Carbohydrates, Proteins, and Hidden Fats

Written by Dr. Donald A. Miller


Recent TV news showed that various food brands are offering low carbohydrate foods due to public demand. That just shows how poorly informedrepparttar public can be.

The Mayo Clinic (http://www.mayoclinic.com/) tells us that "Every day your body requires certain nutrients, such as carbohydrates, fats and protein, to function properly. Too much of one nutrient or not enough of another can influence your health."

Encyclopedia Britannica (http://www.britannica.com) tells how carbohydrates can be classified, but they are all described as molecules of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen. "Carbohydrates arerepparttar 114998 most abundant molecules in all biology."

Carbohydrates and oils arerepparttar 114999 means that plants store energy. Few plant fats are saturated.

Fats are also compounds of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen, but in more complex structures than carbohydrates. The more structural bonds,repparttar 115000 less liquid isrepparttar 115001 fat at room temperature. Such liquid fats are called oils. Hydrogenating oils creates more hydrogen bonds to make liquids into soft or hard fats. These trans-fats are bad for cardiovascular health. The "essential fatty acids" arerepparttar 115002 ones thatrepparttar 115003 human body cannot create from other foods, such as proteins.

Proteins have many structures, but are mostly composed of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen plus Nitrogen. The essential amino acids are those proteins whichrepparttar 115004 human body cannot create from other foods.

Of course, foods also contain essential vitamins and minerals. Supplements of these can be beneficial, if not overdone.

High / Low Carbohydrate / Protein diets really missrepparttar 115005 target. Once minimal needs of each food type are met,repparttar 115006 real issue is high or low calories compared to those used. If you eat more than your exercise can burn, you gain weight, and vice versa.

Carbohydrates as sugars are fine as nature provides them, but not as refined and concentrated by humans. Like any source of calories, excess consumption leads to body fat. The details will vary, but a five pound bag of fresh fruit contains fewer calories than a typical candy bar.

Truths about Diet, Obesity, and $75 Billion

Written by Dr. Donald A. Miller


Sensible diet prevents obesity! Healthy living prevents most diseases! (Unfortunately, old age is not a disease.)

These truths should be self evident.

Yet recent shock headlines tell us that "medical problems caused by obesity are costing U.S. tax payers $75 billion per year".

The human body is a biological machine. We all know that overloading a mechanical machine can cause it to break down, yet we allow ourselves to overload our hearts, joints, and more. Moderate exercise helps "tune up"repparttar machines we live in.

Think about it. Many injuries are a direct consequence of being over weight and under exercised!

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention tells us, "Seven of 10 deaths, or more than 1.7 million each year, are caused by chronic diseases." and thatrepparttar 114997 major risk factors for chronic diseases are "tobacco use, poor nutrition, and lack of physical activity" with "Obesity is a major contributor to heart disease, diabetes, arthritis, and some types of cancer. Recent estimates suggest that obesity is associated with 300,000 deaths annually, second only to tobacco related deaths."

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