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" I believe the doctor of the future will be a teacher as well as
a physician.
His real job will be to teach people how to be healthy."
Dr.
D.C. Jarvis
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ZONE BULLETS
Understanding the Zone
By Barry Sears
The central theme of The Zone is to understand the importance of
thinking of food hormonally, rather than calorically. Once you do so, you
begin to understand why virtually every dietary recommendation of
the U.S. Government, and leading nutritionists, are hormonally wrong ...
maybe dead wrong. An example of caloric thinking is that "if no
fat touches my lips, then no fat reaches my hips." Hormonal thinking, by
contrast, says that insulin makes you fat and keeps you fat. This
new hormonal thinking also explains the dietary paradox why Americans
are eating less dietary fat than they were 15 years ago, but are
becoming more obese. The following is a summary of the key concepts and
ideas presented in The Zone.
It is impossible for dietary fat alone to make you fat. It is the hormone insulin that makes you fat and keeps you fat. How do you increase insulin levels? By eating too many fat-free carbohydrates or too many calories at any one meal. Americans do both. People forget that the best way to fatten cattle is to raise their insulin levels by feeding them lots and lots of low-fat grain. The best way to fatten humans is to raise their insulin levels by also feeding them lots and lots of low-fat grain, but now in the form of pasta and bagels.
Your stomach is politically incorrect. The stomach is basically a vat of acid that breaks all food into its basic components for absorption. From that perspective, one Snickers bar has the same amount of carbohydrate as does 2 oz. of pasta. Most people would not eat four Snickers bars at one sitting, but they would eat 8 oz. of pasta. The stomach can't tell the difference. And the more carboydrates you eat, the more insulin you produce. And the more insulin you produce, the fatter you become.
Not everyone is genetically the same. About 25% of the U.S. population is genetically lucky because they have a low insulin response to carbohydrates. These people will never become fat, and they will always do well on any high-carbohydrate diet whether it be pasta, Snickers, or Twinkies. Unfortunately, the other 75% of the U.S. population aren't so lucky. As they increase the amount of fat-free carbohydrates in their diet, they increase the production of insulin. Next time you look at a bagel, ask yourself do you feel lucky. You have a 25% chance that you might be.
10,000 years ago there were no grains on the face of the earth. Through much of man's evolution, he has been exposed to only two food groups; low-fat protein and fruits and vegetables. This is what man is genetically designed to eat. When grains were first introduced into the human diet, three things immediately happened:
Mankind shrunk in size from lack of adequate
protein.
Diseases of "modern civilization," such
as heart attacks and arthritis, first appeared.
Obesity became prevalent.
How do we know these things? From studies of Egyptian mummies. Not
only were Egyptians much shorter than neo-paleolithic man, but they also
showed significant indications of heart disease. Furthermore, Egyptians
had the same amount of obesity as found in the U.S. today. We can determine
this from the excess amount of skin found around the stomachs of preserved
mummies.
It takes fat to burn fat. Fat slows down the entry rate of carbohydrates into the bloodstream thereby decreasing the production of insulin. Since it's insulin that makes you fat, having more fat in the diet is important for reducing insulin. The best type of fat is monounsaturated fat, like olive oil, guacamole, almonds, and macadamia nuts.
You can use food as a hormonal ATM card. The average American male or female carries a minimum of 100,000 calories of stored body fat. To put this in perspective, this amount of stored body fat is equivalent to eating 1,700 pancakes. That's a pretty big breakfast. The calories you need for energy are already stored in your body. What you need is a hormonal ATM card to release them. The Zone diet is your ATM card.
The number one predictor of heart disease is not high cholesterol,
or high blood pressure, but elevated levels of insulin.
How can you tell you have elevated levels of insulin? Look in the
mirror. If you're fat and shaped like an apple, you have elevated insulin
levels. But you can still be thin and have elevated insulin. How can you
tell? You have high triglycerides and low HDL cholesterol. This is why
high-carbohydrate, low-fat diets can be extremely dangerous to cardiovascular
patients if they lose weight, but see an increase in triglycerides and
a decrease in HDL cholesterol.
Carbohydrates are a drug. The body needs a certain amount of carbohydrates
at every meal, just like a drug, for optimal brain function. Excessive
consumption of any drug, however, has toxic side effects. An overdose of
carbohydrates results in the excess production of insulin, which is toxic.
The Zone should be considered a wake-up call for America that unless
this tide of fat-free carbohydrate gluttony is reversed, millions of
people may be unknowingly driven to early cardiovascular events
which may very well lead to the eventual bankruptcy of our health care
system. This statement should not be taken lightly. In late January
1996, the American Heart Association announced that cardiovascular
deaths in the U.S. were increasing for the first time after a steady
continuous decline sine 1980.
© 1996 Barry Sears
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-147 hand written pages of advice to correspondents- CD-PDF Format $49.95 ea. Includes Shipping |
'Humans could live for hundreds of years'
Scientists say people could live active lives for hundreds of
years if humans follow the same biological rules as
laboratory worms.
By carefully tweaking genes and hormones, scientists
extended the lifespan of the tiny roundworm Caenorhabditis
elegans six times. In human terms, the worms stayed
healthy and active for 500 years.
The researchers pointed out that the chief mechanism they
tampered with - a signalling pathway involving insulin - was
common in many species, including mammals.
But many people might find the price of immortality a little
high. The worms with the longest lifespans also had their
reproductive systems removed.
The life span extensions obtained by US and Portuguese
scientists were the longest achieved for any organism.
Writing in the journal Science, the researchers said
mutations that inhibit insulin/IGF-1 (insulin-like growth factor)
signalling can double the life span of C. elegans.
Removing precursor reproductive cells also extended
lifespan by 60%. This was not due to sterility, but appeared
to be the result of altered hormonal signalling.
Further genetic interference of mutation-carrying worms,
plus the removal of their reproductive systems, produced
lifespans six times longer than normal.
Both insulin and IGF-1 have similar biological signalling
pathways in the body.
Insulin is a hormone with strong metabolic effects. It controls
the level at which glucose is broken down, absorbed into
the muscle cells and used to provide energy. IGF-1
stimulates cell replication and differentiation, and the
synthesis of cellular products.
Story filed: 19:22 Thursday 23rd October 2003
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" I believe the doctor of the future will be a teacher as well as
a physician.
His real job will be to teach people how to be healthy."
Dr.
D.C. Jarvis
|
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