Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Fatty foods may cause cocaine-like addiction

Cheesecake and other fatty foods overload the pleasure centers in the brain
(Health.com) - Scientists have finally confirmed what the rest of us have suspected for years: Bacon, cheesecake, and other delicious yet fattening foods may be addictive.

A new study in rats suggests that high-fat, high-calorie foods affect the brain in much the same way as cocaine and heroin. When rats consume these foods in great enough quantities, it leads to compulsive eating habits that resemble drug addiction, the study found.

Doing drugs such as cocaine and eating too much junk food both gradually overload the so-called pleasure centers in the brain, according to Paul J. Kenny, Ph.D., an associate professor of molecular therapeutics at the Scripps Research Institute, in Jupiter, Florida. Eventually the pleasure centers "crash," and achieving the same pleasure--or even just feeling normal--requires increasing amounts of the drug or food, says Kenny, the lead author of the study.

"People know intuitively that there's more to [overeating] than just willpower," he says. "There's a system in the brain that's been turned on or over-activated, and that's driving [overeating] at some subconscious level."

In the study, published in the journal Nature Neuroscience, Kenny and his co-author studied three groups of lab rats for 40 days. One of the groups was fed regular rat food. A second was fed bacon, sausage, cheesecake, frosting, and other fattening, high-calorie foods--but only for one hour each day. The third group was allowed to pig out on the unhealthy foods for up to 23 hours a day.

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Not surprisingly, the rats that gorged themselves on the human food quickly became obese. But their brains also changed. By monitoring implanted brain electrodes, the researchers found that the rats in the third group gradually developed a tolerance to the pleasure the food gave them and had to eat more to experience a high.

Health.com: Eat this and burn more fat

They began to eat compulsively, to the point where they continued to do so in the face of pain. When the researchers applied an electric shock to the rats' feet in the presence of the food, the rats in the first two groups were frightened away from eating. But the obese rats were not. "Their attention was solely focused on consuming food," says Kenny.

In previous studies, rats have exhibited similar brain changes when given unlimited access to cocaine or heroin. And rats have similarly ignored punishment to continue consuming cocaine, the researchers note.

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The fact that junk food could provoke this response isn't entirely surprising, says Dr.Gene-Jack Wang, M.D., the chair of the medical department at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven National Laboratory, in Upton, New York.

"We make our food very similar to cocaine now," he says.

Coca leaves have been used since ancient times, he points out, but people learned to purify or alter cocaine to deliver it more efficiently to their brains (by injecting or smoking it, for instance). This made the drug more addictive.

According to Wang, food has evolved in a similar way. "We purify our food," he says. "Our ancestors ate whole grains, but we're eating white bread. American Indians ate corn; we eat corn syrup."

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The ingredients in purified modern food cause people to "eat unconsciously and unnecessarily," and will also prompt an animal to "eat like a drug abuser [uses drugs]," says Wang.

The neurotransmitter dopamine appears to be responsible for the behavior of the overeating rats, according to the study. Dopamine is involved in the brain's pleasure (or reward) centers, and it also plays a role in reinforcing behavior. "It tells the brain something has happened and you should learn from what just happened," says Kenny.

Overeating caused the levels of a certain dopamine receptor in the brains of the obese rats to drop, the study found. In humans, low levels of the same receptors have been associated with drug addiction and obesity, and may be genetic, Kenny says.

Health.com: The real reasons we eat too much

However, that doesn't mean that everyone born with lower dopamine receptor levels is destined to become an addict or to overeat. As Wang points out, environmental factors, and not just genes, are involved in both behaviors.

Wang also cautions that applying the results of animal studies to humans can be tricky. For instance, he says, in studies of weight-loss drugs, rats have lost as much as 30 percent of their weight, but humans on the same drug have lost less than 5 percent of their weight. "You can't mimic completely human behavior, but [animal studies] can give you a clue about what can happen in humans," Wang says.

Although he acknowledges that his research may not directly translate to humans, Kenny says the findings shed light on the brain mechanisms that drive overeating and could even lead to new treatments for obesity.

"If we could develop therapeutics for drug addiction, those same drugs may be good for obesity as well," he says.

Nearly third of children globally are couch potatoes

Mon Mar 29, 6:38 pm ET .NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) –

American children aren't the only couch potatoes with nearly one third of children globally spending three hours a day or more watching TV or on computers, according to study of over 70,000 teens in 34 nations.

A boy poses with a chicken burger at a fast food outlet in Taipei January 29, 2010. Bingeing on high-calorie foods may be as addictive as cocaine or nicotine, and could cause compulsive eating and obesity, according to a study published on Sunday.

From Argentina to Zambia, Regina Guthold of the World Health Organization in Geneva and her colleagues found most children aren't getting enough exercise and it made no difference if they lived in a rich or a poor country.


"With regards to physical activity levels, we did not find much of a difference between poor and rich countries," Guthold told Reuters Health. "Growing up in a poor country does not necessarily mean that kids get more physical activity."

The study, published in The Journal of Pediatrics, looking at 72,845 schoolchildren aged 13 to 15 from North and South America, Asia, Europe, and the Middle East. The children were surveyed between 2003 and 2007.

The researchers defined adequate physical activity as at least an hour of exercise outside of gym class at least five days a week.

Children who spent three or more hours a day watching TV, playing computer games, or chatting with friends -- aside from time in school or time spent doing homework -- were classified as sedentary.

The researchers found only one quarter of the boys and 15 percent of the girls were getting enough exercise by these definitions.

A quarter of boys and nearly 30 percent of girls were sedentary and didn't get enough exercise with girls less active than boys in every country aside from Zambia.

Uruguay had the highest percentage of active boys, at 42 percent, while Zambia had the lowest, at 8 percent.

Girls from India were the most active, with 37 percent meeting exercise recommendations, while girls from Egypt were the least active, with just 4 percent getting adequate exercise.

Children in Myanmar were the least sedentary, with 13 percent of boys and 8 percent of girls classified as sedentary. The most sedentary nations were St. Lucia and the Cayman Islands, with 58 percent of boys and 64 percent of girls spending at least three hours a day in sedentary activities.

While the study didn't look at the reasons behind the lack of physical activity in various nations, Guthold speculated that urbanization could be a factor as well as access to cars and TVs.

She said schools can help children become more active by having physical education classes and educating students about the importance of exercise.

Adding lanes for bicycles, pedestrian crossings and other changes to promote walking and biking to and from school could help too, she added.

"Even with the limitations that questionnaire data (suffer) from, I guess it's pretty safe to say that we have a huge problem with physical inactivity among schoolchildren around the globe and that we should take action," said Guthold.

(Reporting by Anne Harding, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)
STORY HERE

Monday, March 29, 2010

The Herbalife LaBamba Diet


The Herbalife 3 Day Diet That Gets Results!

If you're struggling with starting a weight loss program or if you've seemingly hit a stubborn plateau, there is a 3 day solution for you.

The 3-day LaBamba Diet Program incorporates protein to keep you from getting hungry, an all-natural energy booster, and a very gentle digestive cleanse designed to help you begin a healthy weight loss program.

This program is safe and effective and endorsed by Dr. Steven Komadina, who is a prestigious member of Herbalife's Medical Advisory Board.

On average, expect to lose between 2 - 5kgs (5-7 lbs) and lower % body fat in 3 days...

The LaBamba Diet is not a starvation diet. Instead, it is based on science and nutrition. To lose fat and not merely water weight, we must get our bodies to burn fat. Glucagon is the hormone that increases the fat-burning capacity of our bodies while insulin is the hormone that encourages the body to store fat.

The science behind the Labamba Diet is that we will increase our body's production of glucagon and decrease the body's production of insulin. Glucagon is released in the body when we eat protein and insulin is released to regulate carbohydrate metabolism. During the LaBamba diet, we will limit your consumption of carbohydrates (thereby suppressing the body's production of insulin) and increase your consumption of protein (thereby increasing the body's production of glucagon).

NOTE: La Bamba is safe for everyone except those who have kidney problems or renal disease, in which case, they have to limit their consumption of protein.

La Bamba is safe for diabetics, people with high-blood pressure - anyone who has a normal functioning kidney.


Safe and effective! Endorsed by Dr. Steven Komadina M.D. from New Mexico
Dr. Komandina M.D. talks about the LaBamba Diet:
Click *Here* For Audio Presentation

Here is the plan in detail:

What you'll need to order:

  • 1 Formula 1 Nutritional Shake Mix (choose your favourite flavour)
  • 1 Formula Personalized Protein Powder
  • 1 Herbal Aloe Drink Concentrate (choose the Mango flavor if you have it in your country)
  • 1 Herbal Concentrate Tea (choose the original as it has double the "drink & shrink" power)
  • 2 Beverage Mix Packets (If available in your country)

Day 1

For Day 1, you will have:
3.8litre (1 Gallon) of the protein drink (flushes out breakdown products of protein from your kidneys with a lot of glucagon released) and also 3.8litre (1 Gallon) of water, alternating on the half hour as described below.
________________________________________


Make the protein drink according to the following instructions. Have this drink throughout Day 1 and have no other food or drink. This is the only day where you might feel a bit hungry, but rest assured that your body is not starving. Each package of the Beverage Mix has 15 grams of protein. You will be consuming 8 packages, which means you will be getting 120 grams of total protein in Day 1.

To make the protein drink:

1) Take 1 gallon containers
2) In one of the gallon containers, add:
8 packets of Beverage Mix Packets
1 heaping tablespoon of Herbal Concentrate Tea (original flavor)
12mls (4 fl oz) of Herbal Aloe Drink Concentrate
3) Fill the container with purified water. Shake to mix and store in the refrigerator.

also have 3.8litres (1 Gallon) of Purified Water to drink as pure water on the 1/2 hour for 8 hours

Drink 500mls 16 oz. glass every hour for 8 hours

Take Herbalife Nutritional Supplement tablets, NO food

Day 2


For Day 2, you will have:

5 Shapeworks Formula 1 Shakes (no fruit),
2-3 cups of Herbal Concentrate Tea,
at least 8 glasses of water
________________________________________

Formula 1 Shakes are based on the NASA concept of the Complete Meal - you get all the nutrients and phytonutrients you need. Furthermore, every shake contains 20 grams of protein, 22 grams of carbohydrates, 6.4 grams of fat and only 250 calories. For Day 2 you will have a total of 100 grams of protein, 110 grams of carbohydrates, 32 grams of fat and 1250 calories.

The protein-rich shakes will suppress your hunger and the thermogenic effect of protein will help the body release glucagon which turns your body into a fat-burning machine.

To make each shake add:
2 scoops of Formula 1 Nutritional Shake Mix
1 to 2 tablespoon of Personalized Protein Powder
250 - 350 mls (8-12 oz) of either soy or low fat or skim milk (no fruit juice)
Do not add fruit! (We want to restrict your intake of carbohydrates on this day)

Take tablets, NO additional food - only shakes made as above!

Day 3


For Day 3, you will have:
2 Formula 1 Shakes (made the same way as in Day 2) - no fruit or fruit juice,
1 colorful meal - consisting of lean meat or fish, 3-4 servings of vegetables, salad, small potato or half cup of rice,
2-3 cups of Herbal Concentrate Tea,
at least 8 glasses of water

After Day 3
Return to your regular Program Mealplan which consists of 2 shakes, 1 balanced meal, a healthy snack protein/fruit or veggie and supplements.

NOTE: When you hit a plateau, the dieter's tendency is to eat less (and exercise more). However, do not starve yourself! Instead, stay consistent and commit yourself to the mealplan. When you starve yourself, your body will start to conserve energy and store fat. If necessary, try the LaBamba Diet again. You can do this once per month.

Tips/QA:
Q: I am sensitive to caffeine. What should I do?
A: There is caffeine in tea. Use less Herbal Concentrate in your program. Put the Herbal Concentrate in first gallon only, not second so it won't keep them up all night. Or use half the dosage.

Q: Can you use it more than once a month?
A: Not recommended. This is a 3 day jump start program, not a long-term program. ShapeWorks program is designed for ongoing, long term results. Start next month with another boost with the La Bamba Diet, if wanted, but only once a month.

Q: Can you use herbal aloe concentrate or drink?
A: Yes, either one. If you prefer the drink, use the equivalent amount and reduce the water accordingly.
________________________________________

Why This Program Works

Glucagon (released when you eat protein)

  • Raises Blood Sugar By Converting Protein and Fat into Glucose
  • Burns Fat
  • Decreases Cholesterol Production
  • Increases Release of Growth Hormone
  • Decreases smooth muscles cells in vessel walls
  • Makes Kidney release fluid
  • Releases fat from fat cells for energy
  • Makes dietary fats into ketones for energy
  • Shifts metabolism into a Burning Mode

Insulin (released when you eat a carbohydrate)

  • Lowers Blood Sugar
  • Increases the Storage of Fat
  • Stimulates liver's synthesis of Cholesterol
  • Glucose Decreases
  • Growth Hormone Released
  • Stimulates growth of arterial
  • Smooth muscle cells
  • Increases Appetite
  • Makes Kidneys Retain Fluid
  • Shifts Metabolism into Storage Mode

from Dr. Steven Komadina, M.D.
Book "Born to Be Healthy and Thin" pgs. 193 & 194
order it at http://www.stevekomadinamd.com/


The reality of being unhealthy......what are we doing to ourselves? Are you ready to change?



Jamie Oliver spends a day with DJ Rod from Huntington, West Virginia, in hopes of opening his eyes to the need for dietary change in their city.

CLICK HERE:
JAMIE OLIVER

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Sunday, March 28, 2010

30% of breast cancer 'is caused by obesity'


Thirty per cent of breast cancer 'is caused by obesity'

By Jenny Hope - 26th March 2010 - http://bit.ly/c5H5CE

Up to a third of breast cancer cases could be avoided if women ate less and exercised more, researchers claim.
Experts believe more than 14,000 women a year would probably not develop the disease if they had adopted healthier behaviour from an early age.

Modern lifestyles which feature regular drinking, lack of exercise and increased obesity are fuelling the rise of the disease, the European Breast Cancer Conference heard yesterday.

Around 45,000 cases of breast cancer are diagnosed each year just in Britain.

Carlo La Vecchia, of Milan University, told the conference in Barcelona: 'What can be achieved with screening has been achieved. It's time to move on to other things.'

Dr La Vecchia said the International Agency for Research on Cancer estimates that 25 to 30 per cent of cases could be avoided if women were thinner and did more exercise.

But Robert Baan, an IARC expert, said it was not clear if already overweight women could lower their cancer risk by slimming down or if long-term damage had already been done.

More...

* Moderate drinking lowers risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis and slows progression of disease, study finds
* The calorie conqueror: Herbal pill 'can cut your appetite by a fifth ... and even cure a sweet tooth'

Around one in five British women is classified as obese. Research shows they are almost 50 per cent more likely to die from breast cancer than women carrying fewer pounds.

It is unclear why obese women are more at risk, although changes in sex hormone levels triggered by weight gain could be behind oestrogen-dependent tumours, which form the majority of cases.

The World Cancer Research Fund last year suggested up to 40 per cent of diagnosed women - around 18,000 a year - could avoid cancer by adopting a healthier lifestyle.

Studies show drinking one large glass of wine a day increases the chances of developing the disease by a fifth, say experts. Again, this could be linked to alcohol raising levels of oestrogen.

Dr Rachel Thompson said the WCRF had reviewed 954 separate studies.

'The evidence is now convincing that drinking alcohol, being physically inactive and having excess body fat all increase risk of breast cancer,' she said.

'There is also convincing evidence that breastfeeding reduces the mother's risk of breast cancer. Overall, we estimate about 40 per cent of breast cancer cases in the UK could be prevented through these lifestyle factors.'

Delegates also heard a warning from a British surgeon that increasing numbers of women who have a breast removed to treat cancer are panicking into having a second mastectomy.

Ajay Sahu, who works at Frenchay Hospital, Bristol, said many women diagnosed with the disease are extremely frightened and make the wrong decision in a hurry - despite little evidence it will improve their survival chances.

He said a study of 27 patients who had asked for the removal of their unaffected breast revealed all had overestimated their risk of developing a second tumour by five to ten times.

After 'cooling off' for a year, 23 chose not to have the second operation.

The conference will hear today how breast cancer survivors can safely try for a family without triggering a recurrence of the disease.

A review of 14 trials, involving thousands of survivors, showed that not only was pregnancy safe, it might improve their chances of beating the disease in the long-term.

Those who got pregnant had a 42 per cent cut in their risk of dying from cancer compared to those who did not have a baby, researchers found.

Friday, March 19, 2010

More Kids Now Extremely Obese

Report authors warn of shorter life spans, impending health problems for these children.

By Steven Reinberg ~ HealthDay Reporter

THURSDAY, March 18 2010 (HealthDay News) -- The obesity epidemic is hitting children harder than ever, with 7.3 percent of boys and 5.5 percent of girls classified as extremely obese in a California study, researchers from Kaiser Permanente report.

The news is even worse for black and Hispanic kids: Among black teenage girls, 11.9 percent were classified as extremely obese, as were 11.2 percent of Hispanic teenage boys. Extreme obesity among children is defined as weighing more than 1.2 times the 95th percentile, or having a body-mass index (BMI) of 35 kilograms per meter squared.

"There is an alarming high frequency of extremely obese children," said study author Corinna Koebnick, a research scientist at Kaiser Permanente Southern California Department of Research and Evaluation in Pasadena.

Koebnick said the obesity epidemic is driven by a combination of lack of physical activity and poor eating habits. "It's unhealthy eating habits -- fast food versus slow food," she said.

Parents need to be role models for their children, Koebnick stressed. "There are studies suggesting parent's weight has a significant influence on the child's weight," she noted.

Extreme obesity can lead to serious health problems such as diabetes and heart disease, Koebnick added.

"We need to watch these extremely obese kids more carefully, and we need to try to prevent adverse health effects that may come up in the near future," she said.

"Children who are extremely obese may continue to be extremely obese as adults, and all the health problems associated with obesity are in these children's futures. Without major lifestyle changes, these kids face a 10 to 20 years shorter life span and will develop health problems in their 20s that we typically see in 40- [to] 60-year-olds," Koebnick said in a Kaiser Permanente news release.

Although these findings cover only children in southern California, Koebnick thinks they are representative of what is happening throughout the United States.

The report is published in the March 18 online edition of the Journal of Pediatrics.

For the study, Koebnick's team collected data on 710,949 children and teens aged 2 to 19 who belonged to Kaiser Permanente Southern California integrated health plan in 2007 and 2008.

Using these data, the researchers found that 7.3 percent of boys and 5.5 percent of girls were extremely obese, which is more than 45,000 extremely obese children among all the children studied.

Obesity peaked at age 10 for boys and age 12 for girls. The most extremely obese were black teenage girls and Hispanic boys. The least extremely obese were Asian-Pacific Islanders and white children, the researchers found.

Samantha Heller, a dietitian, nutritionist and exercise physiologist, said that "the results of this survey are not surprising, but are heartbreaking when you consider the health consequences that these children will be facing, not to mention the social, emotional and psychological repercussions."

It is critical for parents to learn how to provide healthy food for their families, Heller noted. "Healthy food can be affordable and delicious but consumers are led to believe that fast food, junk food and sweets are the easiest and cheapest way to go," she said.

The public is bombarded with food advertising that targets children, Heller said. The 2008 Federal Trade Commission Report to Congress found that more than $1.6 billion was spent in 2006 marketing food and beverages to children.

"Imagine if that money, or even a fraction of it, was used to promote healthy foods like vegetables, fruits, whole grains and beans, and nutrition education for the public," she said. "People would learn how to buy and prepare healthy foods on a budget and we could reduce the prevalence of obesity and chronic diseases like diabetes, heart disease and cancer, in our children," Heller explained.

"Health professionals, food companies and local and state governments need to find ways to help educate, motivate and empower adults and children to lead healthier lives before it is too late to save our children," Heller added.

More information
For more information on childhood obesity, visit the
Nemours Foundation

SOURCES: Corinna Koebnick, Ph.D., research scientist, Kaiser Permanente Southern California Department of Research and Evaluation, Pasadena, Calif.; Samantha Heller, M.S., R.D., dietitian, nutritionist and exercise physiologist, Fairfield, Conn.; March 18, 2010, Journal of Pediatrics, online

Copyright © 2010 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
http://bit.ly/d9Bfp4

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Thursday, March 18, 2010

Fatty foods affect the brain



Scientists say their studies of the impact on the brain of fatty, sugary foods could shed new light on Australia's obesity epidemic.

A neuroscientist from the University of New South Wales, Professor Margaret Morris, says the study has found such foods trigger the same response in the brain as some recreational drugs.

She says it could explain why one third of men and half of women in Australia are classified as obese.

"It seems that having yummy food available makes you feel better, and maybe that is part of our problem with the obesity epidemic," she said.

"Maybe food is being used to alleviate stress in a similar way in the human and that behaviour is rewarding and so the person continues to do it because it makes them feel good," she said.

Professor Morris is presenting the findings at a free lecture tonight at the University of Tasmania in Hobart.



http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2010/03/18/2850000.htm
posted March 18th 2010


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