Nutritional Counseling Panama City FL

Fast food and organic living don’t mix. Researchers continue to demonstrate the dangers of high-fat food, the omnipresence of high-fructose corn syrup in prepared foods and a sedentary lifestyle, but these three unhealthful lifestyle choices are becoming increasingly commonplace.

Marcia F Pell
850-913-6913
2947 Hwy 77
Panama City, FL
Jenny Craig
(850) 769-8777
900 W 23rd St
Panama City, FL
Yvette's
(850) 769-0826
2471 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd
Panama City, FL
Bay County Farmers Market
(850) 769-2645, (850) 785-0524
2230 East 15th Street; at the Fairgrounds
Panama City, FL
Lawrence Weinstein
561-200-3583
Bethesda Health City
Boynton Beach, FL
Green Wave Family Wellness
850-215-5657
215 Forest Park Cir
Panama City, FL
Body Quest
850-866-1958
2617 Cypress St
Panama City, FL
St. Andrews Waterfront Market
(850) 872-7208
3151 West 10th Street (U.S. hw 98, turn south on Beck Ave., then turn right
Panama City, FL
Zen Garden Market
(850) 234-1651
707 Richard Jackson Blvd.
Panama City Beach, FL
Glenn Farinacci
917 992 0209
1730 S. Federal Hwy, #208
Delray Beach, FL
Data Provided by:
    
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Fast Food & Organic Living

Fast food and organic living don’t mix. Researchers continue to demonstrate the dangers of high-fat food, the omnipresence of high-fructose corn syrup in prepared foods and a sedentary lifestyle, but these three unhealthful lifestyle choices are becoming increasingly commonplace. Most recently, Brent Tetri, MD, an associate professor of internal medicine at the Saint Louis University Liver Center, and his colleagues studied mice that consumed a diet that was 40% fat and full of high-fructose corn syrup (a sweetener common in soda and some fruit juices). “We wanted to mirror the kind of diet many Americans subsist on,” says Dr. Tetri, a leading researcher in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (a condition that can lead to cirrhosis and, ultimately, death). “The high fat content is about the same you’d find in a typical McDonald’s meal, and the high-fructose corn syrup translates to about eight cans of soda a day in a human diet, which is not far off with what some people consume. But we were also keeping the mice sedentary, with a very limited amount of activity.” The 16-week study offered some interesting results. “We had a feeling we’d see evidence of fatty liver disease by the end of the study,” Dr. Tetri says. “But we were surprised to find how severe the damage was and how quickly it occurred. It took only four weeks for liver enzymes to increase and for glucose intolerance—the beginning of type II diabetes—to begin.” And unlike other studies, the mice were not forced to eat; rather, they were able to eat whenever they wanted—and eat they did. According to Dr. Tetri, evidence suggests fructose actually suppresses your feeling of fullness (unlike fiber-rich foods, which make you feel full quickly). The take-home message for humans is obvious, he says. “A high-fat and sugar-sweetened diet compounded by a sedentary lifestyle will have severe repercussions for your liver and other vital organs,” Dr. Tetri says. “Fatty liver disease now affects about one of every ei...

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