The Case for a Breakfast Feast

A very informative read on why eating breakfast is so important.
— Dr. Dale

From The Case for a Breakfast Feast

Many of us grab coffee and a quick bite in the morning and eat more as the day goes on, with a medium-size lunch and the largest meal of the day in the evening. But a growing body of research on weight and health suggests we may be doing it all backward.

A recent review of the dietary patterns of 50,000 adults who are Seventh Day Adventists over seven years provides the latest evidence suggesting that we should front-load our calories early in the day to jump-start our metabolisms and prevent obesity, starting with a robust breakfast and tapering off to a smaller lunch and light supper, or no supper at all.

More research is needed, but a series of experiments in animals and some small trials in humans have pointed in the same direction, suggesting that watching the clock, and not just the calories, may play a more important role in weight control than previously acknowledged.

And doctors’ groups are taking note. This year, the American Heart Association endorsed the principle that the timing of meals may help reduce risk factors for heart disease, like high blood pressure and high cholesterol. The group issued a scientific statement emphasizing that skipping breakfast — which 20 to 30 percent of American adults do regularly — is linked to a higher risk of obesity and impaired glucose metabolism or diabetes, even though there is no proof of a causal relationship. The heart association’s statement also noted that occasional fasting is associated with weight loss, at least in the short term.

“I always tell people not to eat close to bedtime, and to try to eat earlier in the day,” said Marie-Pierre St-Onge, an associate professor of nutritional medicine at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons, who led the work group that issued the statement.

Perhaps not surprisingly, the latest study found that those who supplemented three meals a day with snacks tended to gain weight over time, while those who ate only one or two meals a day tended to lose weight, even compared with those who just ate three meals a day.

But the researchers also found that those who ate their largest meal early in the day were more likely to have a lower body mass index than those who ate a large lunch or dinner. Breakfast eaters tended to keep their weight down generally, compared with breakfast skippers. The lowest B.M.I.s were recorded in the fraction of people — about 8 percent of the total sample — who finished lunch by early afternoon and did not eat again until the next morning, fasting for 18 to 19 hours.

The conclusions were limited, since the study was observational and involved members of a religious group who are unusually healthy, do not smoke, tend to abstain from alcohol and eat less meat than the general population (half in the study were vegetarian). But the results suggested that rethinking when and how much we eat, and including an extended fast, may have benefits.

Fasting signals to the body to start burning stores of fat for fuel, the researchers said. “It seems our bodies are built to feast and fast,” said Dr. Hana Kahleova, one of the authors of the study, which was done by researchers at Loma Linda University School of Public Health in California and published in The Journal of Nutrition in July. “It needs some regular cycling between having food intake and fasting. This seems to be hard-wired.”

Having the largest meal in the morning appears to have advantages for weight control compared with having a large meal in the evening, she said, since the digestive process and the action of insulin, the pancreatic hormone that the body uses to process the sugars in carbohydrates and store glucose, appear to be at their peak performance early in the day. As a result, “our body can use the nutrients as a source of energy the easiest,” Dr. Kahleova said.

A person eating the identical meal at different times of day might deposit more fat after an evening meal than a morning meal, she said.

That’s because insulin action is more efficient in the morning, experts say. “If you give a healthy individual a big bolus of glucose in the morning, the blood glucose might stay high one or two hours before coming back to normal,” said Dr. Satchidananda Panda, a professor at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego. “You take that same normal healthy individual and give them the same bolus of glucose late at night, and now the pancreas is sleeping — literally — and cannot produce enough insulin, and blood glucose will stay high up to three hours.” Doctors once called this “evening diabetes,” he said.

But many people snack all day long, Dr. Panda said. He asked volunteers to use a smartphone app to photograph everything they drank and ate throughout the day and found that even generally healthy people ate and snacked over a period of about 15 hours a day, stopping for an extended amount of time only when they were in bed.

In earlier experiments in mice, Dr. Panda and his colleagues found that when the animals were given unlimited access to a high-fat diet — “the equivalent of humans eating only ice cream, cheese and nachos” — they became obese in nine or 10 weeks, and developed insulin resistance or diabetes and high cholesterol a few weeks later. But when the mice had access to the high-fat diet for only eight hours a day, they did not become obese or diabetic, even though they consumed the same amount of calories as the animals who ate round the clock.

Dr. Daniela Jakubowicz, an Israeli researcher at the Wolfson Medical Center in Tel Aviv, has tested these principles in small clinical trials. For one study, she recruited dozens of obese and overweight women with metabolic problems and put them all on identical 1,400-calorie-a-day diets. The researchers told half the women to consume 700 calories at breakfast, 500 calories at lunch and 200 calories at supper, and instructed the other group to reverse the order. Regardless of when it was eaten, the large meal included foods like tuna, whole wheat bread, a tomato and mozzarella salad, skim milk and a small amount of chocolate.

Women in both groups lost weight after 12 weeks, but those who ate the large meal in the morning lost two and a half times as much as those eating the large dinner. The large-breakfast group also lost more body fat — especially belly fat — and saw more improvement in metabolic factors like fasting glucose levels.

“We observed that the time of the meal is more important than what you eat and how much you eat — it’s more important than anything else in regulating metabolism,” Dr. Jakubowicz said, attributing that to the body’s biological clocks.

Artificial lighting, changing eating patterns, shift work and other variables of modern life can disrupt our internal system of biological clocks, so they are often out of sync, said Courtney M. Peterson, an assistant professor in the department of nutrition sciences at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. While bright light is the dominant timing cue for the body’s master clock in the brain, the peripheral cells and tissues in the body also have biological clocks, and food intake is an important factor for setting their time zones, she said. Ideally, all of the clocks should be in sync and in the same time zone.

“If your timing to light exposure is out of sync with the timing of meals, it’s like your clocks are at different time zones and don’t know how to communicate with each other,” Dr. Peterson said. “It’s like an orchestra whose musicians are playing out of time with each other,” and the result is “cacophony, not music.”

Intermittent fasting may have other advantages as well.

“Twenty years of work on animals shows that compared to those that have constant access to food, those on intermittent fasting diets live longer, their brains function better as they get older and the nerve cells respond to the period of going without food by increasing their ability to cope with stress,” said Mark P. Mattson, chief of the National Institute on Aging’s laboratory of neurosciences. “From an evolutionary perspective, it makes sense that animals in the wild — especially predators — would have to function optimally in a fasted state when they haven’t been able to obtain food.”

Dr. Kahleova says the take-home message is like the old proverb, to eat “breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a pauper.”

That may be a difficult prescription to follow, since family life and social get-togethers so often revolve around sitting down to an expansive meal at the end of the day. Dr. Kahleova suggested making the evening meal smaller as often as possible.

“The message is very straightforward: Make breakfast your largest meal of the day, and eat dinner as your lightest meal of the day,” she said.

Its National Relaxation Day. Here Are 7 Science-Backed Ways to Chill Out

Struggling with work-life balance? This is a good read for you.
— Dr. Dale

From Its National Relaxation Day. Here Are 7 Science-Backed Ways to Chill Out

BY MARKHAM HEID

August 15, 2017

America is uptight. Whether it’s a headache, problems sleeping, or feeling down or depressed, a full 80 percent of us are dealing with at least one stress-related health symptom, according to a 2017 study from the American Psychological Association (APA).

While the APA highlights the current political climate as a major source of anxiety for many of us, the truth is Americans have long had a problem chilling out. We work crazier hours and vacation less than almost any other nation on Earth. We also suffer from higher rates of burnout.

Jack Nicholson may have put it best in a 1986 interview: “Life used to be work until five o'clock and then you were meant to have some fun, some nourishment, some leisure. Americans don't understand leisure. They don't have a clue. They understand work; they understand play . . . they do not understand leisure.” (If you ever want to kill a few hours in the most entertaining, wisdom-infused way possible, read some old Jack interviews.)

“People develop a habit of carrying around more tension than they need to, and the more tense you are, the more easily you become anxious,” says Michelle Newman, Ph.D., director of the Laboratory for Anxiety and Mood Pathology at Penn State University.

Relaxation, Newman says, is the release of physical tension—and therefore a great way to keep your anxiety under control. How can you relax? Here are seven proven techniques

 

BREATHE THIS WAY

“People think ‘take a deep breath,’ but that’s the worst thing you can do,” Newman says. Sucking in a big breath of air is basically hyperventilating your lungs, and can make your anxiousness worse, she says.

Do this instead: “Put one hand on your chest and another on your abdomen just above your belly button,” Newman advises. Your goal is to breathe “diaphragmatically,” which means you’re sucking air down toward your stomach as opposed to into your chest.

“If your lower hand is moving while you breathe, you’re doing it right,” she says. “Try to take slow, shallow breaths,” and you’ll quickly calm yourself down, she adds.

 

LAUGH

Whether a person is suffering from back pain, cancer, or the after-effects of a traumatic experience, “laughter therapy” seems to be an effective way to feel better and combat stress-related anxiety, research shows.

Identifying exactly how laughter does this has proved tricky. But research from Lee Berk, Dr.PH., of California’s Loma Linda University, suggests a good laugh can unwrap or counteract all the tension-increasing, anxiety-driving processes that go on in your brain and body when you’re frazzled.

So fire up a funny video or podcast. You’ll feel more relaxed in no time.

 

TAKE A BREAK FROM YOUR DEVICES

Checking email and sports scores, posting on social, texting your family, listening to music . . . you probably do many (or all) of these things every time you pick up your phone—often in rapid succession.

Bad news: That kind of "media multitasking" may shrink a part of your brain linked with emotional control and anxiety regulation, finds a 2014 study from University College London.

If you can manage to pry yourself away from your phone, ditching it for an hour or two—or at least restricting yourself to one activity, like replying to texts or listening to music—should help you mellow out.

 

CLENCH, THEN RELEASE

Newman says "progressive muscle relaxation" is a proven way to decrease tension and anxiety. "Your goal is to systematically tense and then release different muscle groups," she says.

Tensing your muscles first is important. "When you first tense the muscle group and then release, it's like a pendulum that, when it swings to one side, will then swing farther to the other side," she explains.

She says there are lots of online sites or apps that can walk you through this practice. Here's one 10-minute guided program from Brigham Young University.

 

GET TOGETHER WITH A BUDDY

For decades, psychologists have recognized that hanging with friends is an effective shield against stress and anxiety.

One 2015 study found spending a lot of time on your own can lower your brain’s levels of feel-good chemicals in ways that promote anxiety and hamper “fear extinction”—or your mind’s ability to calm itself down.

Getting together with friends has just the opposite effect, says Robin Dunbar, Ph.D., a professor of evolutionary psychology at the University of Oxford in the U.K. Some quality time with your buds triggers the release of endorphins in your brain. “Since these endorphins are opiates, they give us a bit of an opiate-like high, and that just makes us feel good,” he says.

 

EXERCISE

Newman says almost any form of exercise—from weight training to yoga—can be a great way to unwind and combat anxiety. Mounds of research show exercise triggers the release of endorphins and other feel-good brain chemicals that combat tension.

But it’s important to step away from work and other stressors while you’re sweating out your anxiety. If you’re checking email or conducting business calls while you work out, you’re not going to get any of the relaxation benefits. In fact, those activities, coupled with the physical stress training places on your body, could actually promote anxiousness.

 

SPEND TIME IN NATURE

Going back to the early 1990s, research has linked time spent in nature with lower rates of anxiety and stress. Especially if you live in a city or urban environment, escaping to the woods or mountains for an hour or two seems to help your brain and body mellow out, shows research from Australia.

Why? For most of human history, people lived among plants and trees and water like any other animal. It’s possible we haven’t “fully adapted” to living in nature-bereft city environments, the Aussie researchers write.

How to spot and treat colorectal cancer

Let’s be proactive about preventing colorectal cancer from even starting!
— Dr. Dale

From How to spot and treat colorectal cancer

By Dr. Manny Alvarez Published August 12, 2017

After a twenty-year period in which the development of colorectal cancer among white Americans under the age of 55 was reported as declining, new evidence shows an increase in the disease. A recent study conducted by the American Cancer Society, using data from the National Center for Health Statistics, uncovered this worrying development and experts are urging an increase in awareness of the disease to help combat the rise.

Colorectal cancer describes colon cancer and bowel cancer. They typically occur in the lower part of the large intestine and are accompanied by a range of symptoms. If caught early, there’s a 50 percent chance that treatment will be a complete success. Late diagnosis often results in a less positive outcome.

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Causes of colorectal cancer

Over the years, medical research experts have discovered the causes of different types of cancers and other serious illnesses. Many causes are connected with diet and lifestyle, but there are some that are less obvious or easy to alter.

When it comes to colon cancer and bowel cancer, causes of the debilitating disease include:

  • A diet high in saturated fats and low in fiber
  • Sedentary lifestyle
  • Obesity
  • Smoking
  • Excessive intake of alcohol
  • Old age
  • Family history of colon cancer or bowel cancer
  • Polyps in your rectum or the lowers parts of your large intestine
  • History of irritable bowel illness such as colitis and crohns disease

Common symptoms

To help raise awareness of the disease and give you a better understanding of when you should be concerned, here are the most common symptoms of colon and bowel cancer:

  • More frequent visits to the toilet, without any significant changes in your lifestyle
  • Constipation
  • Diarrhea
  • Blood in stools (feces)
  • Feeling as though your bowel isn’t empty, even after going to the toilet
  • A bloated abdomen
  • Feeling full, even if you haven’t eaten for some time
  • Any regular, unexplained pain in the abdomen
  • Unexplained fatigue or tiredness
  • Inexplicable weight loss
  • Vomiting
  • A lump in your tummy or back passage when your doctor examines you
  • Unexpected development of iron deficiency in men, or in women post-menopause

Of course, a number of these symptoms are associated with other, sometimes less serious, illnesses too. However, if you experience a combination of three or more and have no explanation as to why they’ve begun, you should book an appointment with your doctor.

Even if it turns out to be something else entirely, your doctor will be happy to examine you and rule the possibility of colorectal cancer out as quickly as possible.

How colorectal cancer is treated

We know that no one wants to be diagnosed with colon cancer or bowel cancer. But, if you are unfortunate enough to have the disease, the current treatment to beat it can be successful – particularly if you’re diagnosed early on.

The treatment you receive for colorectal cancer depends on a number of factors, including the stage of the cancer, the exact location of the disease and your age, too – among others. The main treatments are surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy.

Surgery

With colorectal cancer, surgery is the most common treatment. That’s because it is usually possible to remove the polyps that typically cause the caner and also remove the infected part of the bowel or colon. A colostomy bag is often required for a short period of time and between surgeries. But, once the bowel is repaired, the need for a bag is eliminated.

In cases where the diagnosis is early and the cancer hasn’t spread far, surgery is able to cure the sufferer completely. In other cases, further treatment may be required.

Radiotherapy

As in other types of cancer, radiotherapy is where high energy radiation beams are used to try and shrink the cancer cells. It can also be used in an attempt to stop the cancer cells from multiplying and spreading.

Radiotherapy tends to be used in conjunction with other treatments. It can be used to try and shrink the cells before surgery. Or it can be prescribed after surgery too, in an attempt to try and stop the cells from multiplying.

Chemotherapy

A common treatment for colon cancer, chemotherapy uses strong chemical medicines to destroy the cancer cells. It can also be used in combination with other treatments to facilitate a more successful outcome.

Indeed, studies have shown that when chemotherapy is used in patients with advanced colon cancer and familial history of colorectal cancer, they have a lower chance of a recurrence of the disease.

When in doubt, speak to your doctor

As with other forms of cancer, colorectal cancer is a potentially debilitating disease. But, if it’s diagnosed and treated early, the results are more likely to be successful.

If you feel there might be something sinister happening to you that could be related to colon cancer or bowel cancer, make an appointment to see your doctor as soon as you can. They will either put your mind at rest or follow up on your concerns and help ensure you get well again.

The discomfort and upset of having colorectal cancer won’t be pleasant. But removing those cells from your body and enjoying an active and healthy life afterwards is a much better outcome than what could happen if you don’t follow up on your concerns.