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Category: Weight Loss

Danger Lurks: Promoting Bulimia Online

Bathroom: After
Image by srbyug via Flickr

As I mentioned countless times, obesity is an epidemic in America, and it is slowly but surely killing us while putting an enormous burden on our health care system.  But there are other eating issues besides gluttony that are dangerous, and yes, deadly.  Yesterday’s post discussed anorexia and how there are over 10,000,000 websites that encourage and promote anorexia.  Today we are talking about bulimia.

Remember the stats I mentioned yesterday?  Unbelievably, there are over 10,000,000 websites that are promoting anorexia; giving tips and online support to help people become thinner through anorexia.  There are more than 2,000,000 other pro bulimia websites offering encouragement, tips and advice on purging.  I’ll say it again … that these sites exist is to me, morally reprehensible.

What is Bulimia?

Bulimia, also called bulimia nervosa, is a psychological eating disorder. Bulimia is characterized by episodes of binge-eating followed by inappropriate methods of weight control (purging). Inappropriate methods of weight control include vomiting, fasting, enemas, excessive use of laxatives and diuretics, or compulsive exercising. Excessive shape and weight concerns are also characteristics of bulimia. A binge is an episode where an individual eats a much larger amount of food than most people would in a similar situation. Binge eating is not a response to intense hunger. It is usually a response to depression, stress, or self esteem issues. During the binge episode, the individual experiences a loss of control. However, the sense of a loss of control is also followed by a short-lived calmness. The calmness is often followed by self-loathing. The cycle of overeating and purging usually becomes an obsession and is repeated often.

Bulimia was only diagnosed as its own eating disorder in the 1980s.

People with bulimia can look perfectly normal.  Here is the tricky part in identifying someone who is bulimic:  Most of them are of normal weight, and some may be overweight. Women with bulimia tend to be high achievers.

What makes it even harder to determine whether a person is suffering from bulimia, is the fact that bingeing and purging is often done in secret. Also, individuals suffering from bulimia often deny their condition.

Sufferers consume huge quantities of food. Sometimes up to 20,000 calories at a time. The foods on which they binge tend to be foods labeled as “comfort foods” — sweet foods, high in calories, or smooth, soft foods like ice cream, cake, and pastry. An individual may binge anywhere from twice a day to several times daily.

What Causes Bulimia?

There is currently no definite known cause of bulimia. Researchers believe it begins with dissatisfaction of the person’s body and extreme concern with body size and shape. Usually individuals suffering from bulimia have low self-esteem, feelings of helplessness and a fear of becoming fat

Medical complications from bulimia

Some of the most common complications of bulimia are:

•Erosion of tooth enamel because of repeated exposure to acidic gastric contents.
•Dental cavities, sensitivity to hot or cold food.
•Swelling and soreness in the salivary glands (from repeated vomiting).
•Stomach Ulcers.
•Ruptures of the stomach and esophagus.
•Abnormal buildup of fluid in the intestines.
•Disruption in the normal bowel release function.
•Electrolyte imbalance.
•Dehydration
•Irregular heartbeat and in severe cases heart attack
•A greater risk for suicidal behavior
•Decrease in libido
Symptoms of Bulimia

Some of the most common symptoms of bulimia are:

•Eating uncontrollably
•Purging
•Strict dieting
•Fasting
•Vigorous exercise
•Vomiting or abusing laxatives or diuretics in an attempt to lose weight.
•Vomiting blood
•Using the bathroom frequently after meals.
•Preoccupation with body weight
•Depression or mood swings. Feeling out of control.
•Swollen glands in neck and face
•Heartburn,
•Bloating,
•Indigestion,
•Constipation
•Irregular periods
•Dental problems
•sore throat
•Weakness
•Exhaustion
•Bloodshot eyes

Risk Factors of Bulimia

There are certain professions and activities/hobbies where thinness is emphasized, making eating disorders more prevalent.  Not surprisingly, modeling, dancing, gymnastics, wrestling, and long-distance running all foster body image issues that can lead to bulima.

Bulimia Statistics

•Bulimia affects about 10% of college age women in the United States.
•About 10% of individuals diagnosed with bulimia are men.
•10% of individuals suffering from bulimia will die from either starvation, cardiac arrest, other medical complications, or suicide.

Bulimia is insidious in that it is really hard to identify an individual who suffers from the illness.  The health problems associated with bulimia are extensive, but the individual doesn’t look ill on the outside and often isn’t thin to the point of alarming friends and family.  Again, open communication between the individual and family/friends is the key to preventing eating disorders or getting help for the one suffering from the illness.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Teens Find Eating Disorder Tips On Line – Anorexia

Anorexia Nervosa by Dr Mohamed Osman
Image via Wikipedia

We have focused a lot on the ever expanding waistline of Americans, and yesterday’s blog was all about disgusting restaurant menu items that are almost a guaranteed heart attack on a plate.  The overweight and obese are definitely in the majority, and being overweight or obese leads to health problems that will kill you. 

But the flip side of the coin, are the too thin … people with eating disorders who are anorexic or bulimic.

I guess I shouldn’t be surprised, but I was.  I was watching a story on the Today Show about how teenage girls are finding websites that support and encourage eating disorders.  Eating disorders are a mental illness that kills more people each year than any other form of mental illness, and yet it is consistently hushed up or joked about. 

Unbelievably, there are over 10,000,000 websites that are promoting anorexia; giving tips and online support to help people become thinner through anorexia.  There are more than 2,000,000 other pro bulimia websites offering encouragement, tips and advice on purging.  That these sites exist is to me, morally reprehensible.

So what is anorexia?  Anorexia is an eating disorder where people starve themselves.  Anorexia usually begins in young people around the onset of puberty. Individuals suffering from anorexia have extreme weight loss. An anorexic individual will usually be 15% below the person’s normal body weight. People suffering from anorexia are very skinny – too skinny, actually –  but are convinced that they are fat.  Weight loss is obtained in many ways. Some common techniques used are excessive exercise, intake of laxatives and not eating.

Anorexics have an intense fear of becoming fat. Their dieting habits develop from this fear. Anorexia mainly affects adolescent girls.  Current estimates are that 1% of teenage girls are anorexic – and 10% of them will die from the illness.  Another 10% of all anorexics are white males, and while anorexia is more common in the male homosexual community, heterosexual males are not immune to the illness.

People with anorexia continue to think they are overweight even after they become extremely thin, are very ill or near death. Often they will develop strange eating habits such as refusing to eat in front of other people.  Sometimes the individuals will prepare big meals for others while refusing to eat any of it.

The disorder is thought to be most common among people of higher socioeconomic classes and people involved in activities where thinness is especially looked upon, such as dancing, theater, and distance running.

Symptoms of Anorexia

There are many symptoms for anorexia, and some individuals may not experience all of them.  The primary identifying symptom of an individual with anorexia is body weight that is inconsistent with age, build and height (usually 15% below normal weight).

Some other symptoms of anorexia are:

•Loss of at least 3 consecutive menstrual periods (in women).
•Not wanting or refusing to eat in public
•Anxiety
•Weakness
•Brittle skin
•Shortness of breath
•Obsessiveness about calorie intake

Medical Consequences of anorexia

There are many medical risks associated with anorexia. They include: shrunken bones, mineral loss, low body temperature, irregular heartbeat, permanent failure of normal growth, development of osteoporosis and bulimia nervosa.

Continued use of laxatives is harmful to the body. It wears out the bowel muscle and causes it to decrease in function. Some laxatives contain harsh substances that may be reabsorbed into your system.

Back to the topic at hand … we all know how bad anorexia is for you and we all know that starving yourself is not a healthy way to deal with body image issues.  So why are there websites that promote anorexia as a positive, giving young people tips and advice and encouragement on their path to potential death and serious health consequences?

The internet is largely unregulated, so maybe the answer is here is parental filters at home and filters at school.  Since the majority of anorexics are young people, more parental involvement in the lives of there children should be the key.  Provide positive support at home; obtain counseling for the child when necessary.  Leave judgment behind and let them know they are loved.  This is a mental illness.  When an anorexic person looks in the mirror, they do not see themselves as we see them.  They see themselves as fat, and for this, they need professional help … not the help they get on these websites that encourage them to become thinner.

Tomorrow’s post will talk about bulimia in more detail.  It is also a deadly illness with its own set of identifying factors and affects a different group of people.  Be sure to check back tomorrow!

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic center located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.  The Remmel Wellness Center specializes in healthy weight loss with Ideal Protein products and incorporates coaching and mental health counseling to address the patient’s needs.

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Did They REALLY Serve That?

As if the food they serve up at the State Fair isn’t bad enough, at least it is only available for a very short period of time.  However, the restaurant industry has decided to enter into an unholy competition to see who can come up with the most disgusting, artery-clogging, calorie-busting fiasco ever to grace a plate. 

If you’ve never picked up a copy of “Eat This, Not That” you really should browse through the lastest edition.  Honestly, it will help you make better choices when dining out.  Some foods are actually totally unhealthy, but disguised as “good for you” and those you need to watch out for.  But here, for your reading enjoyment, are the top 5 scariest restaurant foods:

See, even the most well-established restaurant chains can’t rest on their laurels, serving the same old standbys that we’ve loved since we were kids. They have to keep us interested and attracted with shiny new bells and whistles. And since no one has invented, say, a new kind of vegetable, they’ve got to go with the next best thing: gimmicky entrees with terrifyingly obsene nutritional content and rapidly expanding serving sizes. It wasn’t enough that pizza makers started putting cheese inside the crust! Kentucky Fried Chicken saw that and ramped up its own destructive powers, by making a sandwich in which the bread is replaced by slabs of fried chicken.  Seriously … do people really that this is is a GOOD idea?  Then a few major league ballparks started serving their burgers on doughnuts instead of buns.  I’m afraid to find out what will come next.

Scary Meal #5
Denny’s Fried Cheese Melt with wavy fries and marinara
1,260 calories
63 g fat (21 g saturated, 1 g trans)
3,010 mg sodium

CALORIE EQUIVALENT: 18 T.G.I. Friday’s Frozen Cheddar & Bacon Potato Skins

Apparently, Denny’s deemed the classic grilled cheese too boring for our novelty seeking taste buds, so they fixed it by driving four deep-fried cheese sticks into the core of the sandwich. So what you end up with are cheese sticks with extra cheese between slabs of buttered bread and a pile of fried potatoes on the side. If Denny’s was serious about improving the grilled cheese, they would have skipped the novelty and brought in big-flavor ingredients like sautéedmushrooms or sliced figs. But, of course, if they did that, they might not be able to sell this entire meal for $4. Here’s to cheap food and expensive health care!

Eat This Instead!
Denny’s BLT with Hash Browns
730 calories
47 g fat (10.5 g saturated)
1,270 mg sodium

Scary Meal #4
IHOP New York Cheesecake Pancakes
1,270 calories

CALORIE EQUIVALENT: 28 McDonald’s Chicken McNuggets

Further blurring the line between dessert and breakfast, IHOP has infused their fluffy flapjacks with gooey hunks of cheesecake. Next thing you know they’ll be serving breakfast with big scoops of ice cream and chocolate syrup. The best breakfast is one with protein and fresh fruit, but if you’re going to go for the carb-heavy indulgence, there’s a better way to do it. Don’t make it a habit, but IHOP’s Chocolate Chip Pancakes will save you 660 calories.  And it sounds better to me, anyway.  But then, I think most of you already know how I feel about chocolate!!

Eat This Instead!
Chocolate Chip Pancakes
610 calories

Scary Meal #3
Friendly’s Grilled Cheese BurgerMelt
1,500 calories
97 g fat (38 g saturated)
2,090 mg sodium

CALORIE EQUIVALENT: 15 Snickers Kudos Granola Bars

Is this a joke? Because it should be. Where a normal hamburger has buns, this one has grilled cheese sandwiches. Yes, that’s two grilled-cheese sandwiches with one hunk of ground beef wedged between them. Other iterations of this sandwich have been dubbed “fatty melts”—for obvious reasons. They have twice as much cheese and bread as a regular cheeseburger.  This is just plain GROSS.

Eat This Instead!
Grilled Cheese
790 calories
37 g fat (12 g saturated
1,280 mg sodium

Scary Meal #2
Uno Chicago Grill Lobster BLT Thin Crust Pizza
1,530 calories
87 g fat (30 g saturated)
3,480 mg sodium

CALORIE EQUIVALENT: 51 Nabisco Ginger Snap Cookies

On its own, lobster is sweet, healthy, and loaded with lean protein. Yet, for some reason, restaurants never seem to know what to do with it. Case in point: Lobster BLT Pizza, an amalgam of foods that don’t quite fit together: One is seafood, one is diner grub, and one is an Italian-American hybrid. We’re all for trying new things, but not when the toll is 75 percent of your day’s calories and 1½ day’s worth of sodium and saturated fat.

Eat This Instead!
Lobster Wrap with side of roasted vegetables  (YUMMY!!!!)
570 calories
30.5 g fat (4 g saturated)
1,660 mg sodium

DRUM ROLL PLEASE ………………………

Scary Meal #1
Applebee’s Provolone-Stuffed Meatballs with Fettuccine
1,550 calories
97 g fat (46 g saturated)
3,910 mg sodium

CALORIE EQUIVALENT: 148 Whoppers Malted Milk Balls

Yes, America has a cheese fetish, but this is just excessive. Cheese-filled meatballs? It’s like a beef-based Gusher, a sort of meaty water balloon of fat. Especially problematic is the fact that said meatballs are served on a bed of fettuccine Alfredo, which is basically flat noodles basting in oil, butter, and—yes—cheese. Cut more than a thousand calories by switching dishes. A smart swap like this one (and the hundreds of others in Eat This, Not That!)  a couple times a week and you can lose 2½ pounds a month without ever dieting! 

Eat This Instead!
Spicy Shrimp Diavolo
500 calories
10 g fat (3.5 g saturated)
1,910 mg sodium

Lucky for me, nothing in the top 5 even remotely sounded tasty to me … but several of the “Eat This Instead!” options did sound good and were reasonable in the total calories, fat and sodium.  This is just the tip of the dining out iceberg, and there are so many more items and options in the book.  From time to time I will share more in my blogs and on our website to help you become smarter, savvier and slimmer diners!  It will be an uphill battle, but if people don’t order this crap, restaurants won’t serve it!  It’s almost like eating your last meal, because any one of these could just place another nail in your coffin.  Sorry to be such a downer, but I’m not the one cooking this stuff, I’m not the selling it, and I’m not the one eating it … Just sayin’….

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic center located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida. 

Be sure to listen to my weekly radio show beginning Monday, September 10th at 2:00 pm Eastern Time at www.LifeImprovementRadio.com for more health and wellness information and to chat with me on the topics I cover.

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What Does Your Waist Say About Your Health?

The Battle of the Bulge wasn’t just fought in Europe during WWII, is is being fought every day in America!  But this modern day battle isn’t being fought on the ground – this fight is taking place at our midsection … our bellies, and losing this battle can be deadly.  Read more in this story that came off the AP News Wire:

If your pants are feeling a bit tight around the waistline, take note: Belly bulge can be deadly for older adults, even those who aren’t overweight or obese by other measures.

One of the largest studies to examine the dangers of abdominal fat suggests men and women with the biggest waistlines have twice the risk of dying over a decade compared to those with the smallest tummies.

Surprisingly, bigger waists carry a greater risk of death even for people whose weight is “normal” by the body mass index, or BMI, a standard measure based on weight and height.

“Even if you haven’t had a noticeable weight gain, if you notice your waist size increasing that’s an important sign,” said lead author Eric Jacobs of the American Cancer Society, which funded the study. “It’s time to eat better and start exercising more.”

Other research has linked waist size to dementia, heart disease, asthma and breast cancer.

Bulging bellies are a problem for most Americans older than 50. It’s estimated that more than half of older men and more than 70 percent of older women have bigger waistlines than recommended. And it’s a growing problem: Average waistlines have expanded by about an inch per decade since the 1960s.

To check your girth, wrap a tape measure around your waist at the navel. No fair sucking in your bulge. Men should have a waist circumference no larger than 40 inches. For women, the limit is 35 inches.

The new study, appearing in Monday’s Archives of Internal Medicine, is the first to analyze waist size and deaths for people in three BMI categories: normal, overweight and obese. In all three groups, waist size was linked to higher risk.

About 2 percent of people in the study had normal BMI numbers but larger than recommended waists. Jacobs said the risk increased progressively with increasing waist size, even at waist sizes well below what might be considered too large.

The study used data from more than 100,000 people who were followed from 1997 to 2006. Nearly 15,000 people died during that time.

The researchers crunched numbers on waist circumference, height and weight to draw conclusions about who was more likely to die. Study participants measured their own waists, so some honest mistakes and wishful fudging could have been included, the authors acknowledged.

Four extra inches around the waist increased the risk of dying from between 15 percent to 25 percent. Oddly, the strongest link – 25 percent - was in women with normal BMI.

People with bigger waists had a higher risk of death from causes including respiratory illnesses, heart disease and cancer.

The study was observational, a less rigorous approach that means the deaths could have been caused by factors other than waist size. But the researchers did take into account other risk factors for poor health, such as smoking and alcohol use.

Some older adults gain belly fat while they lose muscle mass, Jacobs said, so while they may not be getting heavier, they’re changing shape - and that’s taking a toll.

A tape measure, or a belt that doesn’t buckle the way it used to, “may tell you things your scale doesn’t,” Jacobs said.

Fat stored behind the abdominal wall may be more harmful than fat stored on the hips and thighs. Some scientists believe belly fat secretes proteins and hormones that contribute to inflammation, interfere with how the body processes insulin and raise cholesterol levels.

But Dr. Samuel Klein, an obesity expert at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, is skeptical about that theory. Removing belly fat surgically doesn’t lead to health improvements. That may mean it’s simply a stand-in for some other culprit that is causing both belly fat and poor health. Klein wasn’t involved in the new research.

Klein said the new study, while showing a link between waist size and mortality, doesn’t pinpoint exactly how much belly fat is dangerous for normal, overweight and obese people. The 40-inch for men and 35-inch for women cutoff points are irrelevant for many people, he said.

What can be done to fight belly fat? It’s the same advice as for losing weight. Eat fewer calories and burn more through walking, bicycling and other aerobic exercise. “Sit-ups are useless,” Klein said.

****

Ok, I will have to take issue with what Dr. Klein says about sit-ups.  I agree that you have to eat fewer calories and burn more through aerobic exercise, but sit-ups build muscle tissue, and increased muscle increases your metabolism.  Doing both aerobic exercise and sit-ups (and other strength training) is a win-win combination.  If you are looking for help in reducing your caloric in-take, call 727-525-1141 to schedule a consultation with one of our weight loss coaches at Remmel Wellness Center to develop a program that will work for you.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Family Fitness is Fun

Children dancing, International Peace Day 2009...
Image via Wikipedia

With obesity rates in kids on the rise, it isn’t surprising that health clubs are now creating family friendly fitness classes where children can work out with their mom or dad.    Tampa Bay Online (tbo.com) reports:

Kids across the country grow up going to the gym with Mom and Dad.

Ironically, as their parents head to spin class or the weight machines, most kids end up watching TV, playing video games or just hanging out in a designated, supervised kids-only zone.

That’s because fitness centers historically are adult-only playgrounds. Moms don’t get nagged or distracted by the rugrats, and trainers don’t have to watch out for 10-year-olds unable to fully navigate a treadmill’s speed control.

Facilities such as the YMCA and Lifestyle Family Fitness are passionate about exercise for children, but offerings usually segregate kids, teens and adults from one another. The generations simply don’t interact.

Megan Kullman and Audrey Engelberger don’t much like that idea. The St. Petersburg girls, ages 8 and 6, both have pleaded to join their mothers in classes at the St. Petersburg Lifestyle Family Fitness center they frequent. They hear the loud, rhythmic dance music and see a frenzied blur of activity, and ask why they can’t play, too.

A few months ago, Lifestyle decided it wanted to deviate from the old school of thought and launched family-friendly group exercise classes for adults and their children. Five of the 18 Tampa Bay-area Lifestyle locations offer at least one hour long Family Fit class each week.

Audrey, Megan and Megan’s younger brother, Adam, 5, are among the first kids attempting the “Body Attack” class. Megan and Adam’s mom, Katie Kullman, says it shows the kids how seriously she takes her exercise.

“It’s nice for them to see how hard it is. It’s not just bouncing around,” she says.

Body Attack instructor Susan Lyens says she doesn’t modify the high-intensity cardio workout because kids are there. Instead, she treats all students the same, pushing them all to keep stretching, squatting, jumping and leaping around the large studio. She does use the fact that kids are in the room to make sure adults – including about a dozen non-parents – keep going.

Most of the children in the class (usually about 10) remain for the entire hour. Older tweens and teens have a harder time staying focused. Audrey’s mom holds her 6-year-old’s hand whenever she struggles to keep the fast pace.

“I was impressed she made it all the way through the class,” Judy Engelberger says.

Younger children, up to age 10, need more water breaks than the adults, but they seem fascinated by the music and exercises with names such as Superman. Instructor Lyens, the mother of a 2-year-old, says Family Fit really works best with kids ages 4 and older.

Lifestyle traditionally requires kids to be 12 to sign up for a group fitness class, the most popular part of the national chain’s fitness programming. And it has had a lot of success with an annual teen fitness pass that gives youths 13 and older free access to the gym during the summer.

Carlene Childress, the center’s group fitness manager, says the fitness industry forgot how important it is to catch a child’s interest early, especially at a time when obesity is so prevalent. And like having a play place where parents can safely leave the kids, the family fitness idea is also good business.

“It takes care of us in the future,” she says. “If they love it as a kid, they will be our customer in the future.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Are you the Boss of Cake, or is Cake the Boss of You?

It has happened to me many times, and I know it has happened to you.  It’s after lunch, so everybody is full. Then, in comes a luscious chocolate delight. The sight, the smell—even the sound of the word “cake!”—stimulate the reward-and-pleasure circuits of the brain, activating memory centers and salivary glands as well.  You aren’t hungry, but you know you are going to eat a slice, and just because it tastes so good, it’s going to be a big slice!

Scholars have understood the different motives for eating as far back as Socrates, who counseled, “Thou shouldst eat to live, not live to eat.” But nowadays, scientists are using sophisticated brain-imaging technology to understand how the lure of delicious food can overwhelm the body’s built-in mechanism to regulate hunger and fullness, what’s called “hedonic” versus “homeostatic” eating.

One thing is clear: Obese people react much more hedonistically to sweet, fat-laden food in the pleasure and reward circuits of the brain than healthy-weight people do. Simply seeing pictures of tempting food can light up the pleasure-seeking areas of obese peoples’ brains.  I will bet you a big pile of brownies that my pleasure-seeking circuits could light up New York City when you put anything chocolate in front of me … particularly dark chocolate, or fudge/nut brownies with cream cheese icing, or chocolate chip cookies, or … oh, sorry – was that too much information?? :-)

Two conferences in July on obesity each examined aspects of how appetite works in the brain and why some people ignore their built-in fullness signals. Scientists hope that breakthroughs will lead to ways to retrain people’s thinking about food or weight-loss drugs that can target certain brain areas.

In a study presented last month at the International Conference on Obesity in Stockholm, researchers from Columbia University in New York showed pictures of cake, pies, french fries and other high-calorie foods to 10 obese women and 10 non-obese women and monitored their brain reactions on fMRI scans. In the obese women, the images triggered a strong response in the ventral tegmental area (VTA), a tiny spot in the midbrain where dopamine, the “desire chemical,” is released. The images also activated the ventral pallidum, a part of the brain involved in planning to do something rewarding.

“When obese people see high-calorie foods, a widespread network of brain areas involved in reward, attention, emotion, memory and motor planning is activated, and all the areas talk to each other, making it hard for them to resist,” says Susan Carnell, a research psychologist at the New York Obesity Research Center at Saint-Luke’s-Roosevelt Hospital and Columbia University and one of the investigators.

Similar brain reactions occurred in the obese subjects even when researchers merely said the words “chocolate brownie”—but not when they saw or heard about lower calorie foods such as cabbage and zucchini. Reactions were far less pronounced in the non-obese subjects.  Huh, go figure that cabbage and zucchini didn’t rate as chocolate brownie.  I LIKE cabbage and zucchini, but I can guarantee that my brain LOVES the chocolate brownie more.

“If you are of normal weight, your homeostatic mechanisms are functioning and controlling this region of the brain,” says lead investigator Dana Small. “But in the overweight group, there is some sort of dysfunction in the homeostatic signal so that even though they weren’t hungry, they were vulnerable to these external eating cues.”

Studies have found that a diet of sweet, high-fat foods can indeed blunt the body’s built-in fullness signals. Most of them emanate from the digestive tract, which releases chemical messengers including cholecystokinin, glucagon-like peptide and peptide YY when the stomach and intestines are full. Those signals travel up to the brain stem and then the hypothalamus, telling the body to stop eating.

Obesity also throws off the action of leptin, a hormone secreted by fat tissue that tells the hypothalamus how much energy the body has stored. Leptin should act as a brake against overeating, and it does in normal-weight people. But most obese people have an overabundance of leptin, and somehow their brains are ignoring the signal.

All these findings beg the question, which came first? Does obesity disrupt the action of leptin, or does a malfunction in leptin signaling make people obese?   Ah .. the classic chicken or the egg issue. 

Similarly, are some people obese because their brains overreact to tempting food, or do their brains react that way because something else is driving them to overeat? Researchers at Yale and elsewhere are turning to such questions next. “It’s possible that these changes reflect how the brain has adapted to eating patterns in obese people, and that could create a vicious circle, putting them at risk for even more disordered eating,” says Dr. Small.

There are plenty of other metabolic mysteries, too: Why are some “foodies” who get intense pleasure from eating able to stop when they’re full and others aren’t? Is the tendency to eat way past fullness genetic or learned behavior, and how much can it be changed?

The answers are still elusive, but neuroscientists and behavioral experts are finding some tantalizing clues.

Some fMRI studies have found that while tempting food stimulates the release of dopamine in obese people, they actually have fewer dopamine receptors than normal weight subjects do, so they may derive less pleasure from actually eating, setting up a craving for more.

Some of the most intriguing imaging studies have peered into the brains of people who have lost significant weight and kept it off through diet and exercise alone—although researchers say they’re hard to find.

“They are very controlled individuals, and they are very rare. We had to fly some in from Alaska,” says Angelo Del Parigi, a neuroimaging scientists who finally located 11 “post-obese” subjects who had dieted down to the lean range. In his studies for the National Institutes of Health’s diabetes research center in Phoenix, Dr. Del Parigi found that food still elicited strong responses in the middle insula and the hippocampus, brain areas involving addiction, reward, learning and memory, just like the 23 obese subjects did.

This suggests that the temptation to see food as pleasure doesn’t go away. “Post-obese people are extremely prone to regain weight,” says Dr. Del Parigi. “The only way they have to counteract these strong predispositions is by having a very controlled lifestyle, with restrained food intake and exercise.”

He and his colleagues at the NIH have observed that in PET scans, too. In another study, 17 people who had successfully lost weight had more activity in the dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex, a part of the brain involved in impulse-control in response to food than people who were still obese.

In short, successful weight losers seemed to have having second thoughts about eating on impulse, says Dr. Del Parigi. “These people see a piece of pie that is very inviting, but they think, ‘No, I have to diet. Otherwise, I will become obese again. I will suppress that pleasure,’ ” he says.

 Source:  The Wall Street Journal:  http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704288204575363072381955744.html?mod=rss_Lifestyle

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Never, Ever Eat These Two Foods After a Workout!

WEIFANG, CHINA - JULY 24:  Overweight students...
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Because we are a wellness center, we help people get and remain healthy.  We have a lot of tools in our arsenal, including weight loss and diet and exercise counseling.  You’d be surprised at how many people think they are doing something good for themselves, but unintentionally undermine their positive efforts with things that aren’t so good for them.  Here is a great example of the types of foods you should avoid after exercise so that you don’t negate all the hard work you put into your workout (courtesy of foodconsumer.org).

Don’t Eat This After Your Workout:  Did you know that what you eat directly after exercising – typically within two hours – can have a significant impact on the health benefits you reap from your exercise?

Consuming sugar within this post-exercise window, will negatively affect both your insulin sensitivity and your human growth hormone (HGH) production.

A recent study in the Journal of Applied Physiology found that eating a low-carbohydrate meal after aerobic exercise enhances your insulin sensitivity. This is highly beneficial, since impaired insulin sensitivity, or insulin resistance, is the underlying cause of type 2 diabetes and a significant risk factor for other chronic diseases, such as heart disease.

In addition, as HGH Magazine explains, consuming fructose, including that from fruit juices, within this two-hour window will decimate your natural HGH production:

“A high sugar meal after working out, or even a recovery drink (containing high sugar) after working out, will stop the benefits of exercise induced HGH. You can work out for hours, then eat a high sugar candy bar or have a high sugar energy drink, and this will shut down the synergistic benefits of HGH.

And If You Want to Increase The Effectiveness of Your Workout, do This:  … If you miss reaching HGH release during working out, you will still receive the calorie burning benefit from the workout.  However, you’ll miss the HGH “synergy bonus” of enhanced fat burning for two hours after working out.

This is an extremely important fact to remember if you want to cut body fat and shed a few pounds.

The University of Virginia research team demonstrated that carbohydrates are burned during exercise in direct proportion to the intensity of training.  Fat burning is also correlated with intensity.  However, the actual fat burning takes place after the workout, during the recovery.

This makes the “Synergy Window,” the 2 hour period after a workout, very important in maximizing HGH, once it’s released during exercise.

… If you are middle-age and want all the benefits from exercise induced HGH, then apply this strategy.”

Fitness expert Phil Campbell, author of Ready, Set, Go! further explains how you can maximize your HGH production by limiting sugar intake for two hours post exercise, in this article on HowToBeFit.com.

Exercising one hour a week and getting the same results as traditional strength training might sound impossible. However, University of Florida orthopedics researchers have developed a system that may do just that, and the kind of exercise you perform can dramatically reduce the time you spend in the gym while still getting better results than you did before.

The system created by University of Florida researchers uses eccentric (negative) resistance training, which capitalizes on the fact that the human body can support and lower weights that are too heavy to lift.

According to UF Health Science Center:

“Through a system of motors, pulleys, cams and sensors it adds weight when a person is performing a lowering motion, and removes that weight when the person is lifting. As a result, the body starts seeing loads, resistance, and forces that it doesn’t normally see”.

Other scientists have found additional clues that explain how exercise reshapes and strengthens more than just your muscles.

It changes your brain too.

Exercise Helps the Muscle Between Your Ears, Too:  In the late 1990s, researchers proved that human and animal brains produce new brain cells, and that exercise increases the process. But precisely how exercise affects the intricate workings of your brain at a cellular level remained a mystery.

However, a number of new studies have begun to identify the specific mechanisms, and have raised new questions about just how exercise reshapes your brain.

In some studies, scientists have been manipulating the levels of bone-morphogenetic protein (BMP) in the brains of mice. The more active BMP becomes, the more inactive your brain stem cells become and the fewer new brain cells you produce. Exercise reverses some of the effects of BMP.

According to the New York Times:

“BMP signaling was found to be playing a surprising, protective role for the brain’s stem cells … Without BMP signals to inhibit them, the stem cells began dividing rapidly, producing hordes of new neurons.”

Sources:

  UF Health Science Center February 23, 2010

  New York Times July 7, 2010

  PloS One October 20, 2009; 4(10):e7506

  Cell Stem Cell July 2, 2010; 7(1):78-89

  Journal of Applied Physiology December 31, 2009

  HGH Magazine

  HowToBeFit.com

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Solve Your Hot Flashes Naturally

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Ladies, are you hot?  Are you flashing?  (Are these trick questions???)  Do you want it to stop? I’m talking about your feeling of being hot, not your general hotness quotient!

Hot flashes are extremely common during menopause, impacting up to 75 percent of women. While not inherently dangerous to your health, they can be extremely uncomfortable and often interfere with your quality of life, especially if they occur frequently.

As their name implies, hot flashes involve intense feelings of heat that spread across your upper body and face. Flushing and red blotches may also occur, along with rapid heartbeat and perspiration.

Because hot flashes are so uncomfortable, they can interfere with sleep when they occur during the night, and over time may lead to chronic insomnia and related anxiety and even depression in some women.

Unfortunately, many women desperate for some relief are prescribed drugs, either synthetic hormones or even antidepressants, and gladly take them, thinking they’re the only options.

In reality, there are natural ways to lessen the severity of hot flashes and get relief without damaging your health with drug side effects.

Overweight women who experience the uncomfortable flushing and sweating symptoms known as hot flashes may be able to avoid the problem by losing weight.

In a new study, researchers re-analyzed data from a study that included about 150 overweight and obese menopausal women who were experiencing urinary incontinence
 as well as troublesome hot flashes.

Roughly two-thirds of the women were assigned to an intensive program designed to help them lose up to 9 percent of their body weight.

According to CNN:

“Six months later, the women who participated in the weight-loss program were more than twice as likely as the women in the control group to have experienced an improvement in their hot flash symptoms.
And it wasn’t enough to just get more exercise or cut calories — only weight loss itself was linked to fewer hot flash symptoms.

For each 11 pounds that a woman lost, she was roughly one-third more likely … to experience a decline in the severity or frequency of hot flashes.”

Sources: 
CNN July 12, 2010
Archives of Internal Medicine July 12, 2010; 170(13):1161-7

A Hormone-Healthy Lifestyle
While it’s not known for sure why some women experience hot flashes and others don’t, it’s likely related to the fluctuating hormone levels that occur during menopause.

Both estrogen and progesterone are necessary in the female cycle, and their balance is key for optimal health.  Many women have an imbalance of these hormones during their lifetimes, regardless of their age. And if you have insufficient levels of progesterone to counter excessive estrogen, this imbalance can be further exacerbated by chronic stress.

So in some cases, addressing your stress levels will help normalize your hormone levels naturally.

Likewise, eating right for your nutritional type and exercising regularly can go a long way to keeping your hormones balanced as you age.

Refined carbohydrates, processed and heated fats, empty foods — and too much of it — all serve to raise your estrogen to abnormal levels, as much as twice the normal, which are maintained for the better part of the adult lives of most American women. This is a MAJOR contributing cause of menopausal symptoms in the first place.

Additionally, natural phytoestrogens (plant-estrogens) found in plants like licorice, fermented soybeans, alfalfa, and many others, eaten before menopause will do much to moderate your day-to-day estrogen level so that when menopause arrives, there will not be such big drop.

Meanwhile, implementing a regular exercise regimen will optimize your insulin levels and balance your estrogen levels. Estrogen levels are much lower in women who eat little and perform strenuous physical work, as in locales with a non-industrialized lifestyle.

The opposite is true for American women who typically eat too much and get little exercise: abnormally high estrogen levels are the direct result of this kind of sedentary lifestyle.

We also advise optimizing your vitamin D levels and getting plenty high quality animal-based omega-3 fats, such as krill oil. Both of these strategies are essential for optimal health at every life stage.

So ladies, I have given you some really solid tips to help you deal with those pesky hot flashes, and guys … share this info with the women you love – it may just save your life or relationship!!!  After all, when your wife is happy, everyone is happy :-)  

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic office in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Weight Loss Pill Rejected by FDA

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Sad news for all you fatties out there …. you know who you are … there still isn’t a “quick fix” for you.  Yet another wight loss pill has been rejected because of the risks associated with it.  Hmmm …. maybe popping a pill isn’t the best way to loose weight?

A panel of federal health experts dealt a surprising setback Thursday to a highly anticipated anti-obesity pill from Vivus Inc., saying the drug’s side effects outweigh its ability to help patients lose weight.

The Food and Drug Administration panel voted 10-6 against Vivus’s Qnexa, citing uncertainty about the potential risks that could come with long-term use of the drug. The FDA will consider the panel’s ruling and make its own decision on the drug in coming months.

Panelists unanimously agreed the drug helps patients lose pounds, with most reporting more than 10 percent weight loss. But those benefits were outweighed by a slew of safety concerns that cropped up in company trials, including memory lapses, suicidal thoughts, heart palpitations and birth defects.  Oookkaaayyyy…. sign me up for those side effects!?!?

“Some of these side effects are serious and could be life-threatening and must be weighed against a relatively modest weight loss,” said the panel’s chair, Kenneth Burman of the Washington Hospital Center.

 ”You got the sense that a lot of people had a little bit of hesitancy,” said Eric Coleman, deputy director of the FDA’s metabolism division. “They weren’t strongly against the drug but they had enough concerns to make them lean towards ‘no.’”

Qnexa is a combination of two older drugs: the amphetamine phentermine and topiramate, an anticonvulsant drug sold by Johnson & Johnson as Topamax. According to the company, phentermine helps suppress appetite, while topiramate makes patients feel more satiated.

Vivus representatives told panelists the company’s drug fills an important gap between current treatment options.

Current weight loss drugs on the market such as Roche’s Xenical and Abbott Laboratory’s Meridia offer weight loss in the five percent range. Bariatric surgery can help patients lose 30 to 35 percent, though complications with the operation can be life-threatening.

The quest for a blockbuster weight loss drug has been plagued for decades by safety issues. The most notable was Wyeth’s diet pill-drug combination, fen-phen, which was pulled off the market in 1997 because of links to heart-valve damage and lung problems.

With U.S. obesity rates nearing 35 percent of the adult population, people need to take a good hard look at themselves and what they are doing to their bodies and their health.  The ONLY safe way to lose weight and and keep it off is by changing your lifestyle by changing your relationship with food, drink and exercise.

At the Remmel Wellness Center, we help our patients lose weight in a medically supervised environment using Ideal Protein meal replacement products, along with weight loss coaching, support groups and mental health counceling and a full package of exercise tools – from motivational coaching, to classes and discounted gym memberships.  A weight loss consultation is always complimentary, so call 727-525-1141 today!

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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The Power of Gentle Reminder

56/365 morning run
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I hear excuses all the time as to why people don’t exercise.  It all boils down to this:  a lack of motivation.  Getting started in any new routine can be difficult.  Maintaining that routine so that it becomes habit is just as hard.  What just about every person on the face of the planet needs is some external accountability and motivation… a gentle nudge or reminder.  This article from the Wall Street Journal details the results of a study done by Stanford University on the effectiveness of that reminder.  Read the following and then decide if the woman in the story sounds like you.

Unable to push herself to exercise, Ruthanne Lowe joined a research study aimed at motivating the sedentary with a surprisingly simple technique—an occasional telephone reminder.

“It really did work,” says Ms. Lowe, a 66-year-old housewife in San Jose, Calif. Three years after the study ended, she says, “I’m doing more exercise than I ever did in my life.”

The study, conducted by Stanford University, belongs to a growing body of research showing that small amounts of social support, ranging from friends who encourage each other by email to occasional meetings with a fitness counselor, can produce large and lasting gains against one of America’s biggest health problems—physical inactivity. Only 48% of Americans say they meet the federal recommendation for exercising half an hour most days of the week, and the actual percentage is believed to be much lower. Exercise researchers estimate that nearly all sedentary people at one time or another have resolved and failed to maintain exercise programs.

In the Stanford study, 218 people were divided into three groups. After an introductory session, during which Ms. Lowe established a goal of walking half an hour most days of the week, a Stanford health educator called her and other members of her group every three weeks, on average, for a year to ask about their compliance and to cheer them on. A second group of participants received calls not from humans but from a computer programmed to make similar inquiries.

The caller, whether human or computer, asked the participants to recite the amount of exercise they performed during the past week. Participants were then congratulated on any exercise performed, and asked how the level might be increased in the week ahead. When lapses occurred, as they invariably did because of illness, travel or unforeseeable events, the goal was to impress upon participants the importance of resuming the workout as soon as possible. All questions were designed to encourage rather than to scold.

After 12 months, participants receiving calls from a live person were exercising, as a mean, about 178 minutes a week, above government recommendations for 150 minutes a week. That represented a 78% jump from about 100 minutes a week at the start of the study. Exercise levels for the group receiving computerized calls doubled to 157 minutes a week. A control group of participants, who received no phone calls, exercised 118 minutes a week, up 28% from the study’s start. “When you knew you were going to have to report back on what you had done, it motivated you,” says Ms. Lowe.

The researchers checked in with participants after 18 months and found that their exercise patterns had changed little from the 12-month level. But the study didn’t monitor participants’ beyond that.

Some studies by other researchers have suggested that after eight weeks of regular exercising many people can settle into a long-term habit of working out.

Abby King, a Stanford professor of medicine and health research and policy who conducted this study, published in 2007 in the journal Health Psychology, and other similar studies, says people trying to change unhealthy behaviors generally need something more than willpower. “Whether it’s smoking or alcohol use or physical inactivity, social support helps prevent against relapse,” says Dr. King. But the support doesn’t have to be constant. “A light touch can have a lasting effect,” she says.

Even many of the nation’s most committed exercisers have trouble doing it on their own. At 73, for instance, Marty Mennan is an elite age-group swimmer who strokes across the pool several miles a week, a habit dating back to his years as a competitive college swimmer. But his regimen depends on him belonging to a master’s swim group that provides social support. “From age 55 to 65, I really didn’t exercise at all, because my master’s group had disbanded,” says Mr. Mennan, a retired school teacher in Columbus, Ind., who now drives 40 miles to Indianapolis several times a week to swim with a group.

Mr. Mennan belongs to the 35% to 40% of Americans who prefer to work out in groups. Like alcoholics who can stay sober only with the help of 12-step meetings, these athletes owe their high levels of fitness to running, cycling or swimming clubs.

But surveys show that about 60% of Americans prefer working out alone, especially people who have reached middle age and older who may socialize less frequently in groups. Many lone runners say they come up with solutions to personal and professional problems while exercising. And they often resent the constraints of working out according to somebody else’s schedule. “I’m very gregarious and extroverted, yet I don’t want my exercise schedule hooked into somebody else’s,” says Rita Horiguchi, a 64-year-old self-described former couch potato who with the help of Stanford University learned to work out on her own.

The research coming out of Stanford and other universities essentially calls for such people to join a group or program while continuing to exercise on their own. A study due to be published soon in the International Journal of Sport and Exercise Psychology, found that two group-counseling sessions, conducted over a three-month period, produced after three months a quadrupling of exercise levels and an even greater jump at nine months, long after the intervention had ended. By contrast, the exercise level of a control group rose during the study period but at nine months had returned to near-baseline levels. The study involved 119 participants with an average age in the mid 50s.

“This study demonstrated that group dynamics strategies can be [effective] when participants are away from the group or even once the group ceases to exist,” writes lead author Paul A. Estabrooks, a professor of exercise science at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Dr. King, of Stanford, says that in setting up her studies she advertises for people who are physically inactive. By contrast, she says, ads for health clubs and personal trainers tend to feature photographs of young and buff clients, a marketing tactic that can make the sedentary feel marginalized. “The sedentary are a silent majority who are bombarded by images of active people,” says Dr. King. She says her advertisements for “couch potatoes” alleviate participant concerns about feeling inadequate.

Dr. King’s studies have found that telephone interventions of nearly every kind increase the exercise levels of previously sedentary people. One limitation is that the studies by definition attract people who are eager to change. Even so, participants who receive phone calls as infrequently as once a month have consistently boosted their exercise levels above control groups receiving no such calls, she says.

Despite the popular notion that Americans divide cleanly into the active and the sedentary, most people spend time in both camps. For weeks at a time, Dr. King says she sometimes joins the ranks of the sedentary. By nature a solitary exerciser, she says that when the going gets tough, “I join a small class.”

Some gyms have begun to incorporate the lessons of exercise-adherence research. The YMCA in Chicago recently conducted a study in which in it called members to monitor their success at reaching workout goals. If a member falls short one week, the caller would ask why, then gently prod the member to think of a way that a missed session of exercise could have been made up. “The idea is not to give them the answers, but to encourage them to solve their own exercise problems,” says Mary Ganzel, a YMCA exercise expert who led the study.

In a growing number of states, health officials are sponsoring exercise programs that enable residents to join teams while working out on their own. An annual program called Walk Kansas, for instance, divides tens of thousands of participants into teams of six, with each team expected to walk the width of Kansas, about 430 miles, in eight weeks. Team members walk on their own but report their weekly mileage to each other. An academic study of the Kansas program, which just concluded its ninth year, has found that participants continue exercising far above their original levels long past the end of the contest.

“You don’t want to let your team members down,” says Angel Patterson-Tetuan, a registered nurse who recently completed Walk Kansas for her second consecutive year. She credits the program with helping her lose 40 pounds and develop a year-round exercise regime.

“I used to be able to tell you what was on television every night,” says Mrs. Patterson-Tetuan, a 42-year-old mother of three. “Now I have no idea. I’m up and moving, and so are my children.”

If you need a little motivation, partner up with a friend, neighbor or family member with similar goals to partner up with you.  You don’t need to actually exercise together if you prefer to exercise along (like I do), but it is nice to have that accountability.  If you don’t have anyone you trust to keep you going in a positive, supportive manner, Remmel Wellness Center offers motivational exercise coaching through individual weekly phone calls for only $15 a month.  Having a professional help you through the inevitable ups and downs can make all the difference in establishing a habit that will last a lifetime.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center – a full service chiropractic and wellness facility in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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