
10.08.07 | Is a high-protein diet good for you? By Alice Lesch Kelly, EatingWell.com
Lunch is served: a beautiful spinach salad topped with a half-cup of chickpeas, three ounces of chicken, two hard-boiled egg whites and a drizzle of olive oil and vinegar, along with a glass of skim milk. It's a healthful meal that's low in saturated fat and calories, high in fiber and rich in a variety of nutrients. Eat a salad like this and you can feel virtuous all afternoon.
Or can you? This lunch weighs in with 48 grams of protein—two grams more than a woman is advised to eat in an entire day. Add a cup of low-fat plain yogurt and the meal provides more protein than a man needs in a day.
That's just lunch—eat cereal with milk for breakfast, a handful of nuts for an afternoon snack, and fish or meat for dinner, and you may take in twice the recommended intake of protein.
Millions of Americans have jumped onto the high-protein diet bandwagon, saying that the diets help them lose weight. But is a high-protein diet good for you?
Kidney Watch
The short answer is yes—provided your kidneys are in good health. "To the best of our knowledge, you're not damaging your kidneys by eating too much protein," says Johanna Dwyer, professor of medicine at the Tufts University School of Medicine.
When you eat a food that contains protein, the digestive system breaks it down into amino acids and dumps urea, a waste product, into the blood stream. The kidneys remove urea from the blood and dispose of it via the urine. Eating large amounts of protein forces your kidneys to work harder to remove urea from the blood. Kidneys can handle the job if they are healthy. However, if someone with kidney disease eats a high-protein diet, kidney function can worsen as the organs struggle to eliminate large amounts of urea.
More than 20 million Americans have chronic kidney disease, but most don't know it, according to the National Kidney Foundation. An additional 20 million—primarily people with diabetes—have an above-average chance of developing kidney disease. If you have diabetes or any health condition that puts you at risk for kidney disease, you should talk with your doctor about the amount of protein in your diet. Your doctor may want to do a simple blood test that measures kidney function.
If you have healthy kidneys, beefing up the protein in your diet can have some benefits. It takes longer to feel hungry after a protein-rich meal than after a meal that is mainly carbohydrates. And that can translate to weight loss, as anyone who has lost weight on the Atkins diet will tell you.
The Bone Connection
Protein is connected to bone health, too. In the past, researchers believed excess protein contributed to osteoporosis. "That was the common thinking until recently because high protein intakes lead to higher urinary calcium losses," says Connie Weaver, head of the Department of Foods and Nutrition at Purdue University. Now, researchers know more about how to measure calcium retention in the body, and they have found that high protein intake does not sap calcium from the bones. "In fact, seniors who consume a high-protein diet have fewer hip fractures than those who do not," Weaver says.
Fat Company
Protein often gets a bad rap because of the company it keeps. Many protein-rich foods are loaded with artery-clogging saturated fat and cholesterol. However, lean meats, fat-free dairy products, legumes and fish provide protein without a lot of saturated fat.
Even if it is low in saturated fat and cholesterol, however, a high-protein diet lacks nutritional luster if high-protein foods replace the fresh fruits, vegetables and whole grains that supply vitamins, minerals, fiber and other nutrients that protein can't deliver.
A high-protein diet seems safe for healthy people. Although "few studies have rigorously examined the effects of a high-protein intake over long periods of time," says Paul Schmitz, professor of internal medicine at Saint Louis University, "frankly, I am more concerned about the shift to a high consumption of certain saturated and unsaturated fats in the Western diet. A balanced approach to nutrition is best."
06.08.07 | Get The Skinny On Fat Chances are, you're carrying this around. And we've found a better way to get rid of it.
By Lou Schuler, Men's Health
If there's a god of weight loss, he's probably laughing.
For the past 40 years, virtually every weight-loss model has been based on the same principles, and virtually all of them have been wrong. The experts intoned, "Eat less, exercise more." They said that weight loss is all about "calories in, calories out." They informed us that a pound of fat contained roughly 3,500 calories, so if you simply deleted 500 calories from your daily meals or increased your daily exercise by 500 calories, or some combination thereof, you'd lose a pound of fat a week. And if you wanted to lose 2 pounds a week, you just had to double your savings to 1,000 calories a day.
Which is exactly how an anorexic would approach the problem: Starve and strain until you get that perfect, fat-free body, regardless of the muscle you lose or the damage you inflict on your metabolism. And if Lara Flynn Boyle has the body you want, go right ahead and try it.
For the benefit of the rest of you, I want to make two arguments, supported by the latest nutrition and exercise science. That science points toward a new, improved approach to weight loss. First, I want to show that when you eat has a profound effect on how your body deals with the calories you feed it. And I want to present a more sophisticated approach to exercise. This approach not only preserves your body's metabolism, the key to weight control, but also makes more productive use of your precious time and energy.
Grab a bite to eat, then chew on this.
10 lb of Fat
According to a Gallup poll, the average man believes he's overweight by the equivalent of the pile of lard pictured above. He's right, and it's likely gathering around his gut. Sure, he can easily hide it under a sweater, but abdominal fat is the worst kind, surreptitiously releasing fatty acids and other toxic substances that increase your risk of disease. Make that 39 diseases. Maybe you ought to nip this in the bud, huh?
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