Tag Archives: obesity

How stress affects your health

INTRODUCTION

Stress and health are closely linked. It is well known that stress, either quick or constant, can induce risky body-mind disorders. Immediate disorders such as dizzy spells, anxiety, tension, sleeplessness, nervousness and muscle cramps can all result in chronic health problems. In the long run they may also affect our immune, cardiovascular and nervous systems.

10 Health Problems Related to Stress

What are some of the most significant health problems related to stress? Here’s a sampling.

  1. Heart disease. Researchers have long suspected that the stressed-out, type A personality has a higher risk of high blood pressure and heart problems. We don’t know why, exactly. Stress might have a direct effect on the heart and blood vessels. It’s also possible that stress is related to other problems — an increased likelihood of smoking or obesity — that indirectly increase the heart risks.
    Doctors do know that sudden emotional stress can be a trigger for serious cardiac problems, including heart attacks. People who have chronic heart problems need to avoid acute stress as much as they can.
  2. Asthma. Many studies have shown that stress can worsen asthma. Some evidence suggests that a parent’s chronic stress might even increase the risk of developing asthma in their children. One study looked at how parental stress affected the asthma rates of young children who were also exposed to air pollution or whose mothers smoked during pregnancy. The kids with stressed out parents had a substantially higher risk of developing asthma.
  3. Obesity. Excess fat in the belly seems to pose greater health risks than fat on the legs or hips — and unfortunately, that’s just where people with high stress seem to store it. “Stress causes higher levels of the hormone cortisol,” says Winner, “and that seems to increase the amount of fat that’s deposited in the abdomen.”
  4. Diabetes. Stress can worsen diabetes in two ways. First, it increases the likelihood of bad behaviors, such as unhealthy eating and excessive drinking. Second, stress seems to raise the glucose levels of people with type 2 diabetes directly.
  5. Headaches. Stress is considered one of the most common triggers for headaches — not just tension headaches, but migraines as well.
  6. Depression and anxiety. It’s probably no surprise that chronic stress is connected with higher rates of depression and anxiety. One survey of recent studies found that people who had stress related to their jobs — like demanding work with few rewards — had an 80% higher risk of developing depression within a few years than people with lower stress.
  7. Gastrointestinal problems. Here’s one thing that stress doesn’t do — it doesn’t cause ulcers. However, it can make them worse. Stress is also a common factor in many other GI conditions, such as chronic heartburn (GERD) and IBS, Winner says.
  8. Alzheimer’s disease. One animal study found that stress might worsen Alzheimer’s disease, causing its brain lesions to form more quickly. Some researchers speculate that reducing stress has the potential to slow down the progression of the disease.
  9. Accelerated aging. There’s actually evidence that stress can affect how you age. One study compared the DNA of mothers who were under high stress — they were caring for a chronically ill child — with women who were not. Researchers found that a particular region of the chromosomes showed the effects of accelerated aging. Stress seemed to accelerate aging about 9 to 17 additional years. Continue reading How stress affects your health

What are the effects of the low-carb hyper-caloric diet on the body?

Ask:

I am an athlete in the off-season, aiming to get stronger and bigger. My goal is also to become leaner. My body-fat is at around 8% and I would like it to be in 5-6% range.

I am considering a low-carb, hyper-caloric diet. I was thinking that excess calories will help me grow, while low carb will make my body used the stored body fat for energy.

Has anyone ever tried this type of diet? I would also appreciate links to research and other articles about this type of diet.

Answer:

There is no better way to bring the body to the state of optimal health than with a low carb way of eating. Low carb doesn’t cause high blood pressure, high blood sugar or high cholesterol, it cures it. It is actually dangerous to take meds that lower these levels and do low carb at the same time because the levels will become dangerously low. Simple carbohydrates trigger insulin. High insulin levels unbalance other hormones. Anything less that 9 grams of carbs per hour controls insulin and is considered low carb (up to 144 grams per day).

U.S. government guidelines were changed 35 years ago to suggest we lower our fat intake & increase our carb intake. American society followed these recommendations & lowered their fat intake by 11% & increased their carb consumption. In this same time frame obesity, diabetes, heart disease are all at epidemic levels. Through their direct effects on insulin & blood sugar, refined carbohydrates are the dietary cause of coronary heart disease & diabetes. Continue reading What are the effects of the low-carb hyper-caloric diet on the body?

Overweight Children – Prevention and Treatment

Obesity is an increasing problem for children.

Now, in addition to educational efforts to get parents to teach their children to eat well and exercise more, kids are turning to adult obesity treatments. These include the use of weight control drugs, like Meridia, and gastric bypass surgery.

As in adults, there is no quick and easy way for kids to lose weight. Instead, many overweight kids end up becoming overweight adults.

Weight Loss Goals

The first goal in getting kids to a more healthy weight should actually not be weight loss. Instead, the usual recommendation is for kids to just stop gaining weight, and then, as they get taller, they can ‘grow into’ their weight.

An even more realistic goal might be to just not gain weight so fast though. For example, a 12 year old boy should usually gain about 10 pounds a year during the early teen years. If he gains much more, say 15-20 pounds, then he will quickly become overweight. If he limits himself to the usual healthy weight gain for a teenager, then he might become less overweight and will at the very least, not become more overweight. Although that doesn’t sound like much, it is an important accomplishment and first goal.

If your child is very overweight, then the next goal should usually be to stop gaining weight or gain less weight each year, say perhaps only 3-5 pounds a year. If necessary, your child could then move towards losing weight, especially if he is very overweight, in which case he may need to restrict his calories somewhat under the guidance of a Registered Dietician or your Pediatrician.

 

Parents, and many weight loss centers, like Weight Watchers, often ask what weight a child should be to be more healthy. This is a tricky question, as a child’s BMI and healthy weight changes each year as he gets taller. It can be important to figure out what a healthy weight would be though, as it can be an important concrete goal to reach for.

Although the body mass index calculation is usually used to figure out if a person is at a healthy weight, you can also use it to find a target healthy weight for your child. For example, a 12 year old boy who is 4’11” and 150 pounds, has a BMI of 28 and would be considered overweight. A more healthy BMI would be about 24, which would put his weight at only 119 pounds. But it is very unreasonable (and unhealthy) to expect a child to lose 31 pounds.

You should instead look at what his height and weight should be in a year or two to reach a healthy BMI. For example, for this child, in a year you can expect him to grow about 3 inches. And at age 13, a more healthy BMI for a boy would be 25 (which is about a 10% loss in a year). If you enter those numbers in this reverse BMI calculator, you will calculate a target weight of 137, which is a little more reasonable and about a 1 pound loss a month.

Losing Weight

In general, to lose weight, you either have to decrease the amount of calories you are eating and drinking, exercise to burn more calories, or even better, do a combination of both. Remember that 1 pound is equal to about 3500 calories, so you have to burn 3500 calories to lose a pound or eat an extra 3500 calories to gain a pound.

For example, if you are child is at a steady weight, to lose 1 pound a week, you either have to eat 500 fewer calories a day (equal to 3500 calories a week) or burn 500 extra calories a day by exercising. Or eat 250 fewer calories and burn 250 calories exercising.

To lose 1 pound in two weeks, you can decrease your calories by 250 a day or burn 250 extra calories a day.

What is 250 calories? A piece of cake, 4 cookies, 2 sodas, an hour of light bicycling or walking, or 30 minutes of playing soccer, roller blading, or jogging at 5 MPH. 250 calories is also almost the difference between eating a regular McDonald’s cheeseburger (330 calories) and medium (450 calories) french fries instead of a Quarter Pounder (430 calories) and super-size (610 calories) french fries.

If your child is gaining 1/2 pound a week, then cutting his diet by 250 calories a day will lead to no weight gain. Once he stays at a steady weight, you can cut back by another 250 calories a day to lose 1/2 pound a week.

Although you don’t need to count calories each and every day, doing it for a week or so might help you find where excess calories are coming from. If your child is gaining a 1/2 pound a week, you might find that cutting out a bedtime snack of 250 calories might keep him from gaining more weight.

Prevention of Obesity

Although trying to help overweight children lose weight is important, even more important may be trying to prevent them from becoming overweight in the first place. This too is not easy, but something that needs to be started in early childhood, especially if your child is at risk for becoming obese, like if they have overweight parents.

Targeting the behaviors that lead children to become overweight can be helpful in preventing your child from becoming overweight. These include unhealthy eating habits and a lack of physical activity and exercise.

Tips, both to prevent obesity and help your child lose weight, include:

  • limiting the number of calories that your child drinks. For example, many kids drink too much juice and soda each day. Sticking to the usual recommend limits of 4-6 ounces of 100% fruit juice for children under age 6 years and only 8-12 ounces for older children can help to limit excessive weight gain.
  • limiting the amount of milk that younger children drink. Although drinking milk is important and it is a good source of calcium, too much milk can lead to your child becoming overweight. Obesity often starts in early childhood, with a common scenario being a child who drinks too much milk. Children usually only need about 16-24 ounces of milk each day.
  • avoiding frequent meals of fast food.
  • don’t ‘super size’ your child’s meals. A common problem that contributes to overweight children are meals with portions that are too large.
  • don’t force younger children to ‘clean their plates.’ An important way to help children learn to eat healthy is for them to know that they can stop eating when they are full. Continue reading Overweight Children – Prevention and Treatment

New Diet Can Help Battle Child Obesity

All around the world obesity rates among children have increased three-fold in the last 20 years, and there are a few available options that are effective for treating obesity in these kids. Now, new hope is surfacing for children having a hard time keeping a healthy weight, according to a new study published in Molecular Metabolism.

Calorie restriction dieting is not usually a successful method because children tend to gain and lose the weight back and forth, called the “yo-yo diet”.

The new technique concentrates on the energy balance circuit of the brain, which plays an important part in helping maintain the body’s natural healthy weight. It works similar to a thermostat – if it is turned up, a person’s weight decreases, and if it is turned down, weight increases.

Prior research revealed that unhealthy diets can actually harm this brain circuit. Now, the new research confirms that the harm forces the “thermostat” on the energy balance circuit to be turned up, which results in weight increase.

It is possible, according to the researchers, to reverse this damage by using calorie restriction with the “thermostat setting” on low, which can eventually treat the obesity. However, different diets have different results.

The findings revealed that an unhealthy diet, even if a person does not eat a lot, can result in weight loss. However, the energy balance circuit is not turned down. When an individual stops dieting, weight will jump back to what it was before the treatment. On the other hand, healthy diets and eating less not only cause weight loss, but turn down the energy balance circuit as well.

A 2012 study said that it is more important to teach children how to eat, not how to diet. For example, teaching them about healthy food options is effective in preventing obesity.

John Speakman, commented: “Rebound weight gain after dieting is a major problem. These data point to a potential reason why some individuals bounce back much further than others, and provide a clue as to how to minimise the problem. The result is really exciting.”

Healthy diet treatment does not result in “yo-yo” weight gain when the diet is over, explaining why calorie restricted diets only work for some people.

David McNay, co-researcher of the study, said :


 “We’ve known for some time that over-eating an unhealthy diet causes obesity, but we’ve not been sure if it was the overeating or the unhealthy diet that is the problem. This research shows that every calorie is not equal and that successful treatment of obesity requires both eating less and eating healthier.”

“Helping children to keep to a healthy weight could decrease their risk of developing serious, long-term health problems and free them from the stigma that often comes with growing up with obesity,” concluded Caroline Johnston, Research Evaluation Manager at Action Medical Research.

“Obesity Will Crush the United States into Oblivion”

America’s collective waistline is about to expand, if we’re not careful. On Monday the American Journal of Preventative Medicine released a study predicting that 42 percent of Americans will be obese by 2030.

The No-Diet Weight Loss Solution–Eat This, Not That 2012!

The researchers, who examined data from 1990 to 2008 to make projections, predict that the obesity rate will climb by a third and the severe-obesity prevalence (what is severe obesity?) will jump 130 percent over the next two decades. In addition to putting millions of Americans’ health at risk, we’ll be paying an estimated $549.5 billion in health care costs as a result.

The research was presented at the Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s Weight of the Nation conference, which coincides with the upcoming HBO documentary by the same name—a collaboration between the CDC, the Institute of Medicine (IOM), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation, and Kaiser Permanente. The four-part HBO special, which airs May 14 and 15 and streams online, touches on the dangers of America’s growing obesity epidemic. “Obesity will crush the United States into oblivion,” comments Susan Combs Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts in the program’s trailer.

How Sugary Drinks Make You Gain

But it’s not all gloom and doom. At the conference, the IOM presented potential ways to tackle America’s weight woes. The IOM committee looked at more than 800 obesity prevention measures and narrowed them down to five critical goals:

1.    Integrating physical activity into people’s daily lives
2.    Making healthy food and beverage options widely accessible
3.    Changing the way nutrition and activity as marketed
4.    Making schools a vehicle for keeping kids at a healthy weight
5.    Rousing health care professionals to support healthy lifestyles

“Individuals and groups can’t solve this complex problem alone, and that’s why we recommend changes that can work together at the societal level and reinforce one another’s impact to speed our progress,” said committee chair Dan Glickman, executive director of congressional programs, Aspen Institute and former secretary of the USDA.

What’s more, they named a few specific strategies to meet these goals, including requiring 60 minutes of physical activity per day in schools, establishing industry-wide guidelines on the foods that can be marketed at children, and increasing the low-calorie, healthy options for kids’ restaurant meals.  Continue reading “Obesity Will Crush the United States into Oblivion”