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Dr James RomanoDiet and Exercise | |||||
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![]() Diet and Exerciseby,James J. Romano, M.D.
This needs to be individualized with proper goals in mind. It must incorporate into your lifestyle and be a permanent state of mind. We do not subscribe to fad diets or quick-fix medications. High calorie diets and improper foods in improper quantities can have one of the most severe detrimental effects on our body and accelerate aging more than any other single factor. The need for excessive work and energy expenditure of every cell and organ and system in our body to handle high calorie diets is a very rapid aging process. Our dietary consultants and our recommendations are very similar to the Zone and Adkins diet. Don't judge these on whether you can loose weight rapidly or not as much as in its value for physiological nutritional balance in your body and longevity. Consider:
The Problems With Carbohydrates: Myths and Truths The main source of energy in our body is carbohydrates. In the early 1980's a Canadian group devised a system for ranking carbohydrates on a scale of 1 to 100. This is based on how quickly the body converts carbohydrates to glucose, which is reflected in how fast the blood glucose rises and how fast insulin is released. Rapid increases in blood glucose are very bad for the body. For example, whole grains contain lots of fiber and rank low on the scale, whereas starchy foods with little or no fiber rank extremely high. Potatoes rate 93 while fiber rich beans rate 27. This ranking system has become known as the glycemic index, with unfavorable (high glycemic index) and favorable (low glycemic index) carbohydrates respectively.
Research at Harvard School of Public Health studied 65,000 nurses and found that women who ate little fiber and many high glycemic index carbohydrates (pasta, bread, rice) were 2.5 times more likely to develop diabetes than those who ate less of these foods. Additionally, epidemiologist Simin Liu also at Harvard, noted that women whose diet included the mostly high glycemic index carbohydrates doubled their risk of heart attack, even more so than eating saturated fats. Another study of 1400 middle-aged adults found that people who ate sweet, starchy foods had the lowest levels of HDL (good cholesterol), a condition known to increase the risk of heart attacks. Carbohydrates make you gain weight and get fat. They also retain water and make you bloated. In summary, all this is not so much related to the carbohydrate alone, as it is to our body's inability to process higher insulin levels produced by the rapid rise in this glucose. Increased intake of unfavorable carbohydrates leads to insulin resistance which leads to diabetes and increased risk of heart attack, not to mention weight gain.
Many of these progressive ideas came from Canada and Australia, but American dieticians, government agencies, and food manufacturers have been slow to responded and have, for mostly economic reasons, resisted this information. It is very likely that in the future you will the surgeon general declare that cutting back on potatoes, bread, rice, and pasta will be very beneficial for your health.
FAVORABLE CARBOHYDRATES (LOW GLYCEMIC INDEX) Better to eat these: Green Vegetables, Small "New" Potatoes, Most Fresh Fruit, Sweet Potatoes, High Fiber Cereals, Semolina Pasta, Whole Grain Breads, Basmanti Rice, Nuts
UNFAVORABLE CARBOHYDRATES (HIGH GLYCEMIC INDEX) Try to avoid these, but if you must, eat very little:
WATER
EXERCISE Don't think of this just as a means to loose weight which it effects the least. It is mostly beneficial in protecting the heart, strengthening bones, improving sleep and memory, reducing cancer risk, and retaining muscle mass.
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| Copyright 2007 James J. Romano, M.D., 126 Post Street, Suite 618, San Francisco, CA 94108, 415 . 981 . 3911 | |||||
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