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Know Your Macronutrients: Carbohydrate
Managing your
carbohydrate intake doesn’t have to be complicated—or expensive. Nevermind all
the high-priced, heavily marketed “carb aware” foods. If you want to keep it
simple, keep your carbs complex, and just cut out the candy, skip the soda and
pass on the processed pastry.
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Know Your Macronutrients: Protein
The media
blitz about the American obesity crisis is putting new attention on the nation’s
dietary problems, but it isn’t necessarily providing the re-education we need to
help us overcome them.
Research shows
that the majority of us have only a sketchy grasp of how nutrition relates to
how our bodies function—or fail to—and we often regard nutrition as a minor
factor in our overall health.
Of course,
nothing could be further from the truth, but even the most detailed knowledge
isn’t enough to correct or even prevent obesity or bad eating habits—thousands
of overweight doctors can attest to that.
Even so, when
it comes to your health, ignorance never leads to bliss, and the more you know,
the better equipped you are to adjust your own eating habits for better health
outcomes.
Here, then, is
the first of three pieces offering a simple look at the macronutrients, protein,
fats and carbohydrate, the fundamental nutritional building blocks. You may be
surprised by what you don’t know.
Protein First
Of all the
nutrients your body needs, protein is the most vital.
Why? Because
it is absolutely necessary to build and maintain all your body’s structures, not
only muscles, tendons and ligaments, but also your circulatory system, brain,
organs, immune system, skin—just about everything.
As old cells
slough off these various structures, replacement protein is constantly needed to
build and repair them. If fresh protein is not available more or less
continuously, the structures start to break down.
Myths About Protein
Many people
have false ideas about what protein can do. They expect protein to give them big
muscles, stamina and athletic prowess. They think that if a little protein is
good, a lot must surely be better.
But eating a
hearty serving of red meat every night will not make you robust. The average
150-pound man cannot use all the protein in an 8-ounce dinner steak to meet his
daily requirement, even if he eats no other protein foods all day long.
That’s because
the body can utilize only four to eight ounces of protein at a time. The rest
will be converted into carbohydrate for immediate energy or stored as fat,
because, unlike fat and carbohydrate, protein can’t be held in reserve in the
body. You cannot load up on protein Monday and store it for use on Tuesday and
Wednesday. In fact, the protein you eat at breakfast is pretty well used up by
dinner time.
Protein in weight-loss
It would be
nice if your body burned only the excess fat you are anxious to shed.
Unfortunately, it doesn’t work that way.
Even to
function at a minimal level, our bodies first use available carbohydrate, then
protein, and last turn to our fat stores for energy. The very process of burning
body fat requires the presence of carbohydrates. If there are insufficient carbs
and protein in the food you eat, your body breaks down lean body tissue for the
proteins, and converts them to carbohydrate for energy.
That’s why
people on some low-calorie diets lose muscle mass when they’re trying to lose
fat. If there is a deficiency of dietary protein, the body essentially
cannibalizes its lean mass for the energy to burn its fat mass.
And if the
body does have to turn to its own tissues for an energy source, it perceives
this as a threat to survival—which it could be—and it slows the metabolism, so
that the body uses less and less energy to function overall.
But that’s
counterproductive in any weight-loss effort, and shows why starvation diets
don’t work. You want your body to use more of what you take in, not less. So
ensuring adequate intake of small amounts of protein spread through the day
keeps our bodies from turning to lean tissues for energy, and helps keep
metabolism optimal. That’s what’s meant by the expression “feed your
diet.”
Complete and Incomplete Proteins
Proteins are
made from chains of amino acids, of which 20 have been identified so far. Nine
are called “essential” amino acids. They are essential in your diet because the
body cannot manufacture them. The other 11 can be made in the body from remnants
of leftover carbohydrates, fats and other amino acids.
Foods that
contain all nine essential amino acids are considered complete proteins. Those
containing less than nine are called incomplete proteins. Most animal proteins
fall into the category of complete proteins: meat, poultry, fish, eggs, milk,
cheese and other dairy products. Except for soy, proteins from plant sources are
incomplete.
However, as
any vegetarian can tell you, you do not have to eat animal proteins to have an
adequate diet. All you have to do is combine foods that supply all nine
essential amino acids.
For example,
rice is very low in lysine but high in methionine, both of which are essential
amino acids. Beans are low in methionine, but high in lysine. Served together,
they provide a complete protein meal without the expense of prime cuts of meat.
There’s solid nutritional science behind cheap cuisines based on rice and
beans.
Similar logic
holds for the pairing of legumes and grains, the ingredients of a peanut butter
sandwich. It’s also true for dairy and grain combinations, as in macaroni and
cheese. These are called complementary proteins.
The catch is
that these combinations must be eaten together or within a few hours of each
other, or the benefit of pairing them for the complete protein is lost. But when
you consider all the options, you can see how easy it can be to give your body
the little protein infusions it needs throughout the day to be functioning at
its best.
THROUGH THICK & THIN
The challenge
when choosing your protein sources is to avoid foods that are also high in fat
and cholesterol. For example, the fat in a hamburger may almost equal the
protein. And peanut butter has almost twice as much fat as protein, bringing the
calorie total for two tablespoons to a whopping 190 calories! On the other hand,
a serving of fish has very little fat—in most cases, less than one-fifth of an
ounce—and it’s an essential fat, at that. That’s a great protein
bargain. That's knowing your macronutrients.
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Related Links:
Obesity: How Fat Is Too Fat?
Dietary Advice: Trans What? Trans Fat?
Healthy Diet Advice: Overdoing Dietary Sugar is No Sweet Deal for Your Body
Calorie Savings: Modern labor-savers mean calories saved, too
Glycemic Index: Good carb, bad carb
Diet and Exercise Plan: Fatness or Fitness? Making a Plan of Attack
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This website is only for the purpose of providing information and should not be substituted for the advice of your doctor.
Please consult with your doctor before starting any weight loss program or supplement.