Elemental Back & Body
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Spring Detoxification Program
Spring is
here: a time of new beginnings, growth, and of course...spring cleaning.
It is the perfect time to start new projects, clean the house and begin
preparing for the busy summer ahead. Just as the earth has its yearly
cycles so do our bodies, and spring marks a time of transition and cultivation.
During
the spring our body's energy begins to speed up and rise, releasing the toxins
that tend to build up in our organs and cells throughout the winter. In
order to ensure that our energy is up for the busy summer months ahead, it is
important to make sure those toxins are released from the body so they don't
build up and overwhelm our systems. A few
symptoms of toxic overload include:
·
Fatigue, lethargy
·
Headaches
·
Joint pain
·
Trouble staying focused
·
Weak immune system
·
Depression
·
Irritability
·
Allergies
·
Trouble sleeping
·
Body odor
There are
hundreds of different detox and cleansing products on the market today, but
many of them can do more harm than good by not supporting all the phases of
detoxification. Not only do you need to
isolate the toxins and potentially harmful substances (Phase I), but they need
to be efficiently excreted out of the body (Phase II). This is why it is important to have a
medically supervised detox so that the proper procedures take place.
Kaila
Cruttenden L.Ac. at Elemental Back & Body wants to guide you through a successful
cleanse that leaves you feeling rejuvenated, clear headed, energetic, and most
of all toxin free. She has set up a supervised 28 day program that
includes:
·
Day by day instructions on what to eat and drink
·
Supplementation shown to enhance liver detoxification Phase I and II
·
Four acupuncture treatments to support the body through this
process
·
Two massage treatments
·
Three infrared sauna sessions
Whether
it's mountain biking, climbing, running, hiking, or long days at the lake,
after this 28 day program you will feel revitalized and ready for all that
summer has to offer.
Informational
meeting Thursday May 15th at 7:00pm
Program
starts May 22nd and ends June 18th. Call or email now to
reserve your spot!
530.906.0150
info@elementalbodies.com
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Juicing vs Blending: Which is healthier?
Since their introduction in the 1930s, juicing and blending have had periods of wax and wane in popularity with the health conscious. While there are health benefits to both, I thought I would try and shed some light on the advantages and disadvantages of each.
For those who aren’t clear on the difference between the two, let’s take a quick look. Juicing is a process which extracts water and nutrients from produce and discards all the fiber, including the pulp and skins. Blending finely chops the entire fruit or vegetable to produce a smooth consistency. Make sense? Good. Here are a few benefits of each:
Juicing Benefits:
- More nutrients per serving. Without the bulk of fiber your body can absorb the nutrients more quickly and efficiently. Fiber is also filling, so removing it allows you to drink more juice than you would a smoothie.
- Healthier than store bought juice. If you drink juice regularly, then home juicing is much healthier. Store bought juices are heat treated to kill germs, which make them last longer in storage but lowers their nutritional value.
- More variety for picky eaters. It may be easier for some people to add some fruit or veggie juice (ex. beets) in small doses rather than in the bulk of a smoothie.
Blending benefits:
- A slow steady release into the bloodstream. With juicing much of the fiber in fruit and most in vegetables is removed. Without the fiber to slow absorption, juice absorbs quickly. This leads to spikes in blood sugar, followed by an energy crash, increased hunger, and spikes in insulin. This may be a problem in diabetics or others watching their blood sugar. With blending, this fiber is left in, allowing for a longer release, leading to less pronounced swings in blood sugar and energy.
- Cost. By using the fiber and skin in whole fruits and veggies, blending adds bulk easily, requiring less ingredients for the same output. Anyone who has juiced can attest, it takes an amazing amount of fruit to get one glass of juice.
Both are great options for increasing your daily servings of fruit and vegetables. My personal opinion is that juicing is a better option as a daily supplementation of micronutrients, almost like a multivitamin. Blending is a better option for meal replacement.
Remember, no individual food is the magic cure for health. The best approach is a balanced diet of high quality, minimally processed ingredients from a range of sources and types.
Dr. Spencer Cruttenden, DC, CSCS
Chiropractic Physician
References
Pitchford, Paul. Healing with Whole Foods. Berkeley, CA: Atlantic Books; 1993.
Weil, Andrew. Eating Well for Optimum Health. New York: Random House; 2000.
Weil, A. Is Juicing Really Good For You? Dr. Andrew Weil Website. 2007. Found at: http://www.drweil.com/drw/u/id/QAA400198. Accessed October 2012.
Willet, Walter C. Eat, Drink, and Be Healthy. The Harvard Medical School Guide to Healthy Eating. New York: Free Press; 2001.
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
What's Really Behind The Heart Disease Epidemic?
For decades it has been forced down our throats that bad cholesterol causes heart disease, fat is bad, carbohydrates are better, and the more you exercise the skinnier you will be. So we took all the fat out of our diets, replaced it with so called "healthy oils" and sugar, and voila... we now have a more unhealthy nation than ever before! In the book "Good Calories, Bad Calories" Gary Taubes describes in detail why cholesterol is not to blame and why we should be eating butter (organic) instead of certain oils. Our bodies aren't equipped to process all the synthetic substances we put into it, and as a result we have become a very sick nation.
With all the research that is coming out on heart disease, it is becoming more obvious that a major change is in order. Changing our way of thinking, especially when it comes to health, is not an easy task, but a necessary one.
Below is a great article written by a heart surgeon on heart disease and chronic inflammation. It also, along with Taubes, debunks high cholesterol being the leading cause of heart disease and talks about how our diets are causing chronic internal inflammation.
Now is the time to take the initiative and educate yourself, then the next time you're at the grocery store you'll be more inclined to put the crackers back and pick up an apple.
-- Kaila Cruttenden L.Ac., Dipl. OM
With all the research that is coming out on heart disease, it is becoming more obvious that a major change is in order. Changing our way of thinking, especially when it comes to health, is not an easy task, but a necessary one.
Below is a great article written by a heart surgeon on heart disease and chronic inflammation. It also, along with Taubes, debunks high cholesterol being the leading cause of heart disease and talks about how our diets are causing chronic internal inflammation.
Now is the time to take the initiative and educate yourself, then the next time you're at the grocery store you'll be more inclined to put the crackers back and pick up an apple.
-- Kaila Cruttenden L.Ac., Dipl. OM
We physicians with all our training, knowledge and authority often acquire a rather large ego that tends to make it difficult to admit we are wrong. So, here it is. I freely admit to being wrong. As a heart surgeon with 25 years experience, having performed over 5,000 open-heart surgeries, today is my day to right the wrong with medical and scientific fact.
I trained for many years with other prominent physicians labelled "opinion makers." Bombarded with scientific literature, continually attending education seminars, we opinion makers insisted heart disease resulted from the simple fact of elevated blood cholesterol.
The only accepted therapy was prescribing medications to lower cholesterol and a diet that severely restricted fat intake. The latter of course we insisted would lower cholesterol and heart disease. Deviations from these recommendations were considered heresy and could quite possibly result in malpractice.
It Is Not Working!
These recommendations are no longer scientifically or morally defensible. The discovery a few years ago that inflammation in the artery wall is the real cause of heart disease is slowly leading to a paradigm shift in how heart disease and other chronic ailments will be treated.
The long-established dietary recommendations have created epidemics of obesity and diabetes, the consequences of which dwarf any historical plague in terms of mortality, human suffering and dire economic consequences.
Despite the fact that 25% of the population takes expensive statin medications and despite the fact we have reduced the fat content of our diets, more Americans will die this year of heart disease than ever before.
Statistics from the American Heart Association show that 75 million Americans currently suffer from heart disease, 20 million have diabetes and 57 million have pre-diabetes. These disorders are affecting younger and younger people in greater numbers every year.
Simply stated, without inflammation being present in the body, there is no way that cholesterol would accumulate in the wall of the blood vessel and cause heart disease and strokes. Without inflammation, cholesterol would move freely throughout the body as nature intended. It is inflammation that causes cholesterol to become trapped.
Inflammation is not complicated -- it is quite simply your body's natural defence to a foreign invader such as a bacteria, toxin or virus. The cycle of inflammation is perfect in how it protects your body from these bacterial and viral invaders. However, if we chronically expose the body to injury by toxins or foods the human body was never designed to process,a condition occurs called chronic inflammation. Chronic inflammation is just as harmful as acute inflammation is beneficial.
What thoughtful person would willfully expose himself repeatedly to foods or other substances that are known to cause injury to the body? Well, smokers perhaps, but at least they made that choice willfully.
The rest of us have simply followed the recommended mainstream diet that is low in fat and high in polyunsaturated fats and carbohydrates, not knowing we were causing repeated injury to our blood vessels. This repeated injury creates chronic inflammation leading to heart disease, stroke, diabetes and obesity.
Let me repeat that: The injury and inflammation in our blood vessels is caused by the low fat diet recommended for years by mainstream medicine.
What are the biggest culprits of chronic inflammation? Quite simply, they are the overload of simple, highly processed carbohydrates (sugar, flour and all the products made from them) and the excess consumption of omega-6 vegetable oils like soybean, corn and sunflower that are found in many processed foods.
Take a moment to visualize rubbing a stiff brush repeatedly over soft skin until it becomes quite red and nearly bleeding. you kept this up several times a day, every day for five years. If you could tolerate this painful brushing, you would have a bleeding, swollen infected area that became worse with each repeated injury. This is a good way to visualize the inflammatory process that could be going on in your body right now.
Regardless of where the inflammatory process occurs, externally or internally, it is the same. I have peered inside thousands upon thousands of arteries. A diseased artery looks as if someone took a brush and scrubbed repeatedly against its wall. Several times a day, every day, the foods we eat create small injuries compounding into more injuries, causing the body to respond continuously and appropriately with inflammation.
While we savor the tantalizing taste of a sweet roll, our bodies respond alarmingly as if a foreign invader arrived declaring war. Foods loaded with sugars and simple carbohydrates, or processed with omega-6 oils for long shelf life have been the mainstay of the American diet for six decades. These foods have been slowly poisoning everyone.
How does eating a simple sweet roll create a cascade of inflammation to make you sick?
Imagine spilling syrup on your keyboard and you have a visual of what occurs inside the cell. When we consume simple carbohydrates such as sugar, blood sugar rises rapidly. In response, your pancreas secretes insulin whose primary purpose is to drive sugar into each cell where it is stored for energy. If the cell is full and does not need glucose, it is rejected to avoid extra sugar gumming up the works.
When your full cells reject the extra glucose, blood sugar rises producing more insulin and the glucose converts to stored fat.
What does all this have to do with inflammation? Blood sugar is controlled in a very narrow range. Extra sugar molecules attach to a variety of proteins that in turn injure the blood vessel wall. This repeated injury to the blood vessel wall sets off inflammation. When you spike your blood sugar level several times a day, every day, it is exactly like taking sandpaper to the inside of your delicate blood vessels.
While you may not be able to see it, rest assured it is there. I saw it in over 5,000 surgical patients spanning 25 years who all shared one common denominator -- inflammation in their arteries.
Let's get back to the sweet roll. That innocent looking goody not only contains sugars, it is baked in one of many omega-6 oils such as soybean. Chips and fries are soaked in soybean oil; processed foods are manufactured with omega-6 oils for longer shelf life. While omega-6's are essential -they are part of every cell membrane controlling what goes in and out of the cell -- they must be in the correct balance with omega-3's.
If the balance shifts by consuming excessive omega-6, the cell membrane produces chemicals called cytokines that directly cause inflammation.
Today's mainstream American diet has produced an extreme imbalance of these two fats. The ratio of imbalance ranges from 15:1 to as high as 30:1 in favor of omega-6. That's a tremendous amount of cytokines causing inflammation. In today's food environment, a 3:1 ratio would be optimal and healthy.
To make matters worse, the excess weight you are carrying from eating these foods creates overloaded fat cells that pour out large quantities of pro-inflammatory chemicals that add to the injury caused by having high blood sugar. The process that began with a sweet roll turns into a vicious cycle over time that creates heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and finally, Alzheimer's disease, as the inflammatory process continues unabated.
There is no escaping the fact that the more we consume prepared and processed foods, the more we trip the inflammation switch little by little each day. The human body cannot process, nor was it designed to consume, foods packed with sugars and soaked in omega-6 oils.
There is but one answer to quieting inflammation, and that is returning to foods closer to their natural state. To build muscle, eat more protein. Choose carbohydrates that are very complex such as colorful fruits and vegetables. Cut down on or eliminate inflammation- causing omega-6 fats like corn and soybean oil and the processed foods that are made from them.
One tablespoon of corn oil contains 7,280 mg of omega-6; soybean contains 6,940 mg. Instead, use olive oil or butter from grass-fed beef.
Animal fats contain less than 20% omega-6 and are much less likely to cause inflammation than the supposedly healthy oils labelled polyunsaturated. Forget the "science" that has been drummed into your head for decades. The science that saturated fat alone causes heart disease is non-existent. The science that saturated fat raises blood cholesterol is also very weak. Since we now know that cholesterol is not the cause of heart disease, the concern about saturated fat is even more absurd today.
The cholesterol theory led to the no-fat, low-fat recommendations that in turn created the very foods now causing an epidemic of inflammation. Mainstream medicine made a terrible mistake when it advised people to avoid saturated fat in favor of foods high in omega-6 fats. We now have an epidemic of arterial inflammation leading to heart disease and other silent killers.
What you can do is choose whole foods your grandmother served and not those your mom turned to as grocery store aisles filled with manufactured foods. By eliminating inflammatory foods and adding essential nutrients from fresh unprocessed food, you will reverse years of damage in your arteries and throughout your body from consuming the typical American diet.
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/242516-Heart-Surgeon-Speaks-Out-On-What-Really-Causes-Heart-Disease
I trained for many years with other prominent physicians labelled "opinion makers." Bombarded with scientific literature, continually attending education seminars, we opinion makers insisted heart disease resulted from the simple fact of elevated blood cholesterol.
The only accepted therapy was prescribing medications to lower cholesterol and a diet that severely restricted fat intake. The latter of course we insisted would lower cholesterol and heart disease. Deviations from these recommendations were considered heresy and could quite possibly result in malpractice.
It Is Not Working!
These recommendations are no longer scientifically or morally defensible. The discovery a few years ago that inflammation in the artery wall is the real cause of heart disease is slowly leading to a paradigm shift in how heart disease and other chronic ailments will be treated.
The long-established dietary recommendations have created epidemics of obesity and diabetes, the consequences of which dwarf any historical plague in terms of mortality, human suffering and dire economic consequences.
Despite the fact that 25% of the population takes expensive statin medications and despite the fact we have reduced the fat content of our diets, more Americans will die this year of heart disease than ever before.
Statistics from the American Heart Association show that 75 million Americans currently suffer from heart disease, 20 million have diabetes and 57 million have pre-diabetes. These disorders are affecting younger and younger people in greater numbers every year.
Simply stated, without inflammation being present in the body, there is no way that cholesterol would accumulate in the wall of the blood vessel and cause heart disease and strokes. Without inflammation, cholesterol would move freely throughout the body as nature intended. It is inflammation that causes cholesterol to become trapped.
Inflammation is not complicated -- it is quite simply your body's natural defence to a foreign invader such as a bacteria, toxin or virus. The cycle of inflammation is perfect in how it protects your body from these bacterial and viral invaders. However, if we chronically expose the body to injury by toxins or foods the human body was never designed to process,a condition occurs called chronic inflammation. Chronic inflammation is just as harmful as acute inflammation is beneficial.
What thoughtful person would willfully expose himself repeatedly to foods or other substances that are known to cause injury to the body? Well, smokers perhaps, but at least they made that choice willfully.
The rest of us have simply followed the recommended mainstream diet that is low in fat and high in polyunsaturated fats and carbohydrates, not knowing we were causing repeated injury to our blood vessels. This repeated injury creates chronic inflammation leading to heart disease, stroke, diabetes and obesity.
Let me repeat that: The injury and inflammation in our blood vessels is caused by the low fat diet recommended for years by mainstream medicine.
What are the biggest culprits of chronic inflammation? Quite simply, they are the overload of simple, highly processed carbohydrates (sugar, flour and all the products made from them) and the excess consumption of omega-6 vegetable oils like soybean, corn and sunflower that are found in many processed foods.
Take a moment to visualize rubbing a stiff brush repeatedly over soft skin until it becomes quite red and nearly bleeding. you kept this up several times a day, every day for five years. If you could tolerate this painful brushing, you would have a bleeding, swollen infected area that became worse with each repeated injury. This is a good way to visualize the inflammatory process that could be going on in your body right now.
Regardless of where the inflammatory process occurs, externally or internally, it is the same. I have peered inside thousands upon thousands of arteries. A diseased artery looks as if someone took a brush and scrubbed repeatedly against its wall. Several times a day, every day, the foods we eat create small injuries compounding into more injuries, causing the body to respond continuously and appropriately with inflammation.
While we savor the tantalizing taste of a sweet roll, our bodies respond alarmingly as if a foreign invader arrived declaring war. Foods loaded with sugars and simple carbohydrates, or processed with omega-6 oils for long shelf life have been the mainstay of the American diet for six decades. These foods have been slowly poisoning everyone.
How does eating a simple sweet roll create a cascade of inflammation to make you sick?
Imagine spilling syrup on your keyboard and you have a visual of what occurs inside the cell. When we consume simple carbohydrates such as sugar, blood sugar rises rapidly. In response, your pancreas secretes insulin whose primary purpose is to drive sugar into each cell where it is stored for energy. If the cell is full and does not need glucose, it is rejected to avoid extra sugar gumming up the works.
When your full cells reject the extra glucose, blood sugar rises producing more insulin and the glucose converts to stored fat.
What does all this have to do with inflammation? Blood sugar is controlled in a very narrow range. Extra sugar molecules attach to a variety of proteins that in turn injure the blood vessel wall. This repeated injury to the blood vessel wall sets off inflammation. When you spike your blood sugar level several times a day, every day, it is exactly like taking sandpaper to the inside of your delicate blood vessels.
While you may not be able to see it, rest assured it is there. I saw it in over 5,000 surgical patients spanning 25 years who all shared one common denominator -- inflammation in their arteries.
Let's get back to the sweet roll. That innocent looking goody not only contains sugars, it is baked in one of many omega-6 oils such as soybean. Chips and fries are soaked in soybean oil; processed foods are manufactured with omega-6 oils for longer shelf life. While omega-6's are essential -they are part of every cell membrane controlling what goes in and out of the cell -- they must be in the correct balance with omega-3's.
If the balance shifts by consuming excessive omega-6, the cell membrane produces chemicals called cytokines that directly cause inflammation.
Today's mainstream American diet has produced an extreme imbalance of these two fats. The ratio of imbalance ranges from 15:1 to as high as 30:1 in favor of omega-6. That's a tremendous amount of cytokines causing inflammation. In today's food environment, a 3:1 ratio would be optimal and healthy.
To make matters worse, the excess weight you are carrying from eating these foods creates overloaded fat cells that pour out large quantities of pro-inflammatory chemicals that add to the injury caused by having high blood sugar. The process that began with a sweet roll turns into a vicious cycle over time that creates heart disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and finally, Alzheimer's disease, as the inflammatory process continues unabated.
There is no escaping the fact that the more we consume prepared and processed foods, the more we trip the inflammation switch little by little each day. The human body cannot process, nor was it designed to consume, foods packed with sugars and soaked in omega-6 oils.
There is but one answer to quieting inflammation, and that is returning to foods closer to their natural state. To build muscle, eat more protein. Choose carbohydrates that are very complex such as colorful fruits and vegetables. Cut down on or eliminate inflammation- causing omega-6 fats like corn and soybean oil and the processed foods that are made from them.
One tablespoon of corn oil contains 7,280 mg of omega-6; soybean contains 6,940 mg. Instead, use olive oil or butter from grass-fed beef.
Animal fats contain less than 20% omega-6 and are much less likely to cause inflammation than the supposedly healthy oils labelled polyunsaturated. Forget the "science" that has been drummed into your head for decades. The science that saturated fat alone causes heart disease is non-existent. The science that saturated fat raises blood cholesterol is also very weak. Since we now know that cholesterol is not the cause of heart disease, the concern about saturated fat is even more absurd today.
The cholesterol theory led to the no-fat, low-fat recommendations that in turn created the very foods now causing an epidemic of inflammation. Mainstream medicine made a terrible mistake when it advised people to avoid saturated fat in favor of foods high in omega-6 fats. We now have an epidemic of arterial inflammation leading to heart disease and other silent killers.
What you can do is choose whole foods your grandmother served and not those your mom turned to as grocery store aisles filled with manufactured foods. By eliminating inflammatory foods and adding essential nutrients from fresh unprocessed food, you will reverse years of damage in your arteries and throughout your body from consuming the typical American diet.
http://www.sott.net/articles/show/242516-Heart-Surgeon-Speaks-Out-On-What-Really-Causes-Heart-Disease
Thursday, May 10, 2012
In the fast pace world we live in today, is it possible to live without anxiety?
Anxiety is becoming more and more common, affecting over 40 million adults within the U.S. and I believe that number is growing exponentially. With sleep becoming less of a priority and work becoming an around the clock endeavor, is it possible to live without anxiety? Where is the line between a healthy amount of stress and stress that deteriorates our health?
What used to take days or weeks now takes minutes or even seconds. We are bombarded with information at all hours of the day and have less time to assimilate it. Our bodies are stuck in overdrive and our nervous system doesn't get time to slow down.
Everyday in my practice I see people with anything from sleep disorders to broken bones, and when I ask the infamous questions "what is your stress level like?" or "do you ever feel anxious?" 99% of the time they will tell me that their stress level is high and they frequently feel anxious. It is becoming more apparent to me that a major inhibitor to health is anxiety.
So the question isn't can we live a life without anxiety, but how do we manage it and keep ourselves healthy?
The most important thing... SLEEP! If you are not getting enough uninterrupted sleep (6-8 hours where you are waking up for no longer than 20min at a time, and are able to go right back to sleep), your body will never be able to regenerate itself for the next day and your daily stressors will begin to build up, resulting in anxiety. I cannot emphasize enough, the importance of sleep.
The next most important thing, which goes hand in hand with sleep, is good nutrition. Cutting out sugar, caffeine, and processed grains is key. Stimulants increase stress on your body and keep it in a fight or flight state. When your body is in this state you will not be able to sleep, process any foods you eat (weight gain is a common symptom of anxiety), and it makes accomplishing daily tasks challenging.
We will always have the stress of a job, family, finances, health, etc, but the healthier our lifestyle, the more prepared we are to cope with all that life has to throw at us. When living a balanced life (eating correctly, getting enough sleep, physical activity, and laughter) it is possible to keep anxiety under control.
The world we live in today is fast paced and crazy, that is why it is more important now than ever to make health a priority. What you put into your health is what you are going to get out of it.
What used to take days or weeks now takes minutes or even seconds. We are bombarded with information at all hours of the day and have less time to assimilate it. Our bodies are stuck in overdrive and our nervous system doesn't get time to slow down.
Everyday in my practice I see people with anything from sleep disorders to broken bones, and when I ask the infamous questions "what is your stress level like?" or "do you ever feel anxious?" 99% of the time they will tell me that their stress level is high and they frequently feel anxious. It is becoming more apparent to me that a major inhibitor to health is anxiety.
So the question isn't can we live a life without anxiety, but how do we manage it and keep ourselves healthy?
The most important thing... SLEEP! If you are not getting enough uninterrupted sleep (6-8 hours where you are waking up for no longer than 20min at a time, and are able to go right back to sleep), your body will never be able to regenerate itself for the next day and your daily stressors will begin to build up, resulting in anxiety. I cannot emphasize enough, the importance of sleep.
The next most important thing, which goes hand in hand with sleep, is good nutrition. Cutting out sugar, caffeine, and processed grains is key. Stimulants increase stress on your body and keep it in a fight or flight state. When your body is in this state you will not be able to sleep, process any foods you eat (weight gain is a common symptom of anxiety), and it makes accomplishing daily tasks challenging.
We will always have the stress of a job, family, finances, health, etc, but the healthier our lifestyle, the more prepared we are to cope with all that life has to throw at us. When living a balanced life (eating correctly, getting enough sleep, physical activity, and laughter) it is possible to keep anxiety under control.
The world we live in today is fast paced and crazy, that is why it is more important now than ever to make health a priority. What you put into your health is what you are going to get out of it.
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Is Fat or Sugar the Problem?
Is it fat or sugar that's really the problem? For the last 30 years we have been told that less fat is better, not only for our physique, but for hearts as well. Now, from milk to cookies to crackers, low-fat/no-fat is EVERYWHERE! So if we are eating less fat, and less calories, why are heart disease and diabetes still skyrocketing? The answer is found in the label: sugar.
Since the 70's manufacturers have been replacing fat with sugar in almost all processed foods to make them more appealing to the taste buds. It is now a rarity to find a loaf of bread that has no added sugars. We end up consuming more sugar than most of us realize, with the average American consuming 130lbs a year! There are the obvious cookies and baked goods, but we forget to take into account the breads, crackers, yogurt, milk, alcohol, and really anything that comes in a box.
A new study done at the University of California, Davis has shown that excessive sugar consumption leads to increased LDL (bad) cholesterol in the blood stream. An increase in LDL cholesterol is a primary risk factor for heart disease and stroke. This suggests that all calories are not created equal and that calories from added sugars are different than calories from other foods.
Most of us have learned over the last few years that it is better option to go for the natural sugars and to stay far away from high fructose corn syrup, and artificial sweeteners, but it may be a better to try and stay away from sugar all together.
So before you reach for the sugar to add to your coffee, or "just one" cookie, think about the affects it may have on your health.
Want to know more? Click Here to check out a segment called "Is sugar toxic?" from 60 Minutes
Friday, March 30, 2012
Welcome to Elemental Back & Body's new blog. Our hope for this blog, first and foremost, is to educate and bring forward the latest information (and thoughts) on helping you achieve your optimal wellness. Also, we want this to be a place where we can create a community that has the same goal in mind - to live a long, happy, and fulfilled life.
We hope you find this blog useful and informative. We would love to hear your thoughts and insights on all our posts!
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