The Best Foods that Fill You Up and Boost Your Metabolism and Shed
Pounds
by
Ori Hofmekler
What you're
about to read here may change the way you think about food. Yes,
once you see the facts, you'll realize that most of the products
on the grocery shelves don't fit your biology. Most of today's dietary
products are not designed to keep your body young.
The genes
that regulate your biological age are highly sensitive to your diet,
as they're triggered or inhibited by what you eat, how much you
eat, and how often. The point is: You need to know how your diet
affects your biological age. You need to know what food keeps you
young and what food is making you old.
How Your
Diet Affects Your Biological Age
It has been
largely agreed that one of the most detrimental causes of aging
is excessive calorie intake. Scientists speculate that humans have
an overly strong drive to eat when food is readily available. And
since people are surrounded today with calorie dense food, they
tend to consume excess calories, which then cause them to gain weight,
lose health, and age prematurely.
Given this,
many believe that calorie restriction is the most effective strategy
to get in shape and counteract aging. But the calorie restriction
theory is only partly true. It can't always predict whether you'll
gain weight or lose weight, neither can it predict whether you'll
get in shape or get out of shape. You can be on a low calorie diet
and fail to lose weight, and you can be on a high calorie diet and
yet manage to slim down.
Emerging evidence
indicates that there is another powerful factor behind the scene
one that overrules and dictates your energy expenditure,
metabolic rate, body fat percentage, physical shape and eventually
your biological age. That factor is the system that controls your
hunger and satiety signals. And as you'll soon see, it has nothing
to do with your calorie intake, but rather with what you eat and
how often.
How Your
Hunger-Satiety System Affects Your Physical Shape
Your hunger-satiety
system consists of multiple neuro-peptides that act to initiate
or terminate your feeding. These are your hunger-satiety hormones.
Their signals are integrated by centers in your brain to modulate
how you consume, spend or store energy. The balance between these
signals dictates whether your body is in a fat-burning or a fat-storing
mode.
In order to
maintain a healthy body weight, your hunger and satiety signals
must continually adjust your food intake to your energy expenditure.
Any imbalance between these two will affect your fat stores and
physical shape. Obesity, for instance, is a result of a disrupted
energy balance in which a surplus of accumulated food energy is
stored as body fat.
Again, your
physical shape seems to depend on the ratio between your hunger
and satiety hormones and so is your biological age. Both hormones
regulate your eating behavior and metabolic rate, albeit with opposite
effects on your body.
Hunger Hormones
vs. Satiety Hormones
Your hunger
and satiety hormones are constantly clashing with each other like
two armies at war. And the consequences of that hormonal clash are
manifested in your body. Hunger hormones tend to slow your metabolism
and increase your body fat whereas satiety hormones tend to boost
your metabolism and decrease your body fat.
Simply put,
if your hunger hormones get out of control, you'll be prone to suffer
from a sluggish metabolism and excess body fat. And if your satiety
hormones take over, they will counteract the effects of your hunger
hormones to allow you greater energy and a leaner healthier body.
But note that
your hunger hormones are not inherently bad; when balanced, they
play important roles in your metabolic system. Under healthy conditions
they may even help you burn fat. The hunger peptide ghrelin, for
instance, is a most potent trigger of your growth hormone
it binds to growth hormone secreagogue receptors (GHS-Rs) and increases
its release by six fold. Indeed, fasting and hunger boost your growth
hormones and potentiate its actions to burn fat and repair tissues
more efficiently than drugs naturally and safely without
side effects.
Your hunger
hormones are part of your survival apparatus. They relate to your
satiety hormones like yin to yang. They keep you alert and give
you the drive to search for food along with the desire to achieve.
And they balance the actions of your satiety hormones which tend
to calm you down.
But if you
let your hunger hormones get out of control, you'll experience chronic
hunger, diminished energy, metabolic decline, decreased libido and
increased tendency to gain weight.
You need to
know how to manipulate both types of hormones to work for you. And
you certainly need to keep your hunger hormones under control. But
how can you do that if you don't even know what causes your hunger
hormones to get out of control?
What Causes
Your Hunger Hormones Get Out of Control?
Normally your
hunger hormones are highly responsive to feeding their levels
increase during fasting and reduce upon food ingestion. Your most
notable hunger hormones are ghrelin, neuropeptide Y (NPY) and agouti-related
protein (AgRP).
During fasting,
your hunger hormone ghrelin peaks, boosting your growth hormone
to initiate fat burning. Meanwhile, your remaining hunger hormones
are continually balanced by your satiety hormones (adiponectin and
glucagon-like peptide). This keeps your hunger under control and
potentiates your sensitivity to satiety signals.
Then, when
you resume eating, your hunger hormones decline allowing
your satiety hormones to kick in and act to boost your metabolism.
That's how
your hunger-satiety system works under healthy conditions. It allows
you to burn fat when you don't eat and it acts to boost your metabolism
when you eat. Hence, a win-win situation.
But your hunger-satiety
system can only function well as long as your diet is adequate.
If your diet is high glycemic and your feeding episodes are too
frequent, your hunger-satiety system will be utterly disrupted.
Frequent consumption
of high glycemic meals impairs your key satiety hormones insulin
and leptin, leaving your hunger hormones unopposed and dominant.
When insulin is impaired (such as in cases of insulin resistance),
ghrelin levels remain elevated even after meal consumption
a condition that leads to chronic hunger (mostly for carbs), excess
food intake and undesirable weight gain.
This issue
has been widely overlooked, perhaps because people normally like
to consume baked goods and candies on a daily basis and even more
so during celebrations. But the evidence leaves no doubt: frequent
consumption of high glycemic foods jeopardize your satiety apparatus
and put your body under the tyranny of your hunger hormones.
To prevent
that you need to avoid high glycemic foods and resist cravings for
sweets. You need to know how to boost your satiety hormones and
let them take control over your metabolism.
How to Boost
Your Satiety Hormones
Your satiety
hormones include insulin, leptin, adiponectin, cholesystokinin (CCK),
glucagon-like peptide (GLP), PPY and melanocortin. When potentiated
to counteract your hunger hormones, they help increase your energy
expenditure, stimulate your thyroid, enhance your sex hormones,
lower your stress hormones and increase your capacity to burn fat.
The three
main factors that boost your satiety hormones are:
- Food restriction
- Exercise
- Weight loss
Food restriction,
exercise and weight loss increase the sensitivity and effectiveness
of your insulin and leptin while potentiating the actions of your
other satiety hormones. This means that with proper diet, exercise
and restoration of a healthy body weight, you can increase the efficiency
of your satiety hormones to allow you be at your peak physical potential.
But how do you put this in practice? How do you put your satiety
hormones in charge?
There are
three ways to achieve that:
- Eat satiety
foods
- Avoid hunger
foods
- Train your
body to endure hunger
Eat Satiating
Foods
The food that
promotes satiety most is protein. It yields satiety more effectively
than carbohydrates or fat. Out of all proteins, the one with the
fastest satiety impact is whey protein that's if the whey
is whole and non-denatured.
Studies reveal
that consumption of whey protein before meals can swiftly boost
the satiety peptides CCK and GLP-1, which have been shown to decrease
food intake and increase weight loss. Whey protein is also beneficial
when consumed before exercise. Having a small serving of whey protein
(with no sugar added) about 30 minutes before exercise seems to
help sustain intense muscle performance and increase the efficiency
of muscle protein synthesis after exercise. A pre-exercise whey
meal has also shown to boost the body's metabolic rate for 24 hours
thereafter.
Other satiety-promoting
foods are low glycemic plant foods including raw nuts, seeds, legumes,
roots, cruciferous vegetables, tomatoes, eggplants, grasses and
green leafy vegetables.
Being low
glycemic and fibrous, these plant foods are a great fit for your
insulin and leptin as well as your whole satiety system. Nuts and
seeds trigger PPY a satiety peptide which is highly sensitive
to dietary fat. PPY shifts your cravings from carbohydrates to fats
and increases your metabolic capacity to convert fat to energy.
That action
counteracts your hunger hormones, which typically shift your cravings
towards carbohydrates. Note that it's the shift towards refined
carbohydrates that has been linked to chronic cravings and excessive
food intake. This is the reason why once you open a bag of potato
chips and start crunching, you may find it difficult to stop.
And note that
your muscle isn't programmed to do well on hunger foods; it rejects
fructose and has a limited capacity to utilize high glycemic foods.
But your muscle literally thrives on satiety foods. Combinations
of whey protein and berries, eggs and beans or meat and nuts have
unmatched muscle nourishing properties. Furthermore, being satiety
oriented, these food combinations promote the right hormonal environment
for muscle rejuvenation and buildup.
All that said,
you can't fully benefit from your satiety food if you don't know
what food to avoid.
Avoid Hunger
Foods
Stay away
from high glycemic foods including all refined carbohydrates, sugars,
fructose products, baked goods, candies and sugary beverages. Fructose
in particular has shown to cause leptin resistance, lipid disorders,
hypertension, obesity and diabetes. Studies reveal that the muscle
rejects fructose as an energy substrate and the liver has a limited
capacity to utilize it; excess fructose is converted into triglycerides
and body fat.
But nothing
is more damaging to your satiety than the combination of high sugar
and high fat. This dietary combo packs on empty calories, causes
insulin and leptin resistance and shatters your satiety along with
your whole metabolic system. In fact, it has been found that the
high sugar-high fat combo causes insulin and leptin resistance even
prior to any change in body composition.
This means
that all food products made with a high content of sugar and fat
are poisonous to your satiety system. These include cookies, cakes,
ice creams and chocolates, all of which set you up for serious metabolic
setbacks associated with insulin and leptin resistance which may
include excess estrogen, excess cortisol, low testosterone, hypoglycemia,
hyperglycemia and increased belly fat.
The good news
is that both insulin and leptin resistance can be reversed by food
restriction and weight loss. Hence, your insulin and leptin are
restored by austerity and shattered by indulgence.
It has been
suggested that insulin and leptin play important roles in times
of scarcity but have a lesser role in times of plenty. To keep your
insulin and leptin intact you must not indulge yourself with high
glycemic treats, not even in moderation. Otherwise, your body will
get the wrong signal and you'll pay the consequences with your weight,
energy and state of health.
Now that you
know how to choose your satiety foods, let's take a look at the
other methods that boost your satiety hormones.
Train Your
Body to Endure Hunger
Hunger should
be treated like physical exercise. Both are perceived by your body
as survival signals to adapt and improve. When your body is repeatedly
challenged with acute (temporary) hunger, such as due to periodic
fasting, it adjusts itself by decreasing the number of hunger receptors
in your brain and thus making you increasingly resilient to hunger.
This in turn increases the efficiency of your satiety hormones,
and potentiates them to take control of your metabolism.
But only real
hunger can benefit you that way. Real hunger is what you experience
while fasting or undereating, not the kind of craving you feel on
a fully belly after finishing a meal.
There are
different ways to train your body to endure hunger. You can try
to gradually increase the gap between your meals or alternatively
put your body in an undereating state for most of the day. And you
can also try exercising while fasting. Let's see how all this translates
into practice.
Undereating
You can put
your body in an undereating state by minimizing your food intake
during the day to small, low glycemic, fast assimilating protein
meals such as quality whey (every 3-5 hours), which could be served
with (or substituted with) small servings of fruits and vegetables.
Have your main meal at night.
Undereating
has some notable advantages over complete fasting. It challenges
your body similar to fasting yielding a negative energy balance
which increases your adaptability to hunger while promoting fat
burning and tissue recycling. However unlike fasting, it allows
you to nourish your body with protein and antioxidants, and you
won't feel the desire to eat as intensely as when you completely
avoid food.
But whether
you fast or undereat, do not chronically restrict your calories.
Your hunger must be acute, not chronic. Treat yourself with sufficient
food in your main evening meal to compensate for the energy and
nutrients you spend during the day.
Exercising
While Fasting
Probably the
most intense way to improve your hunger durability is by exercising
while fasting. This presents a double challenge to your body and
it yields a stronger signal to adapt than fasting or exercise alone.
Though exercise while fasting may initially affect your maximum
performance, it will nevertheless come with an additional bonus.
A study published
in the Journal of Physchology/November 2010 indicated that exercising
while fasting increases the body's metabolic adaptation efficiency
to utilize energy, burn fat and deposit protein in the muscle
substantially more than when exercising after a meal. The researchers
reported that the increased capacity to deposit protein in the muscle
as observed in people who were exercising while fasting and then
eating a post-exercise meal, is a result of increased insulin sensitivity
and activation of the muscle mTOR (the mechanism that increases
muscle protein synthesis).
Your body
is inherently programmed to benefit from acute hunger (via periodic
fasting or undereating) and even more so when exercising while fasting.
This probably has to do with an early adaptation mechanism to hunger
and hardship which evolved to support human survival during primordial
times of food scarcity and intense hardship. Apparently, this primal
evolutionary trait is still pertinent today and it potentially affects
your physical shape.
Projections
Ori HofmeklerUnderstanding
the biological system that regulates hunger and satiety along with
energy balance is essential for preventing excessive weight gain,
metabolic decline and premature aging. More studies are needed to
elucidate the relationship between human nutrition and aging. As
the mechanisms of feeding and energy homeostasis are studied and
clarified, treatments based on natural manipulations of hunger and
satiety could be just as effective as hormonal therapy in adjusting
hormonal disorders and deficiencies.
Manipulations
of hunger and satiety through special nutritional strategies may
be useful in restoring thyroid hormone activity, balancing estrogen,
and attenuating or preventing growth hormone and testosterone decline.
These strategies may help affect the enormous morbidity associated
with obesity, diabetes and related diseases.
In today's
world, you need to know what are your best options for keeping your
body biologically young. In this case, nature doesn't leave you
with many choices controlling your hunger is not an option,
it's a necessity.
References
July
15, 2011
Ori
Hofmekler, author of The
Warrior Diet, The
Anti-Estrogenic Diet, Maximum
Muscle Minimum Fat, and the upcoming book Unlock
Your Muscle Gene is an expert on how to improve your health
with foods.
Copyright ©
2011 Dr. Joseph Mercola
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