metabolism and calorie burn.”

         How can you tell if you’re lifting the right amount? You should start to feel fatigued by the last few reps of a set, or after about a minute, says Matthews. “If you think you can keep going for a while, it’s time to bump up the weight.” You may also want to consider picking up some resistance bands to take your workout up a notch: A recent study in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research found that women who used these elastic bands along with dumbbells gained two to three times the body strength as those who only lifted weight.




  6. CLEAR OUT Your heavy drapes

         “Certain window treatments, like thick curtains and venetian or Roman Blinds, are serious dust magnets,” says Martha White, M.D., director of research at the Institute for Asthma and Allergy in Wheaton, Maryland. Dust can trigger sniffling, sneezing, and watery eyes in up to 45 million allergy sufferers, she says. If you have seasonal or indoor allergies, trade in those drapes for washable curtains made of cotton or a lightweight synthetic blend and launder them once a month. Prefer blinds? Replace them with roller-type shades that you can wipe down regularly (monthly is best)


Shelf-life smarts

Some expiration dates aren’t clear-cut. Here’s when you need to replace a few common products.

  • Smoke alarm batteries

    1 year, or sooner if they chirp

    One in five homes doesn’t have a working smoke alarm—mainly because the batteries are dead or missing. Set a specific date, like a birthday or the first of the year, to replace the batteries.




  • Eye makeup

    6 months

    Mascara, eyeliner, and shadow contain preservatives that slow the growth of infection-causing bacteria, says Thomas Steinemann, M.D., a spokesman for the American Academy of Ophthalmology. “But micro-organisms can still grow in the container or tube over time.”




  • Condoms

    3 to 5 years

    That’s the general rule for most condoms, but always check the expiration date printed on the foil wrapper to be absolutely certain, says David Johnson, group product manager for Trojan. Too-old condoms are more likely to break.




  • Kitchen sponge

    1 month

    These scrubbers can breed bacteria. “A dirty sponge could spread more germs on your counters.” Says Robin Bechanko, a microbiologist for the public health organization NSF International. Between replacements, disinfect your sponge by microwaving it (make sure it’s sopping wet) for two minutes.




  • Loofah

    2 months

    This skin smoother collects sloughed-off cells, which bacteria can feed on. Hang it up to dry after every use and toss it in the washing machine weekly.


Proactol: Weight Loss and the Perception of Hunger (Part 5)

In Germany, a group of researchers set out to examine the effects of NeOpuntia on both hunger and

body weight

. Researchers used a group of Caucasian subjects who were randomized into two groups. One group received a placebo, and the other group received NeOpuntia. Both groups were given a particular diet plan which consisted of 2500 calories per day.

It was discovered that after just three days, there was a statistically significant loss of weight in the NeOpuntia group. Additionally, the members of the NeOpuntia group reported feeling moderate to strong levels of satiety. The control group did not report these levels of satiety. This suggests that not only does NeOpuntia lead to weight loss, it also helps those using it feel full throughout the day.

Proactol has long joined the club of the

best rated weight loss programs

. Interestingly, popular meal delivery diets in the US, such as Diet To Go and eDiets, cannot match the natural, affordable and scientifically backed solution offered by Proactol. This plant-based pill provides dieters with a simple, safe, herbal remedy to obesity. The fat-binding properties of Opuntia ficus indica cactus offer a promising approach for fighting the obesity epidemic now plaguing the world, and few dieting alternatives can match its effectiveness and safety. Go to Proactol web page right now.

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Greek- Style Pasta with Tomato Sauce & Feta

Weight Loss Recipes : Greek- Style Pasta with Tomato Sauce & FetaIngredients:

  • 6 oz whole grain penne or fusilli


  • 2 tsp olive oil


  • 1 onion, chopped


  • 1 tbsp minced garlic


  • 1 red bell pepper, finely chopped


  • 3 cups (28 oz) fire-roasted tomatoes


  • 1 pkg (8 oz) frozen artichoke hearts, thawed and cut lengthwise


  • ¼ cup crumbled low-fat feta cheese


  • 8 kalamata (or other black) olives, sliced


  • 1 tbsp fresh lemon zest


  • Fresh Italian parsley or oregano


Preparation:

  • Prepare pasta al dente according to package directions. Drain and set aside.


  • Heat olive oil in large nonstick sauté about 5 minutes, or until soft and just starting to brown. Add garlic and simmer 1 minute longer (don’t brown garlic). Add bell pepper and cook just until softened.


  • Add tomatoes and simmer about 4 minutes. Add artichokes and cook 1 minute longer, or until just heated.


  • Pour sauce into large mixing bowl and add pasta. Toss lightly and top with cheese, olives, and lemon zest.


  • Divide among serving bowls. Garnish with fresh herbs and serve hot or at room temperature.


Make 8 (1 cup) Servings:

Weight Loss Recipes Amount per Serving: 140 Calories, 7 g Protein, 27 g carbohydrates, 6 g Fiber, 3 g fat, < 1 g saturated fat, 5 mg cholesterol, 410 mg sodium

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

Fat burning pills : The real deal

People resort into using diet pills because of the ongoing fad that being flabby is not attractive. An immensely fat and at most cases, just a slightly overweight person is no head turner for beauty when passing along the streets. Lots of programs have been launched in order for us to lose weight and make us all look all Aphrodite and Adonis in terms of abs and firmness. But what is really popular and perhaps the easiest way is the intake of drugs that have been claimed to work the easy way around. It takes no willpower they say, just follow the right dosage and you’ll be in the right shape in no time at all. Come on, give us all break.

The real deal about the best weight loss pills is they can be totally dangerous to one’s health. Two of the active ingredients in one pill alone are the phenylpropanolamine and caffeine. While the first one was known to be some appetite depressant, it can also cause side effects which could be extremely unhealthy for the body. Side effects may include high blood pressure, insomnia, hallucinations, organic psychosis, and basically just plain tetchiness and agitation. Phenylpropanolamine is also known as an active ingredient for decongestants, this is why you’ll probably think it sounds vaguely familiar. Caffeine is known to be the main chemical content of coffee and is know to be a stimulant of the nervous system. It is used to heighten alertness and lower the possibilities of drowsiness. Note that caffeine should only be taken in low dosages. Its appetite depressant can be pretty low but it still used among diet pills, because of its adrenaline functions. What could be out of the league are its effects among overweight people. Under such situations, one is totally inclined to have upper risks in hypertension and may negatively influence blood pressure. Now can you see these weight loss pills’ damaging outcomes to the body?

Anti-obesity drugs should only be prescribed to those under the situation of being morbidly overweight, where for some reason using such diet pills can be life-saving. Several pills in the market have been released that are not really based on caffeine and phenylpropanolamine. Some are organic based while others like Orlistat commonly known as Xenical is known to reduce the amalgamation of fat in the intestines. It doesn’t really work as an appetite depressant in the brain but performs to what should matter the most- the stomach.

Diet pills are the product of a civilization that will do all the means to solve a dilemma. So does this mean that being overweight is an extreme tight spot? Well in terms of health, it is a problem because it can cause damage to your body. Being fit and healthy should matter naturally among us human beings. Diet pills are there to act as helpers into achieving a healthy persona but we shouldn’t always rely on them. Nothing beats a better diet than going natural. It takes a lot of willpower but the results can be really superb.

Rosemary-Roasted Root Vegetables

Tip: For veggies that are crisp, make sure the oven is hot and the vegetables are not overcrowded.

Weight Loss Recipes : Rosemary-Roasted Root VegetablesIngredients:

  • 16 oz any combination of parsnips, rutabagas, or turnips, peeled and cut in 1” pieces


  • 2 tsp olive oil


  • 1 tsp chopped fresh rosemary


  • 1 tsp chopped fresh thyme


  • ½ tsp ground mustard


  • ¼ tsp salt


  • ¼ tsp ground black pepper


Preparation:

  • Preheat oven to 400 F.


  • Place vegetables on 15”*10” baking sheet. Drizzle with oil and sprinkle with rosemary, thyme, mustard, and salt. Toss well and distribute evenly over pan. Roast, stirring or shaking vegetables every 15 minutes, until tender and evenly browned, or about 45 minutes. Sprinkle with black peeper, taste and adjust seasoning.


  • Serve hot or at room temperature.


Make 4 Servings:

Weight Loss Recipes Amount per Serving: 70 Calories, 1 g Protein, 13 g carbohydrates, 3 g Fiber, 2 g fat, 0 g saturated fat, 0 mg cholesterol, 180 mg sodium

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

A Little Vlog About Me

The Twinkie Diet for Fat Loss

The Experiment

I've received several e-mails from readers about a recent experiment by nutrition professor Mark Haub at Kansas State university (thanks to Josh and others). He ate a calorie-restricted diet in which 2/3 of his calories came from junk food: Twinkies, Hostess and Little Debbie cakes, Dorito corn chips and sweetened cereals (1). On this calorie-restricted junk food diet (800 calorie/day deficit), he lost 27 pounds in two months.

Therefore, junk food doesn't cause fat gain and the only thing that determines body fatness is how much you eat and exercise. Right?

Discussion

Let's start with a few things most people can agree on. If you don't eat any food at all, you will lose fat mass. If you voluntarily force-feed yourself with a large excess of food, you will gain fat mass, whether the excess comes from carbohydrate or fat (2). So calories obviously have something to do with fat mass.

But of course, the situation is much more subtle in real life. Since a pound of body fat contains roughly 3,500 calories, eating an excess of 80 calories per day (1 piece of toast) should lead to a weight gain of 8 lbs of fat per year. Conversely, if you're distracted and forget to eat your toast, you should lose 8 lbs of fat per year, which would eventually be dangerous for a lean person. That's why we all record every crumb of food we eat, determine its exact calorie content, and match that intake precisely with our energy expenditure to maintain a stable weight.

Oh wait, we don't do that? Then how do so many people maintain a stable weight over years and decades? And how do wild animals maintain a stable body fat percentage (except when preparing for hibernation) even in the face of food surpluses? How do lab rats and mice fed a whole food diet maintain a stable body fat percentage in the face of literally unlimited food, when they're in a small cage with practically nothing to do but eat?

The answer is that the body isn't stupid. Over hundreds of millions of years, we've evolved sophisticated systems that maintain "energy homeostasis". In other words, these systems act to regulate fat mass and keep it within the optimal range. The evolutionary pressures operating here are obvious: too little fat mass, and an organism will be susceptible to starvation; too much, and an organism will be less agile and less efficient at locomotion and reproduction. Energy homeostasis is such a basic part of survival that even the simplest organisms regulate it.

Not only is it clear that we have an energy homeostasis system, we even know a thing or two about how it works. Early studies showed that lesioning a part of the brain called the ventromedial hypothalamus causes massive obesity (3; this is also true in humans, when a disruption results from cancer). Investigators also discovered several genetic mutations in rats and mice that result in massive obesity*. Decades-long research eventually demonstrated that these models have something in common: they all interfere with an energy homeostasis circuit that passes information about fat mass to the hypothalamus via the hormone leptin.

The leptin system is a classic negative feedback loop: the more fat mass accumulates, the more leptin is produced. The more leptin is produced, the more the hypothalamus activates programs to reduce hunger and increase energy expenditure, which continues until fat mass is back in the optimal range. Conversely, low fat mass and low leptin lead to increased hunger and energy conservation by this same pathway**.

So if genetic mutants can become massively obese, I guess that argues against the idea that voluntary food intake and energy expenditure are the only determinants of fat mass. But a skeptic might point out that these are extreme cases, and such mutations are so rare in humans that the analogy is irrelevant.

Let's dig deeper. There are many studies in which rodents are made obese using industrial high-fat diets made from refined ingredients. The rats eat more calories (at least in the beginning), and gain fat rapidly. No big surprise there. But what may come as a surprise to the calorie counters is that rodents on these diets gain body fat even if their calorie intake is matched precisely to lean rodents eating a whole food diet (4, 5, 6). In fact, they sometimes gain almost as much fat as rodents who are allowed to eat all the industrial food they want. This has been demonstrated repeatedly.

How is this possible? The answer is that the calorie-matched rats reduce their energy expenditure to a greater degree than those that are allowed free access to food. The most logical explanation for this behavior is that the "set point" of the energy homeostasis system has changed. The industrial diet causes the rodents' bodies to "want" to accumulate more fat, therefore they will accomplish that by any means necessary, whether it means eating more, or if that's not possible, expending less energy. This shows that a poor diet can, in principle, dysregulate the system that controls energy homeostasis.

Well, then why did Dr. Haub's diet allow him to lose weight? The body can only maintain body composition in the face of a calorie deficit up to a certain point. After that, it has no choice but to lower fat mass. It will do so reluctantly, at the same time increasing hunger, and reducing lean mass***, muscular strength and energy dedicated to tissue repair and immune function. However, I hope everyone can agree that a sufficient calorie deficit can lead to fat loss regardless of what kind of food is eaten. Dr. Haub's 800 calorie deficit qualifies. I think only a very small percentage of people are capable of maintaining that kind of calorie deficit for more than a few months, because it is mentally and physically difficult to fight against what the hypothalamus has decided is in your best interest.

My hypothesis is that, in many people, industrial food and an unnatural lifestyle lead to gradual fat gain by dysregulating the energy homeostasis system. This "breaks" the system that's designed to automatically keep our fat mass in the optimal range by regulating energy intake, energy expenditure and the relative partitioning of energy resources between lean and fat tissue. This system is not under our conscious control, and it has nothing to do with willpower.

I suspect that if you put a group of children on this junk food diet for many years, and compared them to a group of children on a healthy diet, the junk food group would end up fatter as adults. This would be true if neither group paid any attention to calories, and perhaps even if calorie intake were identical in the two groups (as in the rodent example). The result of Dr. Haub's experiment does not contradict that hypothesis.

So do calories matter? Yes, but in a healthy person, all the math is done automatically by the hypothalamus and energy balance requires no conscious effort. In 2010, many people have already accumulated excess fat mass. How that may be sustainably lost is another question entirely, and a more challenging one in my opinion. As they say, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. There are many possible strategies, with varying degrees of efficacy that depend highly on individual differences, but I think overall the question is still open. I discussed some of my thoughts in a recent series on body fat regulation (7, 8, 9, 10, 11).


* ob/ob and db/db mice. Zucker and Koletsky rats. Equivalent mutations in humans also result in obesity.

** Via an increase in muscular efficiency and perhaps a decrease in basal metabolism. Thyroid hormone activity drops.

*** Loss of muscle, bone and connective tissue can be compensated for by strength training during calorie restriction. Presumed loss of other non-adipose tissues (liver, kidney, brain, etc.) is probably not affected by strength training.