Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Your Brain can sabotage your Weight Loss!



Diet Disruptor: How the Brain Sabotages Weight Loss

Why is it so hard to lose weight? Extra pounds may affect brain structures involved in appetite, making it harder to turn down food
They say old habits die hard. But if every time you diet the weight comes back six months later, it may not just be your routines that are sabotaging you. A new study in the Journal of Clinical Investigation (JCI) suggests that prolonged obesity may cause structural changes in the brain, altering the parts responsible for healthy weight maintenance and ultimately undermine your weight-loss plans.
The finding is consistent with a number of recent studies that suggest that each person may have a natural “set-point” weight that our bodies try to maintain. But it’s been unclear why overweight and obese people should have their “set-points” set so high. The new JCI study is among the first to suggest some physiological mechanisms that might keep heavy people too  heavy, even after they’ve begun to make healthy lifestyle changes.
“To explain a biologically elevated body weight ‘set-point,’ investigators in the field have speculated about the existence of fundamental changes to brain neurocircuits that control energy balance,” the study’s senior author, Michael Schwartz, told reporters. “Our findings are the first to offer direct evidence of such a structural change, and they include evidence in humans as well as in mice and rats.”
Although Schwartz cautions that his results are not yet the final word, here’s what the new study found:
Rodents who became obese on a high-fat diet developed persistent “neuronal injuries” in the hypothalamus — a part of the brain that regulates many metabolic functions, including hunger and fatigue. As the mice and rats continued to eat poor-quality food, their brains started to show damage in the region that regulates weight control.
Schwartz and his collaborators then looked at MRI scans from 34 obese humans, and found the same kind of unusual hypothalamus injury among them raising the possibility that a common culprit may be at work in promoting obesity across speices.
The idea of a body weight “set-point” has promising implications for the treatment of obesity. Even though it’s well known that people will lose weight any time they burn more calories than they consume, our bodies have many ways of adjusting how many calories we use during normal day-to-day functions, like muscle repair. This means that even though someone can control his calorie consumption exactly, he cannot control his total energy balance — or how much he eats minus how much he burns away — with the same kind of precision.
In addition, changes in hormone levels can also promote or suppress appetite. A 2011 study in the New England Journal of Medicine found that when obese people lost weight, they typically experienced hormonal changes that led to hunger, making it that much harder to cut calories and maintain the new, lower weight.
For the obese then, it seems like a vicious cycle. Being overweight now means that if you succeed at losing weight in the future, you still face potential challenges when you try to maintain that healthy weight. It’s not clear from the study whether the change in the hypothalamus is reversible, but the alterations may explain why people who were once heavy may struggle with hunger and find that the pounds creep back on unexpectedly — and frustratingly fast. A large number of studies confirms that successful dieters often regain much of their lost weight within one year of the diet — even when people are able to stay on the diet long-term. Seeing that weight come back can in turn quash motivation for future weight maintenance, and add to the vicious  cycle.
So is dieting a futile effort for those who are overweight? Not necessarily. A healthy diet and regular exercise have well-documented health benefits, whether or not a person is overweight. The latest findings just suggest that it may  be harder than simply sticking to a diet to lose weight. You might be fighting not just your eating habits, but some very powerful biological signals to eat, eat, eat.
But even if you struggle with your weight, there’s no reason to lose hope just yet. Losing any weight is better than losing now eight, and physical fitness and good nutrition can keep you feeling energetic, healthier and happier even if you never shed quite as much as you intended.
Read more: http://healthland.time.com/2012/01/04/diet-disruptor-how-the-brain-sabotages-weight-loss/#ixzz1iVcQggPt

Friday, December 2, 2011

Happy People Die Less

A new 15 year study shows that people who reported being happy, content or excited on a typical day had a 35% decrease in risk of dying, compared with those who are sadder or more anxious.
Time Magazine, 11/11

More Exercise = Better Sleep




THURSDAY, Dec. 1 (HealthDay News) -- A new study suggests regular physical activity might encourage better shut-eye: People who met national exercise guidelines reported better sleep and less daytimefatigue than those who didn't.
The research doesn't confirm that exercise directly leads to improved rest, and it's possible there may be another explanation for the apparent connection between exercise and sleep. Still, the findings are mostly consistent with previous research, said Matthew P. Buman, an assistant professor of exercise and wellness at Arizona State University who's familiar with the study.
But if you think a daily walk or jog will clear up your sleep problems, that might be a bit too optimistic.
"In general, the relationship between physical activity and sleep is moderate," Buman said.
More than one-third of U.S. adults have trouble falling asleep at night or staying alert during the day, according to background information in the study. Inadequate sleep has been linked to depression, cardiovascular disease and other health problems.
The new study, led by researchers at Oregon State University, looked at statistics from a U.S. health survey conducted from 2005 to 2006. The researchers focused on more than 2,600 men and women -- aged 18 to 85 -- who measured their activity levels and answered questions about sleep.
All wore accelerometers, devices that measure physical activity, for a week.
The researchers adjusted their statistics so they wouldn't be thrown off by unusually high or low numbers of people of certain ages, weight, health condition, smoking history or other factors.
The researchers then determined how many participants met or exceeded national exercise guidelines by getting at least 150 minutes a week of moderate exercise or 75 minutes a week of vigorous exercise or a combination of both.
Those who met the guidelines were 65 percent less likely to report often feeling sleepy during the day compared to those who got less exercise. They were also 68 percent less likely to report sometimes having leg cramps and 45 percent less likely to report having trouble concentrating while tired.
The study appears in the December issue of the journal Mental Health and Physical Activity.
Buman called the finding intriguing, even if it doesn't prove that exercise improves sleep.
If that is the case, however, the causes are unclear. Some researchers think physical activity improves sleep by helping reduce levels of stressanxietyand depression, he said. "Others have suggested an energy conservation hypothesis, essentially saying that when you burn more calories through exercise, your body more efficiently uses the sleep period to recover. Others have suggested that exercise can modestly reduce body weight, which in turn helps people to sleep better."
Another theory suggests that exercise helps the body deal better with the cooling down of its temperature during sleep, he said.
So should you avoid exercising before bed, as conventional wisdom suggests? The new research doesn't look at the timing of exercise, but the study authors do note that most previous studies haven't shown that late-night exercise disrupts sleep quality.
Study co-author Brad Cardinal, a professor of exercise science at Oregon State, said in a statement that the study is unusual because it directly measured how much exercise people got instead of relying on their memories, which can be faulty.
By Randy Dotinga
HealthDay Reporter

Friends Can Help You Get Healthier


Are You Interested in adopting healthier habits? You have a better chance of success if you find a friend with similar traits to share the experience, a new study suggests.
Participants paired with others of similar body mass, age, fitness level and diet preferences were three times as likely to adopt healthy behaviors as those matched randomly in an Internet-based study conducted by a researcher from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
"I think the reality is, we as individuals may have less motivation to change on our own than if we're surrounded by our peer group, even if we met on a social network site," said Dr. Victor Fornari, director of child and adolescent psychiatry at North Shore-LIJ Health System in New Hyde Park, N.Y., who is familiar with the study. "We're very influenced by the group phenomenon."
The study is published in the Dec. 2 issue of the journal Science.
For the study, an online social network was created to promote health and fitness. Broken into small groups of "health buddies," 710 participants were introduced to the idea of an online diet diary through a "dummy" participant who invited others to take part. Each participant was provided with a personalized, online "health dashboard" that displayed real-time information, such as daily exercise minutes, healthy behaviors and personal characteristics of the health buddies.
At the end of seven weeks, those who were matched with health buddies using the principle of "homophily" -- the tendency of people to have similar friends -- were far more likely to use the diet diary and take part in other healthy behaviors than participants whose buddies were assigned randomly. Not one obese individual signed up for the diet diary in the random networks, compared to more than 12 percent of obese participants in the similarly matched networks.
The results also suggest that the most effective social environment for increasing the willingness of obese people to adopt a behavior is one where they interact with others with similar health characteristics, the study said.
"I think it was a pretty brilliant study," said Tricia M. Leahey, an assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at the Warren Alpert Medical School of Brown University and Miriam Hospital's Weight Control andDiabetes Research Center in Providence. "It's neat that they're actually starting to manipulate a social network in a way specific to homophily."
Group therapy is also partially based on the premise that people can empathize better with others they relate to, said Dr. Alan Manevitz, a clinical psychiatrist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.
"The question of whether people can benefit from role models that show how to move out of similar thinking is also part and parcel of the development of social networks," Manevitz said. "We all need to be able to interact with people who can promote other senses of self, that you can take in and create within yourself."
However, the current findings refute prior research. Leahey wrote a study published in January 2011 that indicated that overweight people tend to have more social contacts who are also overweight or obese.
"We can say, 'Gee, if I'm in a network of relatively healthy individuals and become friends with someone who's overweight or obese, we might be influenced by this one individual,'" she said. "So I guess it cuts both ways."
But Leahey said she has observed results similar to the new study in "Shape Up RI," a statewide initiative in Rhode Island that draws friends, family members and coworkers into teams to increase exercise, family meals, fruit and vegetable consumption and reduce screen time. The program has shown that group support can become a powerful driver of healthy behaviors, she said.
Ideally, Fornari and Leahey said, the findings should spur other statewide or public programs promoting healthy lifestyles either in person or on Internet-based social networks.
"Certainly, that would be an exciting opportunity and I know that more and more educational opportunities will be web-based," Fornari said.
From Medicine.Net


Thursday, December 1, 2011

Exercise Increases Our Self-Control


Exercise May Encourage Healthy Eating Via Brain Changes

24 Nov 2011   

Exercise may encourage healthy eating by changing parts of the brain that influence impulsive behaviour, according to a new review of the available literature by researchers from Spain and the US published inObesity Reviews. The researchers conclude that in a society where we are surrounded by temptations and triggers that facilitate over-eating and excess, the part of the brain responsible for "inhibitory control" undergoes "relentless strain" (they note it has limited capacity anyway), and doing exercise on a regular basis enhances it.

"By enhancing the resources that facilitate 'top-down' inhibitory control, increased physical activity may help compensate and suppress the hedonic drive to over-eat," they write. 

Obesity has been rising at an alarming rate in Spain in recent years, so much so that in some parts of Spain, the proportion of the population that is obese is higher than that in many parts of the United States, the country traditionally considered as having the highest obesity rates in the western world. 

Also, in line with other countries in the Mediterranean, Spain has one of the highest rates of childhood obesity in Europe. 

Co-author Dr Miguel Alonso Alonso, a Spanish neurologist working at the Harvard-affiliated Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in the US, told the press on Wednesday that many studies suggest "physical exercise seems to encourage a healthy diet. In fact, when exercise is added to a weight-loss diet, treatment of obesity is more successful and the diet is adhered to in the long run". 

However, in order better to inform and improve current approaches and treatments for obesity, he and his co-authors, from the US and Spain, thought it might be useful to bring together what these "somewhat disparate, yet interrelated lines of literature" may have to say about the neurological underpinning of the link between exercise and weight loss. 

"Designing effective weight-loss interventions requires an understanding of how these behaviours are elicited, how they relate to each other and whether they are supported by common neurocognitive mechanisms," they write. 

There is evidence that regular physical exercise changes the working and structure of the brain. From their review, the researchers conclude these changes seem to support the idea that regular exercise improves the results of tests that measure the state of the brain's executive functions, and increases in connections in the grey matter and prefrontal cortex. 

One of the brain's executive functions is "inhibitory control" which helps us keep check on impulsiveness, or to suppress inadequate, excessive or inappropriate behaviour toward a goal. 

The researchers conclude that regular practice of physical exercise, in time, produces a "potentiating effect" on the brain's executive functions, including the ability for inhibitory control, and this helps us "resist the many temptations that we are faced with everyday in a society where food, especially hypercaloric food, is more and more omnipresent". 

Exercise also brings other benefits, such as making the brain more sensitive to physiological signs of fulness. This helps not only to control appetite, but it also modifies the "hedonic" response to food stimuli, say the researchers. Thus the benefits of exercise occur in the short term (these affect metabolism) and in the long term (these affect behaviour). 

Alonso Alonso and colleagues suggest it is important that social policies help and encourage people to practise sport and engage in physical exercise, whether at school, in urban settings, or daily life, with the help of public transport, pedestrianized areas and sports centres. 

Written by Catharine Paddock PhD 
Copyright: Medical News Today

Your Brain and B-12


Vitamin B12 Levels Linked to Memory Skills and Brain Size

Are you getting enough of this essential nutrient?

 | A new study links vitamin B12 deficiency to brain shrinkage and memory problems in older adults.
The study involved 121 adults age 65 and older who are part of the ongoing Chicago Health and Aging Project.
Level of B12 Affects Brain Size, Thinking Skills- a B- Vitamin
Seniors with low vitamin B12 may be more likely to have smaller brain size. — Visuals Unlimited/Getty Images
Researchers tested participants for thinking skills and blood levels of vitamin B12, as well as for the presence of blood markers that accumulate when the body does not have enough B12. Four to five years later they had MRI brain scans.
Scientists at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago found those who had the markers linked to vitamin B12 deficiency were more likely to have the smallest brains and the lowest scores on tests measuring short-term memory, concentration and other thinking processes.
As the brain ages, it begins to shrink and lose some volume. More severe brain shrinkage occurs in those with dementia, including Alzheimer's disease.
The study was published September 27 in the journal Neurology.
While B12 occurs naturally in beef, fish, shellfish, dairy products and many other foods, the problem often is not with diet but absorption, says Christine Tangney, associate professor of clinical nutrition at Rush and one of the study authors. Some prescription medications used to treat heartburnstomach ulcers and type 2 diabetes can limit the absorption of B12, as can the thinning of the stomach lining, which can happen with age.
Diagnosing B12 deficiency can be difficult, the study shows. Indeed, all of the study participants had B12 blood levels measuring in the normal range.
Still, 15 to 17 percent had elevated levels of biomarkers indicating B12 deficiency.
"Even though the B12 in the blood may be at a certain level," Tangney says, "there may not be enough in the tissues."
"It's an important study, because it seems to suggest that just checking for serum B12 levels in elderly patients is probably not enough," says Daniel C. Potts, M.D. associate clinical professor of neurology at the University of Alabama School of Medicine in Tuscaloosa.
In the past, he says, he would check for the markers only when he suspected a B12 deficiency. Now, Potts says, "I think I'm going to do it on everybody."

How to get your B12

Liver, clams, salmon and trout are all high in vitamin B12. Fortified supplements and cereals, which may be more easily absorbed in the body, are also good sources of the vitamin.
To get your recommended daily value (DV):
  • 1 slice of liver, 800% recommended daily value
  • 3 ounces of cooked clams, 570% DV
  • 3 ounces of sockeye salmon, 80% DV
  • 1 cup of yogurt, 23% DV
  • 3 ounces of steak, 23% DV
Source: National Institutes of Health fact sheet.