If you overdo it on pizza, macaroni and cheese,
chips, and ice cream, you might worry about what it's going to do to your
thighs or mid-section. But binging on junk food isn't only a matter of weight
gain. It might have far more serious repercussions than that.
People who ate a diet focused on macaroni and
cheese, processed lunchmeat, sausage biscuits, mayonnaise, and microwavable
meals with unhealthy fats, for example, showed serious negative changes to
their metabolism after just five days.
After eating the junk-food diet, the study
participants (12 healthy college-aged men) muscles' lost the ability to oxidize
glucose after a meal, which could lead to insulin resistance down the road.1
What Happens to Your Metabolism
After Five Days of Junk Food
Even though their caloric intake remained
unchanged, when men ate a junk-food diet their muscles' ability to oxidize
glucose was disrupted in just five days' time. This is a significant change,
because muscle plays an important role in clearing glucose from your body after
a meal.
Under normal circumstances, your muscles will
either break down the glucose or store it for later use. Your muscles make up
about 30 percent of your body weight, so if you lose this key player in glucose
metabolism it could pave the way for diabetes and other health problems.2 As reported by TIME:3
"'The normal response to a meal was
essentially either blunted or just not there after five days of high-fat
feeding,' [Matthew] Hulver, [PhD, department head of Human Nutrition, Food, and
Exercise at Virginia Tech Hulver] says.
Before going on a work-week's worth of a fatty
diet, when the men ate a normal meal they saw big increases in oxidative
targets four hours after eating.
That response was obliterated after the five-day
fat infusion. And under normal eating conditions, the biopsied muscle used
glucose as an energy source by oxidizing glucose. 'That was essentially wiped
out after,' he says. 'We were surprised how robust the effects were just with
five days.'"
Just One Bad Meal Can Mess with
Your Health
Morgan Spurlock's documentary Super Size Me
was one of the first to vividly demonstrate the consequences of trying to
sustain yourself on a diet of fast food. After just four weeks, Spurlock's
health had deteriorated to the point that his physician warned him he was
putting his life in serious jeopardy if he continued the experiment.
But as the featured study showed, it doesn't take a
virtual month to experience the health effects of a poor diet. In fact, the
changes happen after just one meal, according to research published in
the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.4
When you eat a meal high in unhealthy fats and
sugar, the sugar causes a large spike in your blood-sugar levels called
"post-prandial hyperglycemia." In the long term this can lead to an
increased risk of heart attack, but there are short-term effects as well, such
as:
·
Your
tissue becomes inflamed (as occurs when it is infected)
·
Your
blood vessels constrict
·
Damaging
free radicals are generated
·
Your
blood pressure may rise higher than normal
·
A surge
and drop in insulin may leave you feeling hungry soon after your meal
The good news is that eating a healthy meal helps
your body return to its normal, optimal state, even after just one. Study
author James O'Keefe of the Mid America Heart Institute in Kansas City,
Missouri told TIME:5
"Your health and vigor, at a very basic level,
are as good as your last meal."
See Inside Your Stomach After a
Meal of Instant Meals…
Dr. Braden Kuo of Massachusetts General Hospital
used a pill-sized camera to see what happens inside your stomach and digestive
tract after you eat ramen noodles, one common type of instant noodles. The results were astonishing…
In the video above, you can see ramen noodles
inside a stomach. Even after two hours, they are remarkably intact, much more
so than the homemade ramen noodles, which were used as a comparison. This is
concerning for a number of reasons.
For starters, it could be putting a strain on your
digestive system, which is forced to work for hours to break down this highly
processed food (ironically, most processed food is so devoid of fiber that it
gets broken down very quickly, interfering with your blood sugar levels and
insulin release).
When food remains in your digestive tract for such
a long time, it will also impact nutrient absorption, but, in the case of
processed ramen noodles, there isn't much nutrition to be had. Instead, there
is a long list of additives, including the toxic preservative tertiary-butyl
hydroquinone (TBHQ).
This additive will likely remain in your stomach
along with the seemingly invincible noodles, and no one knows what this
extended exposure time may do to your health. Common sense suggests it's not
going to be good…
Eating Processed Foods Linked to
Chronic Disease
Research published in the Journal of Nutrition
found that women who consumed more instant noodles had a significantly greater
risk of metabolic syndrome than those who ate less, regardless of their overall
diet or exercise habits.6
Past research also analyzed overall nutrient intake
between instant-noodle consumers and non-consumers, and found, as you might
suspect, that eating instant noodles contributes little value to a healthy
diet.
The instant-noodle consumers had a significantly
lower intake of important nutrients like protein, calcium, phosphorus, iron,
potassium, vitamin A, niacin, and vitamin C compared with non-consumers.7 Those who ate instant noodles
also had an excessive intake of energy, unhealthy fats, and sodium (just one
package may contain 2,700 milligrams of sodium).8
Not to mention, refined carbohydrates like
breakfast cereals, bagels, waffles, pretzels, and most other processed foods
quickly break down to sugar in your body. This increases your insulin and
leptin levels, and contributes to insulin resistance, which is the primary
underlying factor of nearly every chronic disease and condition known to man,
including weight gain.
Not only that, but remember… when you eat junk food
you are not just feeding yourself… you’re feeding your microbiome, too, and in so doing altering
its construction for better or worse. Your body’s diverse army of microbes is
responsible for many crucial biological processes, from immunity to memory to
mental health, so feeding it wisely, with fresh unprocessed and naturally
fermented foods, is crucial to your overall health and well-being.
Is Junk Food as Dangerous as
Cigarettes?
In the US, about one-quarter to one-third of adults
fall into the obese category. A staggering two-thirds of Americans are
overweight, and poor diet is in large part to blame. Last year, UN Special
Rapporteur on the right to food, Olivier De Schutter, said that "obesity
is a bigger global health threat than tobacco use," and that this fact
isn't taken as seriously as it should be. His statements were delivered at the
opening of the 2014 World Health Organization's annual summit. De Schutter
ultimately wants nations to join forces to place stricter regulations on
unhealthy foods:9
"Just as the world came together to regulate
the risks of tobacco, a bold framework convention on adequate diets must now be
agreed," he
said. 'The Special Rapporteur has previously agitated for greater
governmental action on junk foods, including taxing unhealthy products,
regulating fats and sugars, cracking down on advertising for junk food, and
rethinking agricultural subsidies that make unhealthy food cheaper,' Time
Magazine noted. 'Governments have been focusing on increasing
calorie availability,' he said, 'but they have often been indifferent to what
kind of calories are offered, at what price, to whom they are made available,
and how they are marketed.'"
The idea that being overweight can be more harmful
than smoking is likely to make many balk,
considering how "normal" it has become to carry around extra pounds,
but in terms of overall health effects and subsequent health care costs, it's
likely true. For example, data collected from over 60,000 Canadians show that obesity
leads to more doctor visits than smoking.10
Further, according to a report by The McKinsey
Global Institute, the global cost of obesity is now $2 trillion annually, which
is nearly as much as the global cost of smoking ($2.1 trillion) and armed
violence (including war and terrorism, which also has a global cost of $2.1
trillion).11 For comparison, alcoholism costs
are $1.4 trillion annually, road accidents cost $700 billion, and unsafe sex
costs $300 billion. What's more, if current trends continue, the McKinsey
report estimates that nearly half of the world's adult population will be
overweight or obese by 2030.
Junk Food Is Incredibly Addictive
Your body is designed to naturally regulate how
much you eat and the energy you burn. But food manufacturers have figured out
how to over-ride these intrinsic regulators, designing processed foods that are
engineered to be "hyper-rewarding." According to the "food
reward hypothesis of obesity," processed foods stimulate such a strong
reward response in our brains that it becomes very easy to overeat. One of the
guiding principles for the processed food industry is known as
"sensory-specific satiety."
Investigative reporter Michael Moss describes this
as "the tendency for big, distinct flavors to overwhelm your brain."12 The greatest successes, whether
beverages or foods, owe their "craveability" to complex formulas that
pique your taste buds just enough, without overwhelming them, thereby
overriding your brain's inclination to say "enough." In all, potato
chips are among the most addictive junk foods on the market, containing all
three "bliss-inducing" ingredients: sugar (from the potato), salt,
and fat. Further, as reported by TIME:13
"Studies suggest that fatty, sugary foods
promote excretion of the stress hormone cortisol, which seems to further
stimulate appetite for calorie-dense foods. And the big post-meal spikes in
blood sugar are more likely in people who don't exercise or those who carry
weight around their abdomen. All of it makes it tough for people to stop eating
junk food once they're in the habit. 'The more you eat it the more you crave
it. It becomes a vicious cycle,' says O'Keefe."
And while food companies abhor the word
"addiction" in reference to their products, scientists have
discovered that sugar, in particular, is just that. In fact, sugar is more
addictive than cocaine. Research published in 2007 showed that 94 percent of
rats that were allowed to choose mutually-exclusively between sugar water and
cocaine, majority chose sugar.14 Even rats that were addicted to
cocaine quickly switched their preference to sugar, once it was offered as a
choice. The rats were also more willing to work for sugar than for cocaine.
The researchers speculate that the sweet receptors
(two protein receptors located on the tongue), which evolved in ancestral times
when the diet was very low in sugar, have not adapted to modern times'
high-sugar consumption. Therefore, the abnormally high stimulation of these
receptors by sugar-rich diets generates excessive reward signals in your brain,
which have the potential to override normal self-control mechanisms and thus
lead to addiction.
Does Junk Food Have a Hold on
You? How to Break Free
Replacing processed foods with homemade meals made
from scratch using whole ingredients is an ideal and important way to ensure
optimal nutrition. This will automatically cut out the vast majority of refined
sugars, processed fructose, preservatives, dyes, other
nasty chemicals, and many addictive ingredients from your diet. This will allow
your body to depend less on sugar and more on fat as its primary fuel—provided
you eat enough healthy fat, that is.
As a result, you will no longer crave sugar to keep
you going. The key elements for a healthy diet that can help kick your junk
food cravings to the curb are the following. For a comprehensive guide, please
see my free optimized nutrition
plan:
·
Avoiding
refined sugar, processed fructose, grains, and processed foods
·
Eating a
healthy diet of whole foods, ideally organic, and replacing the carbs you
eliminate with:
·
As much
high-quality healthy fat as you want (saturated and monounsaturated). Many
would benefit from getting as much as 50-85 percent of their daily calories
from healthy fats. While this may sound like a lot, consider that, in terms of volume,
the largest portion of your plate would be vegetables, since they
contain so few calories.
·
Fat, on
the other hand, tends to be very high in calories. For example, just one
tablespoon of coconut oil is about 130 calories—all of it from healthy fat.
Good sources include:
|
Olives and olive oil
|
Coconuts and coconut oil
|
Butter made from raw grass-fed
organic milk
|
|
Organic raw nuts, especially
macadamia nuts, which are low in protein and omega-6 fat
|
Organic pastured egg yolks and
pastured meats
|
·
Large
amounts of high-quality organic, locally grown vegetables, fermented
vegetables, and ideally sprouts grown at your home
·
Low-to-moderate
amount of high-quality protein (think organically raised, pastured animals, or
eggs)
Planning Your Meals Is Key
Ditching processed foods requires that you plan your
meals in advance, but if you take it step-by-step as described in my nutrition plan, it's quite possible, and
manageable, to painlessly remove processed foods from your diet. You can try
scouting out your local farmer's markets for in-season produce that is priced
to sell, and planning your meals accordingly, but you can also use this same
premise with supermarket sales. You can generally plan a week of meals at a
time, making sure you have all ingredients necessary on hand, and then do any
prep work you can ahead of time so that dinner is easy to prepare if you're
short on time (and you can use leftovers for lunches the next day).
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