Tuesday, May 19, 2009

How to Use Acai Berry for Weight Loss

How to Use Acai Berry for Weight Loss


How to Use Acai Berry for Weight Loss

I learned of a new superfood called Acai Berry that is used for weight loss. Since I'm always wary of big weight loss claims made by certain companies, I decided to do some research before I actually jumped on board.

The verdict? I've discovered that Acai Berry is filled with vitamins and minerals that can aid in weight loss, building muscle and increasing overall energy—and is rich in antioxidants, fatty acids, fiber and other plant compounds that can increase your health.

I don't believe that Acai Berries hold a "magic key" that will help you lose weight, but it will help make your body healthy. When your body is healthy and well-balanced, it will be easier to reach your perfect weight.

Here are ways to reap the benefits from Acai Berries.


Things You'll Need:

  • Fresh, Dried or Frozen Acai Berries
  • Acai Berry Liquid Supplement
  • Acai Berry Capsules
  1. Step 1

    If you have a health store near you, you can purchase fresh, frozen or dried Acai Berries if you can find them. Or you can purchase them in this form online. Since it is a nutrient-rich food, you can cook with it and add it to your favorite recipes. It works well as a cereal topping, in granola, smoothies, yogurt, on low-fat ice cream and in things like muffins and cookies (as long as they're low fat!).

  2. Step 2

    You can also find Acai in the form of a liquid extract. The benefit of taking Acai in this form is that the nutrients will be super concentrated. Also, if you live in a climate where Acai Berries don't grow, this can be a good way to get it as fresh and concentrated as possible.

  3. Step 3

    If you want, you can also take Acai in capsule form. Capsules are good if you want to take Acai as easily as possible and still receive the benefits. If you make it a part of your daily vitamin and mineral regimen it will be easier to take it consistently.



Tips & Warnings
  • Follow a healthy diet and exercise in order to use Acai for weight loss in the most beneficial way.
  • Contact your doctor to make sure it's OK for you to take Acai.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Traditional Japanese Diet Recipes for Health

Japanese traditional diet recipes for health

Stay Young & Slim with the Chopstick Diet

The traditional Japanese diet is said to be one of the healthiest in the world. Have you ever wondered: well, is Japanese food really that healthy? If so, why? And just what do they eat anyway? If you would like to find tasty, practical Japanese recipes, based on traditional Japanese food, which anyone can make
find out how and why this food can improve your chances of a longer, healthier life

enjoy a different cuisine and impress your friends with your culinary skills ...
find out how to eat a Japanese meal properly (e.g. in a restaurant)....
find suppliers of ingredients and other goods....
find further advice on health, nutrition, diet and weight control ...
then ...
you've come to the right place!

It is now widely recognised that a Japanese-influenced diet can help you to stay healthy and protect you from many Western diseases such as cancer, heart disease, strokes, diabetes, obesity, other cardiovascular problems such as clogged arteries, etc ...

AND it can help you to stay young and energetic - you can stop filling the cracks and throw away that anti-aging cream after you read about the amazing secret food which is seen as the next best thing to a efountain of eternal youth!!

Smoking is very common among Japanese men (especially) and they often lead a very stressful, competitive lifestyle, epitomising the work hard, play hard image. And there is as much pollution in Japan as any other typical industrialised country....

... And yet - the Japanese are among the healthiest and most long-lived people on Earth, certainly among industrialised nations, despite high levels of pollution, stress, tobacco and alcohol. Almost one third of the 125 million inhabitants are of pensionable age - one of the highest proportions in the industrialised world.

96% fewer men suffer coronary heart disease in Japan than in Britain
Only six in 100,000 Japanese women contract breast cancer - 20 times fewer than in Britain (UK Daily Mail eEat for Immunity supplement, Feb 2002)

Those who do suffer Western diseases probably do so largely as a result of adopting a partly Western diet for reasons of fashion (people who are taken in by the hype of the junk-food merchants) or convenience - instant meals.
Money will not solve the problems.

We constantly hear demands for more money to be given to the health service. This would no doubt help to provide a better service, e.g. shorter waiting times, but it will not improve our overall health. The USA spends more money on health care than any other country, yet still suffers shockingly high rates of heart disease, cancer, obesity and all the other diet and lifestyle related illnesses (which means most of them!)

Britain has the highest rate of heart disease in the world, and in both countries around 1 in 3 people are affected by cancer - a rate which continues to rise despite the BILLIONS spent on research over the years.

A Change of Heart
- is what we need. No, not a transplant! That is the whole point: too many people neglect or even abuse their bodies, thinking that if they fall ill (as they surely will) the doctors can make everything all right. Sometimes - but not always - they can. But at what cost, in terms of both finance and personal suffering? Much better not to get ill in the first place! To use a motoring analogy: instead of taking the car to the repair shop to patch up the mess, it's much better to avoid the collision! An ounce of prevention is worth a ton of cure.

You may have heard of double Nobel prize winner Linus Pauling, whose research indicated that almost all diseases (and our ability to fight them) can be linked, directly or indirectly, to what we eat and drink - and also, some would add, to what we breathe in and absorb through the skin.

It is perfectly logical that if you regularly consume the wrong food and drink your body will suffer sooner or later. If you look after your body, you will be spared this unnecessary suffering and actually enjoy a long, healthy life. Which would you prefer???

The information contained in these pages is for educational purposes only. It is based on the research and resulting opinions of the author (except where otherwise stated) who is not a qualified doctor and it is not intended to diagnose or treat any medical condition and should not be construed as medical advice nor used as a substitute for professional health care. Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure the information is correct but no responsibility can be accepted for inaccuracies, errors or omissions.

The Basics - Read Me First!

A general introduction to Japanese food and etiquetteHealth by omission: what they don't eat A diet can be healthy not only because of the good things it includes but also because of what it does NOT include, avoiding food which is bad for us.

Rice - the Japanese way Rice: Japanese rice and how to cook it. It's different!

Fish - Fish is a much healthier option than meat and is at the centre of most Japanese meals.

Sushi - not only raw fish! Sushi is not raw fish, but a way of eating rice. There are several varieties, some of which are eaten with fish ...

Seaweed - Seaweed is one of the healthiest foods. Read why most Japanese eat it every day.

Miso - Miso (soya bean paste) is an important and healthy ingredient in Japanese cooking. Used for soups and flavouring.

Magic potatoes - 'Magic' potatoes with natural anti-aging, life-enhancing properties

Green tea - Green tea, often drunk in Japan, has important health properties - far more than you may think

Tofu - Tofu is one of the best sources of protein without the fat and calories of meat and dairy. It also has important anti-cancer and other health boosting qualities.

Shiitake - Shiitake mushrooms are a common ingredient in Japanese cooking and have a range of important health benefits.

Calcium and bone disease (Osteoporosis) If Japanese people don't eat cheese or drink milk, why do they not suffer more widely from bone disease? Where do they get their calcium?

Protein - Protein: why it is essential, and why meat is not the answer

Fruit - Fruit is a popular dessert in Japan, and vital for health. Not all fruit is the same everywhere ...

Vegetables - Vegetables are obviously an important element in a Japanese diet as many people there are (or at least have been, traditionally) semi-vegetarian.

Noodles - Noodles can be used for a quick, easy, healthy snack. Recipe for soba (Japanese buckwheat noodles) - delicious in hot weather

Japanese Restaurants - Japanese restaurants, sushi bar, tea room and other eating places. Where and what to eat, useful tips.

Recipes - Recipes based on Japanese food, specially selected for ease, practicality and appeal to a wide range of tastes, including non-Japanese.

So a sensible Japanese diet will make you get slim and stay slim - AND healthy.

Stay Young and Slim - Japanese Lifestyle and Diet

Japanese diet is low in fat, high in carbohydrates, devoid of dairy foods and rich in soy foods, and for this reason the Japanese enjoy the longest life-span in the world, with much lower rates of heart disease, osteoporosis, breast and prostate cancer than the US.

Close examination of the traditional Japanese diet proves that, although very different from Western diets, Japanese cuisine embodies all the principles of nourishing traditional foodways. It is rich in fat-soluble vitamins from seafood and organ meats and in minerals from fish broth, and contains plenty of lacto-fermented foods. Japanese preparation techniques eliminate most of the antinutrients in grains and legumes. As long as the Japanese get enough to eat, their diet is a healthy diet in surprising ways.

STAPLES

Rice is the main carbohydrate food in Japan, consumed with every meal. For the poor, it is the chief source of calories. However, the real basis of the Japanese diet is not rice but fish, consumed at more than 154 pounds per person per year most one-half pound per day. This is about the same amount by weight as rice, but in terms of calories, fish provides a greater amount for most of the Japanese.

Fish consumed in Japan come from waters surrounding the island nation and from around the world. Japan imports millions of dollars worth of shrimp, salmon, trout and tuna every year. In addition, carp is farmed in fresh inland waters.

Fish is usually eaten fresh even delivered to the door by fishmongers but it is also consumed in salted, dried and pickled form. Fresh fish is grilled or baked and also eaten raw (sashimi). Generally there are two fish courses at each meal, one of cold fish and one of hot.

A typical fish dish is hoshizakana, which is fish that has been marinated for 20 hours in a mixture of soy sauce and sweet white wine, then hung up for one day to dry. Then it is baked in the oven and served plain, without any sauce.2

Soups made of fish, including the organs and bones, are considered strengthening foods and good for anemia. Carp soup is traditionally given to women after childbirth. It is made from the whole carp, including the head, bones, eyes and all the organs except the gall bladder, and cooked four to eight hours with barley miso and burdock root. It is eaten four days in a row after the birth of the child, even longer if the mother has difficulty producing plentiful milk.3

The Japanese also eat many other animal foods including beef, pork, chicken, duck and eel. Beef consumption has climbed in recent years, some of it locally raised but much of it imported. The famous Kobe beef is tender and full of fat.
The Japanese even import large quantities of beef offal.4 Consumption of beef liver, tripe and other organ meats is commonplace. Various organ meats are usually served at specialty restaurants. Eel served at restaurants is often accompanied with a soup containing eel innards.

Beef, pork and chicken are usually grilled and served with a sauce that contains soy sauce along with other ingredients such as merin (a sweet wine), sake (rice wine), vinegar or sugar.

Soy beans are a distinguishing feature of the Japanese diet, particularly fermented soy sauce used in most prepared dishes. Almost without exception, Japanese sauces and marinades are based on soy sauce. But it would be a mistake to call soy a "staple" in the Japanese diet, in the way that fish and rice are staples. Dietary surveys indicate that the Japanese consume an average of about 1/4 cup of soy products per day, including the ubiquitous soy sauce.5 Other soy foods include tofu, a precipitated product, and fermented soy foods such as miso, tempeh and natto. Until recently, these foods were produced at home or by artisans. They are added in small amounts to soups or used as seasonings. Natto has such a strong smell that restaurants serving it have separate natto-eating sections so that non-natto eaters can be spared the overpowering odor.

Almost all the soybeans used in Japan today are imported and there is a big demand for organic, non-GMO soybeans.

A typical recipe for homemade miso calls for 5 kg soy beans, a whopping 3 kg salt and 8 wafers of malted rice (about 1" by 5" by 10" each).6 The beans are cooked, mashed, mixed with the malted rice and salt and formed into balls. The balls are put into a big bucket lined with a thick plastic bag. The bag is then closed and a 5 kg weight put on top. Six months later the miso is ready.
A 1935 recipe for tofu calls for soaking dry soybeans in water for a day, pounding them with a stone mortar, straining into square molds and mixing with brine.7 They are then boiled until they become hard and firm.

The Japanese recognize that soybeans need careful processing to remove naturally occurring toxins. When they eat beans that are simply cooked, they use small red ones called azuki. A dish of cooked rice and red beans is made for festive occasions, such as weddings and births. Red beans are also used to make sweet cakes.

The Japanese are said to avoid milk products but the statistics prove otherwise. Average consumption of dairy foods in Japan is about 186 pounds per person per year, more than the total for fish.8 This is only one-third the amount consumed in the US, but it is not negligible. Dairy products used in Japan include milk, yoghurt and butter. Japan has a small dairy industry but also imports milk products from Australia and New Zealand.

In general, the Japanese do not like sugary desserts. But they enjoy pounded rice (mochi) covered with sweet bean paste. They also enjoy mashed sweet potato or chestnuts covered with breading.

Noodles made with wheat flour, egg yolks and salt are an important feature in the Japanese diet. They may also be made with rice, sweet potato or buckwheat. Noodles are usually eaten with chicken or duck, sometimes with lobster and often in broth.

A great variety of vegetables and fruits are sold in the shops and markets. Favorites include daikon radish, eggplant, bamboo shoots and many types of mushrooms. Most vegetables are consumed cooked, not raw. Instead of salads, boiled spinach or watercress is served cold and seasoned with soy sauce.

The Japanese diet may seem monotonous to Westerners, but the Japanese actually put a great emphasis on variety. In nutrition classes, Japanese children are taught to eat thirty different foods a day, and to aim for 100 different foods a week.

MAKING BROTH

A fundamental component of the Japanese diet is fish broth, made in a variety of ways. Japanese chefs take much pride in developing an individual style with broths. Fish soup made from arajiru, the discarded portions of the fish such as the head and bones, was traditionally a common breakfast food. (The meat is deftly removed from the head with chopsticks, especially the meat behind the eye, which is extremely rich in vitamin A.) Usually, however, fish stock is made with dried sardines (niboshi) or dried bonito flakes or powder (katsuobushi). In the old days, the bonito could be purchased as a block of dried fish. The block was shaved into flakes with a "shaving box," a wooden box with a thin slot lined with a blade. The block of dried fish was run along the blade and the shavings would fall into a drawer inside the box. When the desired amount of shavings had been produced, the drawer was pulled out and the contents dumped into a pot of boiling water.

Sometimes broken-up chicken bones are added to the stockpot. The broth is transformed into soup with the addition of vegetables, chicken, pork, tofu or eggs.

Other nourishing broths are made with dried kelp (kombu) or dried shiitake mushrooms. The mushrooms are placed in a pot of water and just before the water comes to a boil, the mushrooms are taken out and the dried sardines or bonito flakes are added.

BRAIN FOODS

Egg consumption in Japan is higher than in America (40 pounds per person per year, versus 34 in the US).10 The Japanese consider eggs to be a brain food. The story is told of a woman whose husband was killed during the war. She had an infant son and throughout the following years she gradually sold off all of her furniture to provide her boy with one egg per day, "so that he could go to college." The boy grew up to be an intelligent child and, in fact, did go to college in the postwar years. Eggs are consumed as omelets, custards and in soups. They are also an important ingredient in noodles and batters.

Another brain food in the Japanese diet is seaweed, added to soups and used for wrapping sushi. It is also served as a vegetable. Agar-agar, a gelatin-like product used extensively in Japan, is derived from seaweed.

Seaweed provides an abundance of minerals, particularly iodine so vital for normal thyroid function. Normal thyroid function is, in turn, vital for normal brain function. It is the presence of adequate iodine in the traditional Japanese diet that makes it possible for the Japanese to consume soy products on a daily basis without adverse effects on the thyroid gland.

FATS AND OILS

The Japanese have traditionally used a variety of fats and oils. Delicious tempura vegetables and fish dipped in batter and then deep fried as cooked in sesame oil, rapeseed oil, whale oil, lard or beef tallow. That was in the olden days. Today, the Japanese are more likely to fry in cheap commercial vegetable oils. But even today, lard is available at the grocery stores in squeezable bottles and skillets in the better restaurants are greased with beef fat and lard. Use of shortening and margarine is rare.

Since World War II, the pattern of lipid intake has changed markedly in Japan. There has been a threefold increase in the intake of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids, a reflection of increased prosperity that has allowed the Japanese to subsist on more than fish heads and rice.

Unfortunately, with the advent of cheap vegetable oils and processed foods, there has also been an increase in omega-6 fatty acids along with a lowering of the levels of omega-3 fatty acids. In a milestone review, published in 1997,11 Japanese investigators blamed the increase in cancer, heart disease, inflammatory disease such as asthma and allergies, and even behavioral problems in Japan not on increases in saturated fat, but on increases in omega-6 vegetables oils. "Decreasing the n-6/n-3 ratio of foods is recommended for the suppression of ageing, carcinogenesis and atherosclerosis," they said. "This is because n-3 fatty acids suppress but n-6 fatty acids stimulate ischaemia/inflammation which causes increased free radical injuries. We suggest that a relative n-3 deficiency as evidenced by the very high n-6/n-3 ratios of plasma lipids might be affecting the behavioral patterns of a significant part of the younger generations in industrialized countries."

FERMENTED FOODS

Fermented vegetables in the form of pickles are served with all traditional Japanese meals. They range from pickled cabbage to eggplant to daikon radish. Pickled foods are an important adjunct to a diet that includes raw fish because they help protect against intestinal worms, which can be a frequent problem in Japan. One folk custom is to consume pickled daikon radish with sushi and sashimi, to "neutralize toxins." Daikon radish is one of the best vegetables for supporting the growth of protective lactobacilli.

A typical recipe for pickling lettuce, cucumber and turnips calls for sprinkling them with salt and allowing them to stand for about two days.12 This combination is eaten as a separate course with rice. Pickled melon is prepared by covering melon slices with sake (rice wine) and merin (a sweet wine) and sprinkling them with salt. It is allowed to stand for five days and then eaten as the last course of a meal.

In the mountainous regions where salt was not available, ingenious methods for producing pickles evolved. One of these is sunki or pickled leaves of a type of turnip.13 The leaves are boiled and then inoculated with zumi, a small wild apple, and fermented for 1-2 months.

An interesting fermented fish product called kusaya comes from the island of Izu. Mackerel and similar fish are soaked in a brine or "kusaya gravy" that is used over and over again because salt was a rare material. After soaking, the fish is dried. In the unused period, the "gravy" was kept alive by adding just one fish fillet. Kusaya is distinguished from other dried fish by its strong, unique, peculiar odor. "If you broil kusaya in your house, the odor will not leave for three months."

The typical Japanese dish of sushi originated in funazushi, a type of round shellfish from Lake Biwa in the Shiga prefecture of Japan. The shell fish was cleaned, salted, washed and fermented for 4-12 months. During fermentation, funazushi develops several kinds of organic acids such as lactic acid, acetic acid, propionic acid and butyric acid, all of which contribute to its distinctive sour taste and peculiar odor. The pickled crustacean was sliced and served on rice. In former times, it was said that if you could enjoy funazushi, you were recognized as a gourmet. Once an important dish in the area around Lake Biwa, the catch of the shellfish is decreasing year by year, due to water pollution, introduced species and shoreline destruction, thus making funazushi a rare and expensive food.

The main fermented drink in Japan is a rice drink called amazake, prepared by boiling a block of malted rice until it becomes soft and drinkable. Salt and sugar are added to taste. In winter, amazake can be bought from vending machines.
Surprisingly, a fermented milk drink is sold in Japanese vending machines right next to Coke or Pepsi. Unfortunately, the first ingredient listed is sugar.

BEVERAGES

All meals in Japan are served with a weak green tea, made with one teaspoon of tea to six teacups of water. Black tea, coffee and milk are also common beverages. Milk is available to school children and is recognized as a healthy food, one that helps Japanese children grow taller than their ancestors.
The Japanese have interesting ideas about beverages. On a hot day, most Japanese people, especially older Japanese, prefer hot green tea to anything cold. They say they want something the same temperature as their body or that something cold will make them sweat more. In winter time, they often add ginger to warm drinks as ginger is said to be warming. Water is avoided as it is said to make one fat!

Beer is a common beverage, and also recognized as one that causes weight gain. Sumo wrestlers, who can weigh as much as 500 pounds, put on weight by consuming large quantities of beer, as well as lots of rice and a nourishing stew called chankonabe.

FACTORY VS TRADITIONAL FOODS

While the Japanese diet is held up as the paradigm of natural eating, Japan is also home to the world's quintessential imitation flavor, MSG. Originally extracted from seaweed, MSG or monosodium glutamate activates glutamate receptors on the tongue and tricks the body into thinking it has eaten meat. Today most of the world's MSG is produced by Ajinomoto, a Japanese company, through a chemical process. It is no longer derived from a natural food.MSG is used to make cheap soy sauces, thus driving out artisanal producers who traditionally took great care and up to three years to produce the delicious fermented elixir. Factory-produced soy sauce can be turned out in the space of three days and contains, besides neurotoxic MSG, many carcinogens.

MSG was used to flavor Japanese rice rations during the war and it is said that Americans who loved the taste of these rations helped introduce the flavoring into the US. Today it is found in almost all processed foods, including those now manufactured in Japan. Yet health-conscious Japanese recognize the dangers and the more expensive noodles and processed foods there are labelled "No MSG."

Many Japanese also recognize the dangers of McDonald's and other fast foods that are making inroads in Japan, and they deliberately adhere to traditional foodways. Some housewives still make all traditional foods at home, from amazake to miso. Typical of foods still produced by housewives and artisans are various preparations of the famous umeboshi plum. The plum trees grow in the region of Mito Ibaraki where a park is home to 2000 plum trees, attracting three million visitors per year. Each year thousands of Japanese ladies gather the famous umeboshi plums to make all sorts of plum delights, including salty pickled plums. Well-aged pickled umeboshi plums are a great delicacy—some of them are fermented for as long as 30 years!

PRESENTATION IS EVERYTHING

The manner in which food is presented in Japan is always attractive and distinctive, usually with handsome serving dishes and a great sense of proportion and harmony. Meals are often served with elaborate ceremony. On ceremonial occasions and at banquets, a number of bowls and dishes are set before each guest, so that he may have a wide choice. Those dishes not partaken of are carefully packed in decorated boxes and presented to the guest as he leaves.

Even lunch boxes are an art form in Japan, containing beautifully decorated foods such as large prawns, rice rolled in seaweed, fish and pieces of fruit. One company in Japan prepares as many as 50,000 of these lunch boxes per day.14 Many Japanese mothers get up very early to make lunch boxes containing neatly arranged portions of fish, meat, rice balls, pickles and fruit for their children and husbands.

THE JAPANESE PARADOX

The Japanese suffered greatly before and during World War II. There were many food shortages, particularly of fats and animal foods. TB was common. Many Japanese lived almost entirely on rice during the war.
It was during the postwar years that the American researcher Ancel Keys wrote his famous Seven Countries Study in which he included groups from the Japanese districts of Tanushimaru and Ushibuka. He noted that the Japanese in these two regions had very low levels of serum cholesterol, consumed a diet extremely low in saturated fat and cholesterol and had low rates of coronary heart disease. It was primarily the Japanese data that allowed Keys and others to conclude that consumption of saturated fat and cholesterol caused heart disease.

Keys has been criticized for omitting from his study many areas of the world where consumption of animal foods is high and deaths from heart attack are low, including France. This is the so-called French paradox, one of many. But there is also a Japanese paradox. In 1989, Japanese scientists returned to the same two districts that Keys had studied. In "Lessons for Science from the Seven Countries Study,"15 they noted that per capita consumption of rice had declined while consumption of fats, oils, meats, poultry, dairy products and fruit had all increased. Between 1958 and 1989, protein intake rose from 11 percent of calories to about 15 percent and fat intake rose from a scanty 5 percent to over 20 percent. Mean cholesterol levels increased from 150 in 1958 to 188 in 1989. During the period, mean body mass gradually increased, with overweight rising from 8 percent to about 13 percent of the population. High blood pressure became more common while the percentage of smokers decreased from 69 percent in 1958 to 55 percent in 1989.

During the postwar period of improved nutrition the Japanese average height increased three inches and the age-adjusted death rate from all causes declined from 17.6 to 7.4 per 1000 per year. Although the rates of hypertension increased, stroke mortality declined markedly. Deaths from cancer also went down in spite of the increased use of animal foods.

The researchers also noted and here is the paradox that the rate of myocardial infarction (heart attack) and sudden death did not change during this period, in spite of the fact that the Japanese weighed more, had higher blood pressure and higher cholesterol, and ate more fat, more beef and more dairy.

MISCONCEPTIONS

Misconceptions about the state of health in Japan abound. It is true that the Japanese have lower rates of cancer than the US, although they are by no means cancer-free. For all types of cancer, the death rate for Japanese males is 149.8 per thousand versus 163.2 per thousand in the US. For Japanese females total cancer deaths are 78.1 per thousand versus 109.7 per thousand for the US.16 Japanese have low rates of lung cancer (even though they smoke far more than Americans) and low rates of breast, prostate, reproductive, colon and rectal cancer compared to the US. This is said to be due to the fact that they consume more soy and less meat, fat and dairy than Americans. But cancer rates went down in Japan during the period when consumption of animal foods went up. And the Japanese actually consume far less soy than Americans because even today, they do not consume much partially hydrogenated soybean oil. In fact, the most likely explanation for high levels of breast and prostate cancer in the US compared to Japan is the high levels of trans fatty acids from partially hydrogenated soybean oil in American convenience foods.

Fresh fish, rich in vitamin A and omega-3 fatty acids, is one component of the Japanese diet that protects them against lung cancer. A study carried out at the Cancer Centre Hospital in Aichik Mapan looked at the diets of more than 4,000 healthy people and another 1,000 with lung cancer.17 They found that both men and women who ate large amounts of fresh fish were significantly less likely to develop lung cancer. A diet that included salted or dried fish in place of fresh fish did not confer the same protective qualities.

The Japanese do suffer from very high rates of stomach cancer, and relatively high rates of cancer of the pancreas, liver and esophagus, the so-called Asian types of cancer. There are many explanations for this trend, none of them proven. The most common theory is that the use of highly salted foods such as soy sauce and salted fish is the cause of stomach cancer. But other dietary components are equally suspect, including high levels of irritating talc present in white rice and carcinogens in modern processed soy sauce. A final explanation is the widespread use of microwave ovens by modernized Japanese. Japan was the first country to adopt the microwave, which seemed to many Japanese housewives a safer and more sensible way to cook food in tiny Japanese kitchens than the old-fashioned gas burner or stove.18
Japan has many lessons to teach us about the risk of generalization in scientific studies. All claims about heart disease in Japan should be viewed with skepticism because the Japanese consider it shameful to die of heart disease but honorable to die of stroke. Predictably, deaths reported as due to stroke are much higher than deaths reported as due to a heart attack.

Japanese women are said to be free of hot flashes but some investigators believe that hot flashes are "under-reported," due to the shyness of Japanese women. Soyfood promotion material states that "there is no word for hot flashes in Japan" without acknowledging that there is no word for hot flashes in English either. We use two words to describe the condition and it is likely that Japanese ladies use some sort of euphemism.

Another claim is that the Japanese do not suffer from osteoporosis. But according to a 1998 study carried out by the Tokyo Institute of Gerontology,19 Japanese women have much higher rates of osteoporosis than American women—one in three versus one in eleven. Furthermore, they found that bone mass deterioration begins much earlier in Japanese women, at age 20 versus age 34 in the US.

According to the statistics, the Japanese have the longest life-span in the world. Built into those numbers is a very low rate of infant mortality compared to the US. The Japanese were one of the first countries to practice widespread birth control and they deliberately keep their families small. Great care and attention is lavished on children, starting with the mother's diet during pregnancy, and outright poverty in Japan is rare. When the high infant mortality rate in America is discounted, American men have life-spans equal to Japanese men and American women have longer life-spans than Japanese women.20

STRESS-FREE LIVING?

In his doctoral thesis about coronary heart disease in Japanese emigrants, British physician Dr. Michael Marmot also described a Japanese paradox.21 Dr. Marmot discovered that when the Japanese in Hawaii maintained their cultural traditions, they were protected against heart attacks, even though their cholesterol increased as much as in Japanese emigrants who adopted a Western life-style and who died from heart attacks almost as often as did native-born Americans. The most striking aspect of Dr. Marmot's findings was that emigrants who became accustomed to the American way of life, but preferred lowfat Japanese food, had heart disease twice as often as those who maintained Japanese traditions but preferred high-fat American food.

Dr. Marmot proposed the theory that certain factors in the traditional Japanese culture protected the Japanese from heart attacks in spite of a high-fat diet. He noted that the Japanese place great emphasis on group cohesion, group achievement and social stability. Members of the stable Japanese society enjoy support from other members of their society and thus are protected from the "emotional and social stress" that Marmot believed to be an important cause of heart attacks. The Japanese traditions of togetherness contrast dramatically with the typical American emphasis on social and geographic mobility, individualism and striving ambition, said Dr. Marmot.

But is life less stressful among the traditional Japanese? "Group cohesion" and "group achievement" can also translate into unrelenting pressure and stress. Is the traditional Japanese family man, striving to perform and bring honor to his family, under less pressure than the westernized Japanese bloke who has decided to chuck it all and hang out on the beaches? And is the Japanese-American living under America's wide open skies, where opportunity abounds, under more pressure than his relatives in Japan, where opportunities are fewer and where crowding is commonplace? The Japanese people, including school children, work long hours, travel miles to school and work and often have only one day a week free. The pressure on children to do well in school is intense and the suicide rate among Japanese young people is among the highest in the world.

What Dr. Marmot's study really tells us is that increased animal fat in the Japanese diet protects them from heart disease in spite of their stressful life-style, not the reverse. High rates of heart disease among Americans should be blamed on processed foods based on vegetable oils, not animal fats and a high-stress life style.22

SATURATED FAT

Saturated fat from animal sources is said to be the enemy in the American diet. Researchers espousing this dogma have consistently ignored evidence that saturated fats actually protect against heart disease and cancer. The many studies of the Japanese also ignore two very important sources of saturated fat in their diet.

One of these sources is spam, a canned pork product provided to American soldiers during the war. Americans may have loved the taste of Japanese rice rations, but the Japanese loved our rations even more. Spam provided exactly those dietary components that had been missing through the years of poverty and privation—animal protein and fat. In a nation that has been unusually resistant to foreign influence, spam was quickly embraced and transformed into a popular snack food. Spam musubi consists of a slice of spam soaked in soy sauce on top of a bed of rice and wrapped in seaweed—a convenient morsel resembling sushi. Spam musubi can be purchased in local convenience stores, including 7-11 stores, in Hawaii. In fact, spam consumption in Hawaii is higher than the total spam consumption in all the other 49 states combined due to its popularity among Japanese Americans.

The other source of saturated fat in the Japanese diet is . . . white rice, a refined carbohydrate that the body efficiently turns into saturated fat. As long as the diet is rich in fat-soluble vitamins from fish and organ meats, and minerals from broth and seaweed, white rice can be consumed without adverse effects. In fact, for the Japanese, it is beneficial, providing the substrate for saturated fats that the diet still lacks. Macrobiotic proponents claim that the traditional Japanese diet was based on whole brown rice, not refined white rice. It is said that the first Samurai warriors ate brown rice while the rest of the nobility ate white rice. Then the samurai slowly "softened" and started eating white rice. But the true explanation for the use of white rice may be somewhat different.

Brown rice that is not soaked and fermented, as was done traditionally in India, may block mineral absorption and cause intestinal problems. The Japanese prefer the taste and texture of white rice and this preference may reflect a profound intuition that when rice is consumed on a daily basis, it should be refined not whole, unless a long and careful preparation is observed.

THE MODERN CHALLENGE

The challenge for the Japanese, like the challenge for all countries in the process of modernization, will be to resist the temptations of processed foods. But Japan faces an additional challenge and that is to resist the advice of meddling American health researchers who are telling them to eliminate vital components of their traditional diets - beef, pork, lard, tallow and even white rice. Better to pay attention to a few problematic additives such as talc in rice and impurities in salt, and to protect artisanal food protection from the cutthroat policies of the food processing industry.
And one more piece of advice to the Japanese: throw out the microwave.

JAPANESE MEALS

Recipes of All Nations, published in 1935, gives the following menus for typical Japanese meals, although dietary habits of modern Japanese have suffered from western influences since World War II. Today a high percentage of urban

Japanese have English-style white bread for breakfast.

Breakfast: Fish broth and vegetable soup with rice; omelet, baked fish, seaweed and pickles

Lunch: Egg or rice soup, fish, chicken, vegetable dish and fruit

Dinner: Broth soup with pieces of meat and vegetables, raw fish with grated horseradish, lobster with lettuce and cucumber salad, hot fish, cold noodles, vegetable soup and rice, fruit.


THE MACROBIOTIC DIET - IS IT REALLY JAPANESE?

Americans have become familiar with many Japanese foodways through the macrobiotic diet, popularized by Michio Kushi and practiced by thousands of adherents. Proponents advocate a diet based on brown rice and containing only small amounts of animal foods, if any. But is the macrobiotic diet actually representative of the Japanese diet? Not really. The Japanese eat white rice, not brown, and consume large amounts of animal foods, particularly fish but also beef, pork and chicken. Americans following the macrobiotic diet tend to use soy foods instead of meat, and in amounts much greater than are found in the typical Japanese diet.

Macrobiotic cookbooks contain recipes for broth and pickled foods, but the importance of these is not stressed and they are often left out in practice.
Macrobiotics introduced Americans to the use of seaweed, but caution is advised in adopting this habit. Seaweed contains complex carbohydrates that are difficult for many Westerners to digest.

Green Tea Diet

Green Tea Diet - Stay slim and Healthy

Green tea has been enjoyed by people in Japan and China for thousands of years. A lot of people in the west nowadays have heard that green tea benefits the overall health, but not a lot know why exactly. After you learn all the health benefits of green tea, you can not only enjoy the taste of it but also get the moral satisfaction knowing that you are doing something right and extremely healthy for your body.

It appears that a green tea diet may hold at least a few properties of those golden elixirs, fountains of youth, and magic potions we've all heard about over the years. Listed below are just a few:

Green tea contains anti-oxidants that:

1. Helps to prevent cancer.The is some strong evidence that green tea included in you every day diet can reduce bladder, colon, esophageal, pancreas, rectum, and stomach cancer up to 60%. An antioxidant known as "epigallocatechin gallate" (EGCG for short) is at least 100 more times more effective than vitamin C and 25 times more effective than vitamin E at protecting cells from harmful influence.
The amazing thing about it that EGCG it not only inhibits the growth of new cancer cells it also kills some of the existing cancer sells without harming the healthy ones.

2. Staving off Alzheimer's.A green tea diet may delay the onset of Alzheimer's disease. A British study found that drinking green tea inhibited three important brain-battering chemicals: acetylcholinesterase, butyrylcholinesterase, and beta-secretase. Before you get your tongue twisted around your eye teeth and can't see what your saying with these three-dollar words, all you really need to know is that they are three chemical culprits associated with breaking down chemical messengers and forming plaques and protein deposits in the noggin's gray matter - definite hindrances to crystal clear thinking.

3. Stops the unnatural formation of blood cloth which if not taken care of will cause thrombosis. It takes on added importance if you consider that thrombosis is one of the main causes of strokes and heart attacks.

4. Lowers "bad" cholesterol (known as LDL) and improves the ratio of "good" cholesterol (known as HDL). It explains why tea-drinkers can eat almost twice the foods containing cholesterol as those who don't drink green tea, but still have an equal cholesterol count.

5. Lowers blood sugar (polyphenols and polysaccharides are the two main antioxidants are especially effective in lowering blood sugar). That helps prevent and relieve type-two diabetes.

6. Reduces high blood pressure by repressing angiotensin II which causes constriction of the blood vessels causing high blood pressure.

7. Promotes oral health by suppress the process of plaque formation and destroys the bacteria that forms plaque. It also destroys bacteria that causes bad breath, so after eating something sweet I suggest you drink a cup of green tea.

8. Protects liver against toxins like alcohol and chemicals in cigarette smoke.

9. Possess antibacterial and antiviral properties. Recent studies show that green tea inhibits the spread of disease, speeds up recovery from cold and flu. It also kills seven strains of food poisoning bacteria including clostridium, botulus and staphylococcus (which makes it a good treatment for diarrhea).

10. Destroys free radicals that cause aging.

11. Helps your body to maintain healthy fluid balance and relieve fatigue and stress often caused by dehydration.

12. Boosts your immune system function (because of its high concentration of polyphenols and flaveboids).

13. Blocks main receptors that produce allergic reactions.

14. Stimulates metabolism, calorie burning process and is wildly being used as an important part of a healthy diet.

It is important to know that black tea, even though it comes from the same plant as a green tea, will not give you the same benefits. Black tea during fermentation process loses most of its medical benefits.

The best way to preserve all the disease-fighting nutritions is to drink your tea freshly brewed. All the decaffeinated, ready-to-drink bottled or instant teas will give you very little of natural health compounds. It is better to let your tea steep for about 4-5 minutes before drinking it. To date, the only negative side effect reported from drinking green tea is insomnia due to the fact that it contains caffeine. However, green tea contains less caffeine than coffee: there are approximately thirty to sixty mg. of caffeine in six - eight ounces of tea, compared to over one-hundred mg. in eight ounces of coffee.

Love the idea of a green tea diet but can't stand the taste of tea? Don't despair. There's hope for you, yet! Green tea extract comes in pill form, as well, so you'll need to come up with some other excuse! Taken as a dietary supplement, green tea extract usually comes in 500 mg. capsules taken two or three times daily. Now, that's not hard, is it? And no bitter-beer-face aftertaste, either!

So whether you take pills or sip it from a cup, the benefits gained from a green tea diet cannot be ignored. Well, they can, but that would be stupid, right? And since you're smart enough to be reading this great article, that proves you've got a leg up in the brains department (please don't take that literally!). But I digress. The point here is to consume green tea - one way or another. And if you're not willing to give up the green eggs with your ham, well, then, at least add green tea to the meal. But if the ham is green ... toss it!

The Chopstick Diet

If you want to lose weight, and stay young, fit and slim there is one diet to be followed, the Japanese chopsticks diet!

Haven't you ever wondered why Japanese women live longer and are mistaken for 20-year-olds and above all, keep their girlish figures - even when they are 40? The Japanese chopstick diet is the secret of all the above and more!It has been proved that following the principles of Japanese home-style cooking and healthy habits can make a dramatic difference to your health and shape. Here are the secrets of the Japanese kitchen, just follow them and you will surely feel and see the difference. You will not have to worry about 'Weight Loss' anymore, as Japanese lifestyle and diet are designed to lose weight and stay slim naturally.

Fish - Japanese people eat around 69kg of fish per person each year. That's more than four times the average of the rest of the world. Cutting back on meat and replacing it with fish will decrease your risk of heart disease. Oily fish are full of Omega 3 oils which are good for your skin and have been proven to help children learn.

Soya - The Japanese eat ten times more soya products that any other nation. It's low in fat and calories and high in protein. The low incidence of breast and colon cancer in China and Japan has been partially attributed to the high consumption of soya products as research shows it to has anti-carcinogenic properties.

Fresh Fruit & Vegetables - As with all diets ? a lot of fresh fruit and vegetables, especially leafy greens is a must. Try and pick fruit and vegetables that are in season.

Variety - Your body will benefit from a wider range of nutrients following the Chopstick Diet due to the variety of food. In a study, elderly Japanese women were found to eat 100 different foods a week, compared to only 30 for a woman following an average Western diet.

Small Portions & Chopsticks - Japanese food portions like sushi, are bite-sized, compared to Western portions. Eating with chopsticks should slow down the speed of consumption, giving you time to savour your food. On average it takes 20 minutes for your stomach to register that it's full. Eating more slowly means that you're less likely to overeat.

Light cooking techniques - Light cooking techniques include steaming, pan-grilling, simmering and stir-frying over a high heat. This helps to preserve more of the food's nutrients including anti-aging antioxidants.

Power Breakfasts - A typical Japanese breakfast includes green tea (which is believed to be full of antioxidants), steamed rice, miso soup (research has suggested that eating three bowls of miso soup a day could reduce the risk of breast cancer). It also includes a small omelette or piece of grilled salmon. This is a great start to the day as all foods are packed with nutritional benefits.

Sweet Treats - Japanese women are renowned for their sweet tooth. Their secret is that they don't over indulge. They do eat desserts and chocolate, but less regularly and in smaller portions. Like many diets, it's fine to treat yourself to something that you like - just don't over do it.

Informal Exercise -It's not just the diet that keeps Japanese women looking great and living longer. People walk or cycle everywhere. The 10,000 steps a day programme was first popularised in Japan 40 years ago. The British Heart Foundation in the UK has recently embraced the programme saying that 10,000 steps a day can give you a healthy heart and reduce body fat.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

TaiSlim Weightloss

Taislim Weight Loss Energy Drink

Doctors and diet experts agree that there's only one permanent way to lose pounds and inches, and that's to burn more calories than you take in. But if you've failed with diet after diet, it's not your fault. Trendy pills and potions use gimmicks to give you some early results, but the weight always returns. Over time, this yo-yo cycle of losing and regaining can actually slow your metabolism, making it even harder to lose weight. But now, FreeLife science has found the way to lose weight and feel great, and that's TAIslim.

TAI slim

In Asia, the word tai signifies "total" or "complete". And unlike any other diet you've ever tried, the comprehensive TAI slim plan addresses every key aspect of successful weight control. FreeLife TAIslim weight loss energy drink is based on FreeLife revolutionary patent pending technology and research on the ability of the goji berry to reduce unsightly and dangerous belly fat.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Detoxification

Detoxification comes in many forms and refers to many different programs that cleanse the body of toxins. Today, our environment is toxic and the foods we eat, even the air we breathe and the water we drink is laden with chemicals foreign to our system. Therefore, everyone is undergoing some type of detoxification to maintain life and health. Although basic detoxification begins with diet, detox programs may include nutritional fortification for the liver, lungs, kidneys, bowels and blood.

We will soon see why these organs are so important in detoxification.

Detoxification for the body may refer to the cleansing of the bowels, kidneys, lungs, the liver or the blood, since these are the organs involved in detoxification of chemicals and toxins from the body. The liver acts as an "in-line" filter for the removal of foreign substances and wastes from the blood. The kidneys filter wastes from the blood into the urine, while the lungs remove volatile gases as we breathe.

Our body is designed to utilize natural substances, which includes foods, herbs and phytochemicals. Any foreign substance will serve as a stimulus to our immune system, which has the function of removing these substances. Although the toxicity of a chemical may vary, it is the job of the liver to reduce toxins into compounds that the body can safely handle and eliminate through the kidneys (as urine), skin (as sweat), lungs (as expelled air) and bowels (as feces).

Maintaining these eliminative organs in good working order is essential for one's good health to continue.

While there are many detoxification programs available, they differ in their actions and their intent. Some detoxification programs (DP) work only with the bowels, others may cleanse the liver or the blood, and others may aid the kidneys or the skin in their functions. By combining these detox programs into a total health program, one can effectively restore their health to an optimal level and look younger in the process. When the body can eliminate toxins, then health is restored and energy and vigor are revitalized. Many different approaches to detoxification and wellness will work, even though they attack the problem at different levels. Any program that augments detoxification will improve health. Other factors must be considered in detoxification, like nutrition, water, and exercise, rest, sunshine, and fresh air.

Detoxification Diets

Detoxification diets help the body to eliminate toxins in many ways. First, natural vegetarian diets include the fiber needed for stimulating good bowel eliminate. They also contain the proper amounts of vitamins that feed and nourish the bowels and the liver, as well as other eliminative organs. They also include a valuable source of enzymes since most vegetarian diets are eaten raw. The elimination of meat from the diet for a short period enhances detoxification because meat is so difficult to digest and requires many enzymes for its digestion. Therefore, vegetarian diets are cleansing diets and aid the body in elimination of toxins.

Of course, changing diets and lifestyle is easier said than done for some people. Many people want health and will go to any length to improve their health, including dietary changes. But there are others who do not want to change their life style for anything. These people will be difficult to motivate and will not stick with the detox programs for one day. They may not want to give up their sodas, or their cigarettes, their beer or their coffee. They may make a few changes, like drinking more water, or they may give up completely in a very short notice. Our way of eating has been cultivated over many years and will not change over night. But to those who do want better health and do not want to rely on pills/drugs for their existence, nutritional changes will be welcomed, especially when they start feeling better and having more energy.

Diets are very important and are usually the basis for any detox program, whether it is herbs, cleansing or other detox programs.[i] Detox diets will generally eliminate trigger foods, which may cause many problems with digestion and elimination. Foods like wheat (glutens) and dairy (milk, cheese) are often the cause of allergies. Sugar is eliminated because of its "empty calories" and tendency to produce hypoglycemia. Meats are eliminated because they may contain hormones, antibiotics and are difficult to digest. Caffeine is wise to avoid, since it has many ill effects on the body's digestion. Refined, processed and junk foods are also out for any detox program to work.

Herbal Detoxification

Generic diets for detoxification are good, but may not stimulate the liver, lungs or the kidneys as much as one would like. Therefore, herbal cleanses are indicated when we want to hone our cleanse to a "sharp edge" and be organ specific. Of course, herbs are foods too and provide one with vitamins, minerals and enzymes for excellent nutrition. Herbs are powerful, because they may be combined together to fortify those herbs that aid specific organs. For example, herbal combinations that aid the liver may be found in many organic food stores.

The list below shows how herbal combinations help the various organs.

Herbal Combinations

Liver:

LIV-A Dandelion, red beet, liverwort, parsley, horsetail, birch leaves, chamomile, blessed thistle, black cohosh, angelica, gentian, goldenrod

Kidneys

Uva ursi, parsley, dandelion, juniper berries JP-X Parsley, uva ursi, marshmallow, ginger, goldenseal, dong quai, cedar berries

Lungs

LH Comfrey, marshmallow, mullein, slippery elm, senega, Chinese ephedra

While herbs may be taken at any time, they are best for detoxification purposes when they are used with a good diet also. It does not make any sense to take herbs to cleanse the liver if the bowels are clogged with junk or refined foods, since the liver dumps its toxins into the bowels. And while detoxification diets are effective by themselves, they may be reinforced and speeded up with herbs, which stimulate the eliminative organs.

Herbs may be used as teas, powders or extracts. Powders are usually encapsulated for easier swallowing, but are best when taken with meals and digestive enzymes. Extracts may be used when specific herbs are needed, but may be extracted with alcohol, which we need to avoid. Herbal teas are easily made and easily taken all throughout the day. They are mild and gentle and sometimes refreshing and sometimes bitter. Experimentation may be in order until one develops the right tea to drink. Herbal teas is a topic in itself, since there are so many and different ways to make them.

Example Herbal Cleanse

Rising
Drink a glass of lemon water or drink a glass of water with added: one teaspoon of apple cider vinegar and one teaspoon of blackstrap molasses

Morning
Drink a glass of water with psyllium husk powder (follow with another glass of water).

Meals
Take 2-3 multi-digestive enzymes Take liver herbs

In Between Meals
Drink herbals teas which support the liver, including Dandelion/licorice/ginger/fennel
Note: Following a good diet is mandatory for herbs to work optimally. See Diets
for detox.

Skin Cleansing

Detoxification should include some type of skin cleansing, because our skin it one of our best eliminative organs. Heavy metals are actually released through the skin's pores when we sweat. Sauna baths and steam rooms are great for removing toxins from the skin and regenerating one's health and energy. It has been documented that our skin's sweat glands when combined can perform as much detoxification as one (or both) kidneys. Therefore, it is very important to support our skin for detoxification to be maximal. If our kidneys are damaged, then helping the skin will help the kidneys ... indirectly, but effectively.

Good skin care is in order, if one's health is to benefit, also. Using chemicalized skin care products is not wise, even though they are cheaper. These chemicals may be absorbed into our circulation and provide more "toxins" for our liver to deal with. We are not made out of cast iron, and even the chemicals in our soaps and shampoos will make a difference with our health. Most people do not "see" the ill effects of these subtle chemicals, because their liver is able to metabolize them. But, individuals who are environmentally toxic will see a great change in their health when using natural soaps and shampoos. We should take their advice and use only natural skin care products also.

Cleansing our skin is rather simple. First, we need to bathe daily using natural soaps. Then we need to care for the skin by using only natural oils and products of natural origin. Even the clothes we wear can make a big difference in our health. Synthetic fibers do not absorb sweat (toxins), while natural fibers, like cotton, will absorb toxins. Dry skin brushing helps in removing the outer dead skin layers and keeps the pores open. Another good method of skin brushing is with vigorous toweling off after bathing. Towel roughly until the skin is slightly red. Change towels often because they will contain toxins.

Good skin care also requires good nutrition.[
ii] Since our skin is mainly fat, we need high quality fats and oil from natural sources to give our skin health. Butter and olive oil are two excellent natural oils, which keep the skin in good condition. As always, the fats/oils should be natural ... only.

Detoxification Baths
Use 1/2 cup of baking soda or use 1/2 cup of Epsom salt or use 1/2 cup of sea salt. Soak for 15-20 minutes and then scrub the skin gently with soap on a natural fiber. Within a few minutes the water will turn murky and "dirty." The darkness to the water is heavy metals coming out of the skin (aluminum and mercury). Do this once a week during detox and once a month for maintenance.
Juice Fasting

Fasting with vegetable juices can be another excellent way to develop good health and cleanse the body of toxins. Juices, minus their pulp (fiber), contain an excellent source of vitamins, minerals and enzymes. When the pulp is not added, one is able to drink more juice than they are able to eat. For example, one can easily consume the juice of several heads of lettuce in one sitting, but may not be able to eat the lettuce whole. This allows the body to get an abundance of nutrients with minimal processing (digestion). Fasting on mono-juices also allows the body proper time to process these juices and helps to preserve our valuable digestive enzymes.
Juice fasting has helped many people over come serious diseases like cancer, because it gave them optimal nutrition and allowed the body to cleanse itself of toxins. [According to many nutritionists, cancer is merely a toxic condition.] With some juicers, the pulp is discarded, but it may be saved and added back for fiber (not too much). Juices contain good sources of antioxidants and enzymes, both of which are needed for cleansing and eliminating toxins. Juices are also easy to digest and help those with digestive problems.

Flora
Our bowel flora is also important for detoxification and normal health. Probiotics is the term given to the normal bowel flora, which are taken as supplements. It has been found that these normal flora actually defend our body from the pathogenic species of bacteria and perform many vital functions, such as detoxification of toxic chemicals and making valuable vitamins (mainly the B vitamins). When our normal flora are present they secrete mediators in which the pathogenic forms cannot grow. But the reverse is also true, that when the pathogenic forms take over, they will exclude the normal flora with their toxins.
Many scientists feel that it is the toxins secreted from the pathogens and not the pathogens themselves that create disease. The ability of all bacteria to change and grow under specific conditions of their immediate environment is called pleiomorphism. Cell wall deficient forms are "bacteria" which lack a defined cell wall, yet have all the specifications of being bacterial-like. Even viruses have been found to exhibit morphological forms, which resemble bacteria and fungus. While this is not widely accepted by modern medical scientists, it has been proven beyond a shadow of doubt by eminent scientists, like Virginia Livingston Wheeler, Irene Diller, and Royal Rife. Their microscopic studies have revealed that bacteria and viruses and fungus may be all different forms of the same organism, differing only by the environment in which they are grown.

Antibiotics kill off the good bacteria as well as the bad and allow the bad to repopulate and develop antibiotic resistance. Natural forms of antibiotics are better, since they do not kill off the good bacteria with the bad and do not allow drug" resistance to take place. Garlic, for example, is perhaps, 200 times more effective against pathogens than most antibiotics today. And it does not produce antibiotic resistance forms, which is a danger to all our health. As antibiotics become more widely used, more antibiotic resistant forms will be encountered. Herbal antiseptics and antibacterial tonics are far better and less dangerous to our over-all health, because they do not kill of the good bacteria with the bad.

Replacing our natural flora is a good step for preventing disease and keeping our bowels healthy and populated with normal flora. Taking probiotics containing Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidus can help us in our detox program and also in repopulating the gut after a cleanse. Our normal healthy flora should be a part of any detoxification program.

Antioxidants

The use of antioxidants, like vitamins A, E, and especially C, are very essential for detoxification since they are involved with the detoxification of toxins. Antioxidants are involved with helping cells to neutralize free radicals that can cause mutations and cellular damage. As these free radicals are neutralized, the antioxidant vitamins will be used and exhibit low levels. Vitamin A and E are fat soluble and will be found in our fat tissues/stores, but vitamin C is water soluble and will be found mainly in our skin (between the cells according to Reams). Vitamin C is also involved with many other important bodily functions, like collagen formation, wound healing, energy production and fighting off colds (viruses).

The function of antioxidants is so important that any deficiency of them will be seen as catastrophic to one's health. When our antioxidants are low, energy is not available and detoxification cannot take place in a normal fashion. Therefore, toxins accumulate or are stored until they can be processed. The liver and many other organs are compromised in their functions when antioxidants are low. Just the lack of energy is enough to cause the body to have compromised or poor health, because it is energy that is required for the removal of toxins and wastes.

Vitamin C should be taken with bioflavinoids to ensure that all the components of the vitamin C complex are taken together, since they work together. Pure ascorbic acid is called vitamin C, but does little by itself. We tend to think that ascorbic acid as vitamin C, but it is only part of the vitamin C complex. Vitamin C is very essential to any detoxification program, because that is what the body uses for energy to process and eliminate these toxic waste Vitamin C can be taken in very high doses until the bowel tolerance level [BTL] is achieved. This BTL is different for different people. Some persons reach tolerance at 4-5 grams (4,000-5,000 mg), while others may not reach tolerance until 10-15 grams (10,000-15,000 mg). Cancer patients notoriously can take 20-30 grams (20,000-30,000 mg) of vitamin C before tolerance is reached ... meaning that they needed more vitamin C than most people.

By taking vitamin C to its tolerance level we find out 1) what our BTL is and 2) how saturated our body is with Vitamin C. Vitamin C was found by Linus Pauling and Ewan Cameron to be very effective in helping many patients to over come that killer disease, called cancer. Perhaps, this was because vitamin C was needed for detoxification of toxins, which "caused" the cancer in the first place. Although Pauling and Cameron were greatly criticized for their work with vitamin C, they were able to help many people overcome cancer and without compromising their health with toxic drugs.

Enzymes
The use of enzymes in detoxification is important, because the body needs an adequate supply of enzymes, not only for digestion, for also for detoxification.[iii] Enzymes are best obtained from fresh raw fruits and vegetables, but may be taken daily with meals as nutritional supplements of multi-digestive enzymes. Enzymes in our food helps us to digest that food, but many foods today are processed, refined, heated (cooked), radiated and stored, which destroys enzymes and leaves it non-vital.[iv] Foods with enzymes destroyed will have a longer shelf life, but will not give one health when it is eaten.

Fresh raw fruits and vegetables are the best source for enzymes and help to give one vibrant health. Enzymes are also used by the body in detoxification of toxic substances. The liver is the source of most detoxification enzymes, which it must make, or store. To aid the body in removing and eliminating wastes and toxins, enzymes are best taken in between meals. This way they do not get involved with digestion, but go to the liver and to the blood for detoxification.

Many therapies have utilized enzymes for improving health and enzymes have long been the key to many detoxification therapies which have helped many to over come that dreaded disease, cancer. Kelley, Gerson, Moerman, and Neiper used alternative nutritional therapies with enzymes for curing cancer. The famous Wobe Mugos enzymes from Europe were utilized with Laetrile therapies for cancer. Never was Laetrile give alone, but was used with vitamins, diet and enzymes. This made the Laetrile therapy very successful in the 1970s. If cancer is a toxic condition, which many feel that it is, then taking enzymes will help it. And it does.

The use of raw foods in many detoxification diets are using the enzymes found naturally in those foods. Additionally, these raw foods provide fiber and, with proper food combining, will not waste the body enzymes reserves. Preserving enzymes is the key to over coming disease and living to ripe old age and remaining healthy. Yes, vitamins and minerals are important, but vitamins are enzyme co-factors and many minerals are use to activate enzymes. Therefore, the vitamins and minerals themselves are only augmenting the role of the enzymes which are detoxifying toxins and supporting metabolism.

Enzymes also help the bowels in cleansing, because they liquefy the bowel content, which makes transit much easier. The role of enzymes in digestion is to break down foods for digestion and absorption. When foods are broken down they become more liquid and the bowels move much easier and faster. Transit time is decreased and our health is increased when toxins are removed and eliminated. Perhaps, this is a link to breaking the "constipation chain." Enzymes are the key to health. Preserve our enzymes and we will be healthy for a long time.

Bowel Cleansing
Keeping the bowels clean and moving is a major step in regaining our health since the bowels are crucial in the elimination of toxins, especially those processed by the liver. [The liver dumps in to the bowel via the gall bladder.] This is why one hears a lot about the bowels, and bowel cleansing. In severe cases, enemas and colonics may be needed to breakup and washout long-standing bowel encrustations. Diet may do the same thing as an enema or colonic, it will just take longer. Also, one should be very diligent in repopulating after a total washout of the normal flora and probiotics will be necessary to restore that balance.

Constipation is a national pastime and slow bowels are more common today than years previous. For one thing, people not only ate better 100 years ago, they were more active and got out doors more. When the bowels slow down, toxins are not eliminated and are reabsorbed and carried back to the liver for recycling and elimination. Reabsorbed bile salts have been linked to increased cholesterol levels; therefore, cholesterol is a major indicator of constipation. Also, when the bowels get slow and toxin levels increase, the pathogenic microorganisms grow to out-number the normal flora causing dysbiosis. Although flora is needed to correct this, it is the clogged bowels that are the major problem. When the bowels move again, everything else will fall into order.

Our endocrine glands that control metabolism are also involved; since it is our thyroid that controls metabolism and metabolism affects how our bowels are functioning. In this way, constipation can be seen as a symptom of hypothyroidism. Low body temperatures (a symptom of hypothyroidism) are very common today ...although they are not "normal" ... as many authors have reported. One major factor in low body temperatures is the suppression of thyroid function by heavy metals, like mercury, which binds to our thyroid hormones and renders them inactive. Eliminate the mercury and the body temperature is likely to return to normal.

The easiest way to get the bowels moving is by using a high fiber diet consisting of fresh fruits and vegetables. Sometimes, one may add extra fiber during the day by drinking a glass of water (juice) with psyllium husk powder. The extra fiber adds to the bulk of the stool and decreases the bowel transit time, which means better toxin elimination and better health. It makes sense that if one can eliminate toxins their health will improve.

One of the best ways to improve the bowel function is with herbal remedies that act as bowel stimulants or laxatives. These products range from the very mild - slippery elm - to the stimulant - cascara sagrada- to the very harsh - aloes and senna. Everyone may react differently to these products, so they should be taken cautiously at first. Some persons may take two aloes with no effect (meaning they are heavily blocked), while others may take a mild herbal and get a much greater effect than most. Herbal bowel combination formulas are excellent because they not only stimulate the bowels to move, but give the bowels the nourishment it needs to move on its own.

Herbal formulas should not preclude a wholesome natural diet, since diet comes first in matters of health. One should not become overly dependent on herbal laxatives, since they deplete potassium and may be "addicting" as some authors claim. Yet, herbal products play a key role in getting the body to eliminate toxins by stimulating the eliminative organs like nothing else can and, therefore, cannot be ignored.

Herxheimer Reaction
The Herxheimer Reaction occurs when the body is detoxifying too rapidly and toxins are being released faster than the body can eliminate them.[v] When this occurs, one will suffer from headaches, nausea, vomiting, and malaise. Even though this is but a short period of the health program, it can be severe and deter one from reaching their intended goals. Also, the person may not know what they are experiencing and think that they are regressing.

To minimize the Herxheimer Reaction:
Drinks lots of pure water
Get minimal exercise daily
Lots of sunshine
Take detoxification slowly... one step at a time
Don't increase the dose of herbals
Keep the organs of elimination (bowels, lungs, skin, kidneys) open
Take detox baths
Use aromatherapy oils for aches -like peppermint, birch, and wintergreen
Sweat by using exercise, saunas, baths, and herbs
Avoid foreign chemicals and refined processed foods

If the Herxheimer reaction occurs, cut back on your health detoxification program. Reduce the dose of herbs and follow the above outline to reduce the symptoms of toxin elimination. The more toxins there are to eliminate, the sicker one is when they come out. Generally, one will feel better when all is over and health is restored again. Just remember, don't give up.

Conclusion
Detoxification may produce symptoms of headaches, nausea, malaise and vomiting due to the toxins being released [Herxheimer Reaction]. If this occurs, one should back off the program and proceed slowly. Proceeding to fast with detoxification can have disastrous results when toxins are released into the circulation. Our body should be primed and ready to eliminate toxins before they are released. We do this by getting the bowels working, keeping the skin clean and getting the kidneys and lungs operating. Only by having all organs of elimination in proper operating order can our body begin to dump toxins efficiently and maximally. Keeping the skin clean and healthy is of prime importance also.

Detoxification is essential for good health to exist. Our body must eliminate toxins daily or we would die immediately. Since our environment is more toxic today, our livers are over stressed with environmental toxins to deal with daily. Processing other toxins, when the liver is stressed, may be delayed.

Detoxification is also a lifestyle change. For it is by the way we live that determines our health and how our liver processes toxins. Detoxification is easy if we eat a wholesome natural organic diet and live life in a natural way. But for those who want their cake and eat it too, detoxification may be compromised. A change your lifestyle may be needed and detoxification will be forthcoming. Nature has afforded us the chance to live in a toxic environment and not be affected by it. Of course, we have to live right to get that chance. Without detoxification we may not get a second chance.

Good health is within our reach, but first we must cleanse this "temple" and eat a wholesome natural diet that provides us with maximal nutrients and fiber. Herbs can help us stimulate the liver, lungs, kidneys and bowels when needed, but diet is the first priority in any detoxification program. Don't become overly dependent on herbal laxatives. When toxins are released one may feel bad for a day or two, but when our good health is restored we will have renewed energy and will "soar on the wings of an eagle". Many people living today have never known what good health "feels" like. They survive with an abundance of toxins and an existence less than healthy.

Good health is not hard to find, but does require diligence and life style changes which are compatible with toxin elimination. Sir Jason Winters Says, "Death begins in the colon." With good toxin elimination through natural detoxification programs our health and energy are restored.

[i]. "The Best Way to Detox," Jill Ruttenberg, Natural Health, Oct 1999, p 88-92, 152.
[Ii]. Aubrey Hampton, Natural Organic Hair and Skin Care, 1987, Organica Press, Tampa, FL 33614
[iii]. Harold Loomis, DC, Enzymes: The Key to Health, Vol 1, The Fundamentals, 1999, 21st Century Nutrition, Madison, WI
[iv]. Anthony J Cichoke, DC, Enzymes and Enzyme Therapy, 1994, Keats Publishing, Inc, New Canaan, CT
[v]. Ibid, p 148.

Thursday, April 30, 2009

All You Need to Know About Obesity

Obesity is when a person is carrying too much body fat for their height and sex. A person is considered obese if they have a Body Mass Index (BMI) of 30 or greater. BMI is a measurement of your weight in kilograms divided by your height in metres squared. Obesity can happen when you eat more calories than you burn off over a period of time.

The rate at which you burn off calories from food and drink is known as your metabolic rate. This is often faster during growth spurts and puberty, but reaches a fairly steady rate by adulthood.

People who are very active generally have a higher metabolic rate than those who are inactive because they burn off calories faster through energetic activity. For example, a labourer working on a building site may need as many as 4,000-5,000 calories a day to keep an even weight. In contrast, an office worker who uses a car to get to work and does not exercise may only need 1,500 calories a day.

If the amount of calories provided by your daily food intake is more than the calories that you burn off, your body will store the extra energy as fat. This is the body's way of protecting itself in case of starvation. However, starvation in developed countries is extremely rare, and this insurance against "hard times" is hardly ever needed.

Most of us have more food than we need, and much of it is higher in calories than the human body was originally designed to cope with. Fast foods, high calorie snacks and large portions all mean it is easy to take in more energy than we need. Obesity has now become one of the most serious medical problems of the Western world.


What is Obesity?

Obesity can be measured in different ways. An easy way is to simply step on the scales and compare your actual weight with your ideal weight. Any health or diet book will give this information.

The most scientific way to measure your weight is to calculate your Body Mass Index (BMI). This is your weight in kilograms divided by your height in metres squared (see the 'diagnosis' section on how to work out your BMI). In the UK, people with a BMI between 25 and 30 are categorised as overweight, and those with an index above 30 are categorised as obese. People with a BMI of 40 or more are described as morbidly obese.

Your BMI, waist circumference, and ethnic group, may all help your GP, or practice nurse, to assess your risk of developing obesity-related health problems, such as heart disease.

Most modern gyms and some weighing scales can electronically measure the percentage of your body weight that is fat, and can compare this with what would be ideal for you depending on your height, age and sex.

See your GP for advice if you are unsure about how to best measure your weight, and work out your BMI.


Facts About Obesity

Obesity is fast becoming the developed world's biggest health problem, with over 9,000 deaths a year in England being caused by obesity alone.

Adult obesity rates have almost quadrupled (become four times as great) over the last 25 years, and two thirds of UK adults are now considered overweight or obese. Of these, 22% of men and 23% of women are obese. This means that they are at least two to three stone overweight and putting their health at serious risk.

According to figures from the National Audit Office, being obese can take up to nine years off your lifespan. It also makes you far more likely to develop a range of health-related problems, including:

  • diabetes,
  • heart disease,
  • stroke,
  • osteoarthritis,
  • high blood pressure,
  • gallstones,
  • infertility, and
  • depression.

Combined with a lack of exercise, obesity contributes to one third of cancers of the colon, breast, kidney and stomach.

Childhood obesity

Obesity is not just a problem that affects adults. The number of obese children has tripled over the last 20 years. At least 10% of six-year-olds and 17% of 15-year-olds are now clinically obese. Childhood obesity should not be dismissed as 'puppy fat' - it is a strong indication that the child will be obese as an adult and is likely to lead to serious health risks in later life.


What are the Symptoms of Obesity?

Being a little bit overweight tends not to cause too many noticeable problems, but once you are carrying a few extra stones, symptoms will affect your daily life.

Day-to-day, obesity causes problems, such as shortness of breath. However, the long-term health risks that you cannot see are far more serious, such as heart-related illnesses.

The immediate symptoms of obesity include:

  • breathlessness,
  • sweating a lot,
  • snoring,
  • difficulty sleeping,
  • inability to cope with sudden physical activity,
  • feeling very tired every day, and
  • back and joint pains.


In the longer term, obesity greatly increases your risk of:

  • high blood pressure,
  • heart disease and stroke,
  • high cholesterol levels (fatty deposits blocking up your arteries),
  • breast cancer in women,
  • gall bladder disease,
  • gastro-oesophageal reflux disease (when acid from the stomach flows up into the gullet) and associated problems,
  • arthritis of the back, hips, knees and ankles,
  • diabetes, and difficulty controlling existing diabetes,
  • polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS - multiple cysts within the ovaries), and
  • reduced life expectancy.


In addition to the immediate and short-term problems of obesity, many people may also experience psychological problems, such as:

  • having low self-esteem (self-worth) - or poor self image,
  • having low confidence levels,
  • feeling isolated in society, or
  • having reduced mobility leading to a poor quality of life.
What Causes Obesity?

Obesity does not just happen overnight - it develops gradually from poor diet and lifestyle choices and, to some extent, from your genes.

Lifestyle choices

Lifestyle choices are an important factor in influencing your weight. Eating more calories than you need may be down to poor food choices - for example, eating high fat, processed, or fast food - rather than filling up on fruit, vegetables and unrefined carbohydrates, such as wholemeal bread and brown rice. Alcohol also contains a lot of calories, and heavy drinkers are often overweight.

Bad eating habits also tend to run in families - rather than inheriting a slow metabolism, the habits learned from your parents can be an important factor. Childhood obesity is a strong indicator of weight-related health problems in later life, showing that learned unhealthy lifestyle choices continue into adulthood.

Lack of physical activity

Lack of physical activity is another important factor that is related to obesity. Many of us have jobs that involve sitting at a desk for most of the day, and we rely heavily on our cars to get around. When it is time to relax, we tend to watch TV, or play computer games, and rarely take any regular exercise. If we are not active enough to use up the energy provided by food, the extra calories are stored as fat instead.

Some people tend to stay the same weight for years without much effort, whereas others find they put on weight quickly if they are not careful. This could be due in part to your genes - scientists have discovered certain genes that make you feel hungrier, or make it take longer for you to feel full.

Medical reasons

In less than one out of every 100 cases, there is a medical reason for obesity. Conditions such as Cushing's syndrome (over-production of steroid hormones in the body) and an under-active thyroid gland are rare causes of weight gain.

Certain medicines, including some steroids and antidepressants, can contribute to weight gain. Also, taking the contraceptive pill and quitting smoking may increase your appetite.


How to Diagnose Obesity?


Body Mass Index (BMI) is currently used as the most accurate and reliable way of measuring how overweight you are.

You can work out your own BMI using this calculation:

1. measure your height in metres and multiply the number by itself - this is the squared figure,
2. measure your weight in kilograms,
3. divide your weight by the answer you got in step 1 (squared height),
4. the number you are left with is your BMI.

For example, if you are:

  • 1.65 metres tall (165cm - 65 inches), your squared figure is 2.72
  • 58kg in weight
  • 58kg divided by 2.72
  • 21.3 BMI figure.


For most people, an ideal BMI is between 20 and 25.


Obesity - Treatments

The best way of tackling obesity is to reduce the amount of calories that you eat and exercise more. The is aim of treatment for obesity is to lose weight in order to improve your general quality of life, both physically and psychologically (see the ‘symptoms’ section). For example, losing weight may help you to increase your mobility, or help you to improve your self-esteem (self-worth).

Calorie control

Keeping a food diary can enable you to control the amount of calories that you eat. For example, recording what you eat and when can and help you to identify where you can cut out 500 calories a day from your diet. Keeping a diary may also help to reveal particular times when you overeat, or certain types of food that you are more inclined to binge on.

Try to find other activities to do rather than snacking, such as reading a magazine. Also, be careful not to buy foods that will tempt you, such as high calorie snacks, because not eating these type of foods is an obvious way to cut out 500 calories. You should find that you are still able to enjoy a wide range of tasty options, but in moderation (restraining yourself and avoiding excess).

Avoid special diets. Try to change your eating habits for the long-term by choosing a healthy, balanced diet instead of cutting out particular food groups. See the ‘prevention’ section for more information about healthy eating.

Increase your exercise

If you are obese, in order to lose weight you need to increase the amount of aerobic exercise that you do.

You should aim to do between 45-60 minutes of moderate intensity exercise a day. However, your GP may recommend that you to do more than this (between 60-90 minutes a day) in order for you to lose weight. Before starting an exercise programme, you should check with your GP to ensure that you are doing enough physical activity, and that the activity that you plan to do is safe for you.

In order to lose weight, the exercise that you do should increase your heart rate so that you break into a light sweat and you are out of breath by the end of the activity.

Recommended types of physical exercise include:

  • activities that can be incorporate into everyday life, such as brisk walking, gardening, or cycling,
  • supervised exercise programmes, and
  • activities such as swimming, walking (where you aim to walk a certain number of steps a day), and stair climbing.

As well as increasing the amount of exercise that you do, you should also reduce the amount of time that you spend on activities that involve being physically inactive, such as watching television, sitting at a computer, or playing video games.

Children and exercise

Children should be encouraged to do at least 60 minutes of moderate activity each day. The activity can be in one session, or several sessions that last 10 minutes, or more. As with adults, children who are overweight, or obese, may need to do more than 60 minutes of exercise. You should check with your GP before your child starts a new exercise programme.

Control your weight loss

Do not aim to lose weight too quickly, or you could end up losing muscle rather than fat. Aim for half to 1 kg (1 - 2 lbs) per week. This means eating 500-1,000 fewer calories than you were eating and drinking before. You should lose 6-12 kg if you keep this up for three months.

Losing weight and keeping it off is a long term commitment. It is not easy, and it is important not to be disappointed with any minor increases along the way. It is better to look at the overall progress, and remember that any weight loss will improve your health.

Always eat three meals a day, especially breakfast. Do not skip meals, as this will only make you feel hungrier, and it is likely you will overeat at your next meal time. If you are on a calorie controlled diet, remember to reduce your alcohol intake as well.

Weight loss groups

Some people who are overweight, or obese, find that joining a self-help group, or other type of weight-loss organisation, can be a good way of losing weight in a supportive environment.

However, you should avoid groups or programmes that claim to be able to achieve rapid weight loss through the use of ‘crash diets’ because these sorts of programmes have a poor record of success.

Weight loss programmes known to be successful are ones that:

  • aim for a realistic weight loss target (usually 5-10% of your original weight),
  • aim for a maximum weekly weight loss of 0.5-1 kg (1.1-2.2 pounds),
  • focus on long-term lifestyle changes, rather than a short-term, quick-fix approach,
  • use both diet and activity as a way of achieving weight-loss,
  • promote a healthy, balanced diet,
  • promote regular physical activity,
  • provide advice about how to change your behaviour, such as keeping a food diary,
  • provide advice about how to cope with lapses and possible ‘high-risk’ situations, and
  • provide on-going support.

Medication

Medication for obesity is only available in extreme cases from your GP. You need to show you can lose weight on a calorie controlled diet before it is considered. Medication is normally one part of a weight-loss programme, and requires a long term change in lifestyle for lasting results.

The part of the brain that controls how hungry we are is called the hypothalamus. It controls the hormones and chemical signals circulating in our blood that influence appetite.

Traditional weight-loss drugs contain amphetamine, which is a stimulant that increases the activity of certain brain chemicals. Stimulants increase the amount of noradrenaline and dopamine hormones in your blood, which stops you feeling as hungry. However, they are not suitable for long term use and can have serious side effects, including high blood pressure, anxiety and restlessness.

Scientists are trying to develop new medications that have fewer side effects by looking at the relationship between your body fat and hunger. Fat produces a hormone called leptin, which makes you feel less hungry.

Orlistat

Your GP may prescribe you with orlistat, which works by blocking the action of body chemicals called enzymes which digest fat. The undigested fat is not absorbed into your body, and is passed out with your faeces (stools). One orlistat capsule is taken with each main meal (a maximum of three capsules a day). You have to have made significant effort to lose weight through diet, exercise or changing your lifestyle before taking it. Even then, it is only prescribed if you have:

  • a BMI of 28 or more, and other diseases related to weight, such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or high cholesterol, or
  • a BMI of 30 or more.

Treatment with orlistat must be combined with a low fat diet and other weight loss strategies, such as doing more exercise.

Treatment with orlistat should only continue beyond three months if you have lost 5% of body weight, and beyond six months if you have lost at least 10% of body weight.

Side effects of orlistat include fatty smelly stools, urgency to get to the toilet, oily spotting on your underwear, and flatulence (wind). Side effects are much less likely if you stick to a low fat diet. Women taking an oral contraceptive pill are advised to use an additional method of contraception, such as a condom, if they experience severe diarrhoea whilst taking orlistat.

Orlistat is not prescribed to:

  • pregnant women,
  • breastfeeding women, and
  • children.

Sibutramine

Sibutramine is another type of medication that may be prescribed to help you lose weight. One sibutramine capsule is taken once a day. It affects chemicals in the brain called noradrenaline and serotonin to make you feel fuller, or satisfied with less food. Again, you need to have made considerable effort to lose weight before sibutramine is considered. Even then, it is only prescribed if you have:

  • a BMI of 27 or more, and other diseases related to excess weight, such as diabetes, high blood pressure, or high cholesterol, or
  • a BMI of 30 or more.

Sibutramine will only carry on being prescribed if you lose at least 2 kg within four weeks, and 5% of your initial weight within three months of starting treatment.

People with high blood pressure, heart disease, peripheral vascular disease (narrowing of blood vessels usually in the legs), arrhythmias (abnormal heart rhythms), or a history of strokes, should not take Sibutramine.

Side effects are common (affects 1 in 10 to 1 in 100 people), including constipation, dry mouth, difficulty sleeping, and increased blood pressure.

If either orlistat or sibutramine are prescribed for you, you will also be offered advice, support and counselling about diet, exercise and making lifestyle changes.

Medication and children

The use of medication to treat obesity is usually not recommended for children who are under 12 years of age, unless there are exceptional circumstances, such as their obesity places their life in danger.

Weight loss surgery

People with a BMI of 40, or more, are described as morbidly obese. At this stage, the problem can be very hard to treat. Surgery may be considered to restrict the amount of food eaten, or to interrupt the digestive process.

Surgery may also be an option for people with a BMI of 35 to 40, who have life-threatening cardiopulmonary problems – for example, severe sleep apnoea (a sleep disorder where a person experiences irregular breathing at night), obesity-related heart disease, or diabetes.

Availability on the NHS

Weight loss surgery is usually only available on the NHS where there is a clear clinical need for surgery, and other treatment options have been tried but failed.

You will probably only be able to receive weight loss surgery on the NHS if:

  • you have a BMI of 40 or more, or a BMI of between 35-40 and also have a serious health condition that could be improved if you lose weight, such as type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure,
  • you have tried all the appropriate non-surgical methods, such as diet and exercise, but have failed to achieve or maintain a clinically beneficial level of weight loss for at least six months,
  • you agree to commit to the need for long-term follow-up treatment after surgery at a specialized obesity service, and
  • you are fit and healthy enough to withstand anesthetic and surgery.

Types of weigh loss surgery

There are three widely used techniques in weight loss surgery:

  • gastric band surgery,
  • gastric bypass surgery, and
  • intra-gastric balloon.

Gastric band surgery

Gastric banding is a surgical procedure that involves fitting a band around the upper part of your stomach.

Gastric banding helps you lose weight by limiting the amount of food that you eat.

Once the band is in place it effectively divides your stomach in two, creating a smaller pouch at the top. Having this small stomach pouch will mean that it takes a lot less food for you to feel full. The food then slowly passes down into the rest of the stomach and is then digested in the normal manner.

A gastric band is designed to remain permanently within your stomach. However, it can be removed, and in the majority of cases leaves you with no permanent changes to your stomach. The procedure to fit a gastric band can involve a certain degree of complication, for example there is a risk of infection, and in rare cases, leaking into your stomach may occur.

Gastric bypass surgery cannot be used in people with a BMI of 45 or above, as the risks of serious complications are too high.

Gastric bypass

A gastric bypass is a similar procedure to a gastric band as a band is used to create a smaller stomach pouch. However the pouch is not connected to the rest of the stomach, but surgically re-routed to the small intestine, bypassing the rest of the stomach.

Gastric bypasses have a higher risk of complications that gastric band surgery, but they can be used for people who have a BMI of 45 or above.

Possible complications of gastric bypass surgery include:

  • leakage from the intestine or bowel,
  • obstructing the bowel,
  • internal bleeding,
  • blood clots,
  • infection at the site of surgery, and
  • lung infection.

These complications can be serious and may require additional surgery to treat them.

Intra-gastric balloon

An intra-gastric balloon is a soft silicone balloon that is surgically implanted in your stomach. This can help reduce your weight as it then takes less food to stop you feeling hungry.

The balloon is usually removed after six months.

Intra-gastric balloons tend not to achieve the same level of weight loss as gastric by-passes and gastric bands, but the procedure is less expensive, which may be a consideration if you opt for private surgery.

Prices can vary, depending on the clinic and your individual circumstances.


How to Prevent Obesity?

The best way to prevent becoming overweight, or obese, is by eating healthily and exercising regularly. As obese children also tend to be obese in later life, it is very important for parents to set the right example to their children from an early age.

Diet

Fruit, vegetables and unrefined carbohydrates should make up the bulk of your diet. Choose brown and wholegrain carbohydrates, and be sparing with high-fat additions, such as cheese, cream and butter. Aim for five portions of fruit and vegetables a day, and vary the type to get the maximum vitamins possible.

Think about how you prepare food - steaming and grilling are healthier ways of cooking than frying and roasting. Go easy on the amount of butter and oil you add during and after cooking.

Try not to overeat - listen to your body and stop when you are full. It can take up to 30 minutes for the stomach to register it is full, so eat slowly and wait before tucking into seconds. Serve food in the kitchen, not from the table where you might be tempted to go back for more.

Cut down on high fat snacks, junk food and ready meals, as they are often packed with fat, high levels of sugar and salt, and do not fill you up. Dried fruit, oatcakes, yoghurt and fruit are healthier and will keep you feeling full for longer.

Calories

Work out your daily calorie requirement from a calorie-counting book, and keep a food diary for a week. Do not change anything about your usual diet, but be ruthless in noting down the amount and type of food and drink you have. From this, you can work out how many calories you have consumed compared with the amount you need.

As well as showing you whether you need to cut your calories, keeping a food diary can also help you identify the types of food you are eating too much of. As well as recording what you eat, note down the time, place and how you feel. Mood often plays a big part in what we eat - feeling depressed, bored or tired, can quickly lead to comfort eating. Shopping when you are hungry, not making time to prepare a balanced meal, and stress, can also lead to the wrong food choices being made.

Exercise

It is recommended that, in general, adults should do at least 30 minutes of moderate intensity exercise, at least five days a week (or more). This can be done in one session, or split into a number of sessions lasting at least 10 minutes.

However, before starting an exercise programme, it is important to see your GP for advice as some people may not be able to manage this amount of exercise and others may benefit from doing more exercise.

Exercise does not just burn up calories. Regular, aerobic exercise increases your metabolic rate, so that even when you are not exercising, your body uses more calories overall. However, this effect is quickly lost once regular exercise stops.

Regular exercise increases appetite, but having a faster metabolic rate means that any additional calories are easily burnt off, particularly if you make the right food choices as described above.

Exercising when you are overweight can be tough because the extra weight means your body has to work harder. Stick to activities that increase your heart rate and get you sweaty, and slightly out of breath. If you feel embarrassed about joining a gym, try gardening, swimming or attending fitness classes specifically designed for people who are overweight.

In addition, try to fit more activity into your daily routine. Walk or cycle to work, or take the stairs rather than the lift. If you have never exercised before, a brisk 30 minute walk each day is a really good starting point.