Is Watching TV Worse than Smoking?

August 18th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

For years now, you’ve heard that the way to better health is to turn off the Boob Tube and get your body moving. But new evidence shows that cutting back on TV time does more than just help you slip in a little exercise. The fact is it can also add years to your life.
 

 

As reported in The Daily Mail and Time Healthland, a new study published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine shows that every hour of TV watched by people age 25 or over equates to a 22-minute reduction in life expectancy. The findings suggest that too much TV is as detrimental to longevity as smoking and lack of exercise, Time Healthland reports.

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How to Get Rid of Belly Fat and Build Strong and ‘Sexy’ Abs

July 21st, 2011 by Darin Steen

Most of us at one point or another, has wanted to get a chiseled midsection. Most of us have given up on the dream of having “ripped” six pack abs. But you don’t have too.

There are many reasons to build your abdominals and reduce your body fat.

Below are three.

  1. You look and feel good

    How you look and how you feel about your body can have a big impact on your psyche. When you feel good about your body, that feeling good spills over into other areas of your life.

    Mind, body, and soul are all connected. Feeling good is a prerequisite for going out and having good flow back to you. So when you feel good about your body, it helps you become more successful in other areas of your life; as long as you’re not too vain and hyper focused on your waistline.

  2. Your spine is more stable and pain free

    When you build your ab muscles, it’s like developing an internal corset that holds your gut in. When you tighten your “Inner Weight Belt,” you create more stabilization for your spine, vertebrae and discs. We have had dozens of clients vastly improve, and many totally eliminate back pain, simply by developing stronger abdominal muscles.

  3. You gain the ability to become more athletic, doing functional activities.

    Having a strong, athletic abdominal wall is very important for optimal body movement. This is very important at any time of your life but especially in your 70’s, 80’s and 90’s. Being able to work, play, and move is a big part of aging gracefully. Having pain or limited range of motion in your core can be very challenging.

One big misconception that many of people have about building a strong, sexy midsection is that all you have to do is sit-ups. The more sit ups you can do; the better your abs will look. This is called “Spot Reducing”. You can build up an incredible abdominal wall with the best exercise program on earth; but if you do not bring your overall body fat level down, you will not see your abs.

The truth is, it is impossible to reduce your mid-section by just doing abdominal exercises.

For tight abs you must also reduce overall body fat. To accomplish this, you need to focus on:

Food – Nutrition

Make sure to eat unprocessed foods; organic when possible. If it is made in a plant, stay away; if it comes from a plant, eat it. Remember the axiom, “Lean, Green, and Marine.” Lean grass-fed red meats, green colorful leafy veggies, and fish, are all good foods to include in your nutrition program.

However, pay very careful attention to the types of fish you consume, as a vast majority of fish have become so polluted that the damage they can incur far outweighs their benefit. For more information about the best and worst of the bunch, please review this previous article.

These days, I strongly recommend you substitute much of your fish intake with a high quality, animal-based omega-3 supplement instead. My highest recommendation goes to krill oil

But eating good quality unprocessed foods may not be enough for most people.

In order to reach your true fitness and fat loss potential you must eventually work you way up to eating 5-6 small meals per day.

When you eat small meals (with protein and carbs together) more often throughout the day, you boost your body’s metabolism.

When you eat only once or twice a day (which is very common today because most people are in a hurry) you are sending a message to your body that food is scarce. Therefore it is going to slow down the rate at which you are burning calories.

Exercise- Resistance and Cardio

One of the most time-efficient ways to burn more calories is to gain more muscle. Because for every pound of additional muscle you gain, your body will burn an additional 50-70 calories per day.

So, if you gain 10 lbs. of muscle, you will burn 500 -700 more calories per day than you did before. And that is just to carry around that muscle with your daily activities (you even burn more calories at night when you sleep). So, in order to burn more calories, you must increase your physical activity level.

You have the best chance of gaining the most amount of muscle in major areas like legs, buns, chest, and back. Therefore a resistance program that is designed to hit all these major muscle groups is crucial.

A nice mix for an intelligent routine that can be woven into a lifestyle would be to do two 30-minute interval cardio sessions (preferably first thing in the morning) and two or three 60 minute resistance sessions per week.

Lifestyle Choices

Also important in bringing your overall body fat level down is choices you make outside of your work outs and meals. Like getting enough rest.

Since you will be training relatively intensely, you need more sleep to help in recovery. You see; you are actually tearing your body down while you work out. Your muscles and your energy systems rebuild and recover away from the work outs. Work out too much and you will limit your muscle growth and lower your immune system.

Also, it is a must to avoid using alcohol, tobacco, and other types of drugs. You’ll want to limit your intake of caffeine and stay away from fat burning pills and ephedrine. These types of supplements and drugs are only a short term help toward fat loss and are very harmful to your system.

Lowering your stress levels through meditation, deep breathing, prayer, Meridian Tapping Techniques, and laughing can help you reach your true fat loss potential.

Tips on how to work abdominals

Make sure to make your movements slow and shorten the range of motion on your exercises. The old-fashioned sit ups do not isolate your ab muscle very well at all, whereas very slow crunches (limited range of motion) work very well.

Your abdominal muscles need more variety than other muscle groups. Make sure to hit your abdominals from all three sides, each week. Crunches / sit ups will focus on your upper abs; knee-ups and leg raises will focus on your lower abs, and punches, twists and side bridges will focus on side obliques.

Try doing two sets of three different exercises in each abdominal work out.

Work your abs two or three times per week at most. Like other muscle groups, if you work them out effectively they will be slightly sore the next day. This is a sign that they need to rest and recover before you exercise them again.

Also make sure that you use a wide variety of abdominal exercises.

You may only be able to use an effective ab exercise for two or three work outs before your body gets used to it. That is not to say you can’t use it again later, but you will want to use new ones for a few weeks.

For many videos on unique, effective abdominal exercises, please see: fitness.mercola.com

You Do Have the Power to Change!!

Your Healthy Lifestyle Coach,

Darin

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Why Exercise Makes You Feel Good

July 21st, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Almost everyone agrees that exercise makes people feel happy and calm, a conclusion which is supported by research. But exactly why it does so, at a cellular level, has been difficult to determine.

However, a recent animal study provides some interesting clues.  Researchers found that mice allowed to exercise were more stress resistant, and tried to figure out the reasons.

According to the New York Times:

“To discern what was different, physiologically, about the stress-resistant mice, the scientists looked at brain cells using stains and other techniques. They determined that neurons in part of the rodents’ medial prefrontal cortex, an area of the brain involved in emotional processing in animals and people, had been firing often and rapidly in recent weeks, as had neurons in other, linked parts of the brain, including the amygdala, which is known to handle feelings of fear and anxiety.”

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5 Diet Mistakes That Prevent Workout Results

July 19th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Sports nutritionist Cynthia Sass, writing for Shape, lists five diet mistakes that could interfere with getting the most out of your training time: 

Drinking a Protein Shake Before a Workout:  Protein is digested slowly than carbs, so too much pre-workout can give you stomach cramps.  Have them afterwards instead.

Exercising on an Empty Stomach:  This forces your body break down its own muscle mass and convert it into blood sugar.

Overusing Energy Bars:  Too many of these and you might “eat back” the calories you burned exercising.

Not Eating Enough “Good” Fat:  The right kinds of fats are needed for your cells to heal and repair post workout.

Buying Into the Afterburn Myth:  You will indeed burn more calories in the hours after a workout — but for most it amounts to just 50 additional calories burned, not enough for a calorie splurge.

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Will You Get Bigger and Bulkier if You Lift Weights?

July 18th, 2011 by Darin Steen

This question comes up a lot from my female clients. And the answer is, no, most likely you will not.

In fact, gaining more muscle through resistance exercises is an integral part of any well rounded fitness / fat loss program.

Having more muscle on your frame is the best “fat burning friend” that you will ever have.

Below are some advantages to incorporating resistance training (lifting weights) into your fitness / fat loss routine, along with a sound nutrition program, a strong positive mindset, and a social support plan.

Muscle is Five Times More Dense Than Fat

Conversely, a pound of fat takes up five times more space on your body than muscle, which means you can gain a pound of muscle and lose a pound of fat, and while your weight stays the same, you will actually shrink in size, and get that toned look you are looking for.

I can understand why many women may be reluctant to start lifting weights. You may have visions of steroid-bloated female bodybuilders with veins running through their biceps and chests. Of course, there is that extreme, but keep in mind those women are out of balance. That kind of build is NOT the typical result of weight lifting, and 99 percent of women simply do not have the level of natural testosterone to gain muscle like men.

It is a common misconception that muscle weighs more than fat. In reality, it’s simply a matter of density. They take up different amounts of space. Muscle is five times more dense than fat, meaning it takes up five times less space on your frame, pound for pound.

Burn More Calories 24 hours a Day / 7 Days Per Week

Another great advantage to gaining muscle through resistance training is that you burn more calories.

Why?

Because muscle is anabolic and demands energy just to sit on your frame – even when you sleep!. For every pound of muscle that you gain in the future, your body will burn 50-70 calories more per day.

That means, if you add 10 lbs. of muscle through a sensible fitness program (which is very possible), you will burn 500 – 700 calories more per day. And burning more calories leads to shedding excess fat.

How Weight Lifting Can Reduce Your Risk of Diabetes and Heart Disease

Remember, shedding excess fat is about more than just looks.

Your body has two types of fat: visceral and subcutaneous. Subcutaneous fat is found just under your skin, and is the type that causes dimpling and cellulite. Visceral fat, on the other hand, shows up in your abdomen and surrounds your vital organs including your liver, heart and muscles.

Visceral fat has been linked to serious health problems such as heart disease, diabetes and stroke, among many other chronic diseases.

If you want to reduce your risk of heart disease (and a host of other chronic diseases), the key is to keep your inflammation levels low, and avoid gaining visceral fat in your body.

Exercise is a critical component for this, as it both lowers inflammation in your body, and is one of the best weapons to fight visceral fat. For example, one study found that volunteers who did not exercise had an 8.6 percent increase in visceral fat after eight months, while those who exercised the most LOST over 8 percent of their visceral fat during that time.

So, since increasing muscle-mass puts your calorie burning into overdrive, which reduces fat stores, weight lifting is an essential part of a healthy fitness routine.

One of the Best Ways to Fight Osteoporosis

Your bones are actually very porous and soft, and as you get older, your bones can easily become brittle and less dense. Especially if you are inactive.

When you engage in resistance training you put more tension on your muscles, which in turn puts more pressure on your bones.

In addition, as you build more muscle, and make the muscle that you already have stronger, you also put more constant pressure on your bones.

Weight-bearing exercise is one of the most effective remedies against osteoporosis. The last thing you want to consider is to take a drug to improve your bone density, as without question, that is more likely to cause long-term harm than benefit.

I have had many clients who have amazed their doctors by reversing osteoporosis and osteopenia by lifting weights a couple times per week. So when it comes to fighting osteoporosis, stay off the meds and incorporate weight-bearing exercises instead. For example, a walking lunge exercise is a great way to build bone density in your hips, even without any additional weights.

You Have the Ability to Sculpt Your Physique

It’s important to realize the difference between simple weight loss and the body sculpting so many are trying to achieve. Body sculpting is not possible with cardio exercise only. For example, if you start out with a pear shaped figure and lose weight by calorie restriction and/or cardio work alone, you will simply end up with a smaller pear shape. For many, this is not enough.

However, by including weight training in you program, you have the ability to literally reshape your shoulders, buns, arms, back, and chest. You are the sculptor and can create virtually any changes you so desire.

But don’t think that the benefits of resistance training are limited to mere cosmetic adjustments — although most will agree it does feel great to look good in your birthday suit. You see, the intensity of your resistance training will achieve a number of beneficial changes on the molecular, enzymatic, hormonal, and chemical level, which will help slow down (and many cases stop) many of the diseases caused by a sedentary lifestyle, including:

  1. Metabolic syndrome
  2. Insulin sensitivity and resistance
  3. Diabetes
  4. Auto immune diseases

Optimal health is dependent on an active lifestyle; eating fresh, whole foods, avoiding as many processed foods as possible, and addressing the stress in your life. Ignoring any of these basic tenets of health will eventually lead to a decline in health and any number of diseases.

So start moving, and do remember to include strength training in your fitness / fat loss program. It is the number one way for you to remain strong, young, and independent well into old age.

For effective, easy to duplicate exercises, please go to our youtube video www.mercola.com/peakfitness

Your healthy lifestyle coach,
Darin Steen

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7 Benefits of Exercise (and Why Weight Loss Isn’t One of Them)

July 7th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

In a recent study, researchers took a group of sedentary, overweight men and women and over 18 months trained them to run a marathon. The men lost just a few pounds, and the women in the study averaged no change to their weight.  One reason may be that people tend to increase their caloric intake as they increase their exercise; diet and exercise go hand in hand when it comes to weight loss.

But exercise by itself has many benefits, of which Lifehack lists a few:

Increases your energy levels: The more energy you use, the more you have.

Improves the quality of your sleep: Exercise helps you get to sleep more quickly, and improves the sleep quality as well.

Helps combat chronic disease: Exercise helps improve your blood pressure and cholesterol levels, and has been linked with delayed onset of dementia.

Improves your mood: Exercise promotes positive brain chemistry.

To see the other three benefits they list, and what they had to say about them, you can click on the link below.

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The 5 Biggest Exercise Myths

June 8th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Many of today’s exercise guidelines originated in the 1940s and 1950s. Even though research has declared some of them counterproductive, fitness “experts” still follow the conventional wisdom. Yahoo Health lists 5 of the biggest exercise myths.  Here’s some of what they found:

Do 8 To 12 Repetitions

In reality, this approach places muscles under a medium amount of tension for a medium amount of time. Vary your repetition range to stimulate every type of muscle growth.

Do 3 Sets of Each Exercise

There’s nothing wrong with doing three sets, but nothing particularly right with it either. In general, the more repetitions of an exercise you do, the fewer sets you should perform.

When You Lift Weights, Draw in Your Abs

In reality, your body automatically activates the muscles that are most needed for spine support during exercise. So focusing only on your transverse abdominis can overrecruit the wrong muscles and underrecruit the right ones.

For the rest of the myths, click on the link below.

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3 Workout Mistakes that Slow Metabolism

June 2nd, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Exercise is usually a great way to burn more calories all day long. Fitbie warns against some mistakes that can rob you of your postworkout burn:

Mistake #1: You’re in a rut

When you do the same activity day after day, your body stops being challenged and your results plateau.  Change things up.

Mistake #2: You’re a slave to cardio

Resistance training, such as weight lifting or strength training, is the only way to increase lean muscle mass. Do it at least twice a week, hitting all your body’s major muscle groups.

Mistake #3: You’re stuck in the “fat-burning” zone

A treadmill, elliptical trainer, stair climber, or other cardio machine will often offer a programming option that allows you to stay in a “fat-burning” zone, which is based on the fact that at lower intensities, the body uses a greater percentage of its fat stores for fuel. But you’ll burn fewer calories overall. Instead, burn more calories and more calories from fat by doing intervals — periods of higher intensity followed by a slower recovery pace.

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How to Use a Foam Roller as Part of Your Exercise Program

June 2nd, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

A foam roller, which looks like a firm log, can be a valuable part of your warmup and cooldown routine. Rolling improves circulation and breaks down knots that limit range of motion. Runner’s World suggests these routines:

CALVES: Put the roller under a calf. Rest your other foot on the floor. Roll from the ankle to below the knee. Rotate the leg in, then out. Stack ankles to add pressure.

ILIOTIBIAL BAND: Lie on your side with the roller near your hip, rest your other leg’s foot on the floor. Move along your outer thigh. Increase pressure by stacking your legs.

PIRIFORMIS: Sit on the roller and place one foot on the opposite knee. Lean into one buttock and roll forward and back, using your supporting leg to control the pressure.

ADDUCTORS: Lie on your stomach with one leg extended slightly to the side, knee bent. Place the roller in the groin area of the extended leg and roll the inner thigh.

QUADRICEPS: Lie on your stomach with a roller placed under the front of your thigh and slowly roll up and down from the bottom of your hip to the top of your knee.

To see the rest of their suggestions, you can click on the link below.

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Age Is No Barrier to Muscle Building

June 1st, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

A sedentary lifestyle can result in the loss of up to 0.4 pounds of muscle per year. But even if you’re well over 50, you can add 2.42 pounds of lean muscle in an average of 18 to 20 weeks. The same techniques can increase your strength by 25 to 30 percent.

The numbers come from a report on the benefits of progressive resistance training for older adults. The researchers suggest beginning with squats, modified push-ups and tai chi, Pilates or yoga.

After that, according to Dr. Weil’s Daily Blog:

“Then they advise working with a professional who can design a strength training program that advances to working with weights and machines to build and strengthen muscles. In five months, you could be much, much stronger.”

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Is Gaining Weight Related to Less Physical Activity at Your Job?

May 30th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Scientists are pointing to a new factor that may be a major cause of the current obesity epidemic: the American workplace. A review of changes in the labor force since 1960 suggests that at least some weight gain can be explained by declining physical activity at work.

Jobs requiring moderate physical activity accounted for 50 percent of the labor market in 1960. Today, that number has dropped to 20 percent.

According to the New York Times:

“The remaining 80 percent of jobs, the researchers report, are sedentary or require only light activity. The shift translates to an average decline of about 120 to 140 calories a day in physical activity, closely matching the nation’s steady weight gain over the past five decades”.

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Protein Drinks After Exercise Help Maintain Aging Muscles

May 30th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

A new research report shows that what you drink after exercise plays a critical role in maximizing your workout’s effects. Specifically, protein drinks after aerobic activity increase the training effect after six weeks.

Scientists recruited 16 participants and instructed them to exercise on treadmills for 45 minutes three times a week for six weeks. After each workout, one group was given a protein drink and another group was given a carbohydrate drink.

According to Science Daily:

“To measure the making of new structures in the muscle, metabolic pathways were measured using heavy water labeling. Subjects consumed heavy water, which becomes incorporated into many synthetic processes allowing measurement of the rates at which different components of the muscle are being made. Using ultra-sensitive mass spectrometry methods, scientists took muscle samples at the end of the six weeks and were able to determine how much of the muscle and its component pieces were new. In this case, new proteins, DNA, and membranes were measured.”

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The Marathon Myth: Is It the Quickest Way to a Heart Attack?

May 25th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Long-distance runners can, in fact simply drop dead — usually in the middle of a run, from fatal heart attacks. In 2010, three runners died at the 32nd Detroit Free Press/Flagstar Marathon.

In fact, about 14 percent of athlete deaths are linked to heart problems. Although exercise reduces your cardiovascular risk by a factor of three, too much vigorous exercise, such as marathon running, increases your cardiac risk by seven.

Healthier Talk reports:

“That’s because the further you run, the more stress you put on your body … [L]ong duration exercise releases chemicals that flood your body. And that leads to inflammation … If you have hidden heart problems, this can be seriously risky.”

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Move Like a Hunter-Gatherer, Live Longer

May 25th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

If you want to reduce your risk of chronic disease and live longer, you might want to try behaving like a hunter-gatherer. Hunter-gatherers tended to engage in short bursts of physical activity followed by periods of rest, and health experts are agreeing that this may be a healthier way to live.

Hunter-gatherers probably expended between 800 and 1,200 calories per day in physical activity. The average American today, however, expends only a small fraction of this energy — with the result being that stamina, muscle strength, and flexibility aren’t maintained.

According to Yahoo Health:

“What’s more, our inactive ways cause us to miss out on yet more healthful habits enjoyed by hunter-gatherers — socializing and outdoor living … Human beings lived for eons as hunter-gatherers, so it’s not surprising that our bodies are built to thrive under physically demanding conditions outside.”

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Why Exercising on an Empty Stomach Can Mean a Better Workout

May 17th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Researchers and athletic coaches are becoming excited by emerging practice known as “train low, compete high.” The concept involves doing some of your workouts in a carbohydrate-depleted state.  It’s thought to be the nutritional equivalent of training while wearing a weighted vest.

Initial research shows that the technique boosts fat-burning, as well as other metabolic responses to exercise.

The Globe and Mail reports:

“The idea is driven by new interest in ‘cell signalling’ … Exercise stimulates the production of specialized proteins that signal your body to adapt to new demands. These proteins are locked up in your body’s carbohydrate stores, and released as those stores are burned; starting with low carbohydrate stores means the proteins are already free to do their signalling as soon as you start exercising.”

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When Exercise Is Too Much of a Good Thing

May 9th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Researchers studying the heart health of a group of older lifelong athletes found that fully half of them showed evidence of heart muscle scarring. Those with the scarring were those who had gone through the longest, hardest training.

Another study, conducted on laboratory rats, also provides solid evidence of a direct link between prolonged exercise and heart scarring. The results show that years of strenuous cardiovascular exercise can potentially cause damage to your heart.

According to the New York Times:

Unfortunately, it remains impossible, at the moment, to predict just what that threshold is for any given person, and which athletes might be most vulnerable to heart problems as a result of excessive exercise”.

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The Top 5 Fitness Apps for Your Smartphone

May 6th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

If you’re trying to get in shape, technology can offer you powerful new tools to help. ABC News has collected five fitness apps for smartphones that can help you lose weight, get fit and eat healthier.

Lose It!

Lose It! provides a digital diary of calories eaten and calories burned. You enter your weight, height, age and sex and then this app sets up a daily budget to help you reach your goals.

CardioTrainer

CardioTrainer, which is currently only available for Android users, is easy to set up. EEnter your weight, height and other key information, and then is can track your progress in running, biking, walking, or rollerblading. It also has a built-in music player, a free calorie counter, and offers verbal encouragement as you work out.

IMapMy

IMapMy uses your phone’s built-in GPS to monitor your fitness activities. You can record the duration, distance, pace, speed, elevation, calories burned and route traveled on an interactive map.

Daily Burn

Daily Burn, for the iPhone, iPad and iPod touch, helps you manage your diet, fitness and exercise. It has the ability to make a training plan, complete with detailed instructions on how to properly perform a given exercise.

Fooducate

Fooducate helps you figure out what food labels mean, and how nutritious a product is. Just scan the barcode and it will return the name, a grade and the scoring methodology it uses.

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Study Shows Moderate Exercise Radically Inferior to Vigorous Exercise

May 5th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

New research shows that vigorous exercise helps boost mood — but moderate exercise does not. Researchers drew this conclusions after studying people who took part in two 20-minute work-outs, one moderately intensive and one highly intensive. The mood of the participants was measured before, during, immediately after the work outs.

The study participants exhibited no mood improvements after moderate exercise. However, 20 minutes after the end of the strenuous work-out, the participants reported feeling more positive.

The Telegraph reports:

“Psychiatrists believe that mood improves after vigorous exercise – a phenomenon known as the ‘runner’s high’ – because it triggers the release of endorphins. These are a type of neurotransmitter in the brain that help combat pain.”

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Exercises to Improve Your Balance Crucial as You Age

May 2nd, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Your balance doesn’t stay steady throughout your life. Just like your muscles and bones, your steadiness can deteriorate if it is not maintained. However, balance training isn’t part of most workouts.

As you get older, the senses involved with balance can start to dull — vision and your ability to sense touch, temperature, pressure and proprioception (your sense of where your body is and how it moves.) However, your balance can be shored up, even in very old age.

According to the Los Angeles Times:

“A 2007 study … looked at the effect of a yearlong balance training program on women with osteoporosis. By the end of the study, the women’s functional and static balance improved, as did mobility. Falling frequency declined … Balance training almost always involves targeting core muscles — the ones surrounding the trunk and the back, such as the abdominals, obliques and latissimus dorsi.”

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Is this the Best Body Weight Exercise to Get in Shape?

April 22nd, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Acquiring a “V” shape — wide through the shoulders and narrow at the hips — is one of the most common goals of a weight training or exercise program. One of the best exercises you can use to reach it is the pull-up, a common and fundamental exercise.

A well-rounded program requires some variations on the pull-up. Any pull-up that starts with your palms facing forward on the bar (a “forward grip”) and ends with your chin going up over the bar will bring focus to the pectoralis muscles of the chest. To bring more focus to your back muscles, there are two options you should consider. The first is a wider grip, and the other is a pull-up bar that has the ends angled down.

According to Livestrong:

“For many, the pull-up is a more difficult exercise than they can start out with. If you are having trouble completing more than five or six repetitions of the exercise without stopping, consider modifying the pull-up for a while … You can place a chair in front of the chin-up bar and rest one foot on the chair while you do the exercise … You can also do a variation called a ‘jump up’ by hopping up to the chin-up position and focusing on lowering your body slowly.”

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Whey Protein Shown Superior to Other Milk Proteins for Building Muscle

April 22nd, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Loss of muscle mass with age (sarcopenia) may be caused by a reduction of muscle protein synthetic response to food intake. A group of researchers set out to find which milk protein was the best for muscle protein accretion, and would therefore help stave off sarcopenia.

Three groups of older men were fed a meal-like amount of whey, casein, and casein hydrolysate proteins. Their protein ingestion was combined with an intravenous tracer which was used to assess digestion and absorption kinetics, and their muscle synthesis rates were also calculated from the ingested tracer.

According to the study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition:

“Whey protein stimulates postprandial muscle protein accretion more effectively than do casein and casein hydrolysate in older men. This effect is attributed to a combination of whey’s faster digestion and absorption kinetics and higher leucine content.”

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How Human Growth Hormone Helps You Get Fit

April 20th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Human growth hormone (HGH) is naturally produced by your body in sufficient quantities until you reach the age of 21. After this, production starts to drop.

HGH is the master hormone controlling growth.  It helps build muscles, bones, organs and the basic links between the cells. Lower levels of HGH also make it more difficult to lose weight — HGH increases your metabolism, which helps to burn more fat.

According to Fitness Health Zone:

“Thus a person loses weight but not their body muscle. It also helps to increase the levels of HDL the good cholesterol, thus reducing cardiovascular risks too.”

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When Mom Exercises in Pregnancy, Her Baby’s Heart Benefits

April 20th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

New research shows that exercise during pregnancy can result in a healthier baby.

Researchers collected noninvasive fetal heart measurements when the mothers were 28, 32 and 36 weeks pregnant. Some of the mothers engaged in moderate to vigorous aerobic activity at least three times a week, while others didn’t exercise.

According to Time Magazine:

“At 32 weeks, researchers started to see changes in heart response in the fetuses of the exercising moms. By 36 weeks, they noted … a ‘big, significant change’ — lower heart rate and increased heart rate variability … 43 moms brought their babies back when they were 1 month old. Their hearts still showed that pumped-up quality”.

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Fat Burner Workout Supplements Could Be Harmful to Your Body

April 18th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Two supplements that are popular with people who spend time at the gym could be causing more harm than good, according to new information published by Obesity.com. Known as “thermagenics,” the supplements increase the body’s metabolic rate and appetite with assorted stimulants such as caffeine and herbal extracts that are largely unregulated by the FDA.

However, worrisome side effects include increased heart rate or even heart palpitations, along with other stimulant-related complications. Obesity.com also noted these increased risks: sleeplessness, nervousness and possible mood swings. Muscle damage, and knee and joint problems are also possible, when exercisers push themselves too hard because they are stimulated from the supplements.

“The most appropriate substitute to using supplements is a strong diet, lots of nap and periodic exercise that will enable the body to create high levels of appetite naturally,” Obesity.com noted. “Some people think supplements may be willing to help for working out, but this is usually loyal when the use of those supplements is joined with a strong lifestyle.”

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These 5 Things Can Destroy Your Fitness Plans Fast …

April 7th, 2011 by admin

By John Paul Catanzaro

Dispelling Five Common Health and Fitness Misconceptions

In life we take many things for granted. People are told to go on a low fat diet and do some aerobic training, and yet they still gain body fat. Your blood work shows slightly altered cholesterol and thyroid levels and right away you’re told to go on medication. The trainer at your local gym rips out a copy of Everyday Stretches (reproduced from a 1987 poster) and says: “Do this before your next workout.”

If you’ve been spinning your wheels and going nowhere in your pursuit for optimal health and fitness, then stop! Doing something simply because you’ve been told to is not good enough.

It’s time to question authority and challenge the establishment!

Let’s start by dispelling five common health and fitness misconceptions. Dare I suggest that…

  1. A high fat intake can actually lower body fat!

    Two reasons: a) If low fat is consumed, your body retains body fat as a protective/survival mechanism, and b) a high fat intake upregulates key (lipase) enzymes, which not only break down dietary fat but also body fat.

    Of course, a high fat and high carb diet will result in body fat accumulation so this only applies to a low carbohydrate intake.

    The lipase enzyme is a naturally occurring enzyme found in the stomach and pancreatic juice, which is also found within fats in the foods you eat.

    Lipase enzyme digests fats and lipids, helping to maintain correct gall bladder function. As such, these constitute any of the fat-splitting or lipolytic enzymes, all of which cleave a fatty acid residue from the glycerol residue in a neutral fat or a phospholipid. The lipase enzyme controls the amount of fat being synthesized and that which is burned in the body, reducing adipose tissue (fat stores).

    The lipase enzyme belongs to the esterases family of proteins. The lipase enzyme is found widely distributed in the plant world (beans and legumes), as well as in molds, bacteria, milk and milk products, and in animal tissues, especially in the pancreas.

    In sufficient quantities of lipase enzyme production, lipase can help use fat-stores to be burned as fuel. Indeed, lipase is a rate-determining enzyme, which not only activates the burning of stored body fats but also effectively inhibits fatty acid synthesis, or fat storage!

    Hormone-Sensitive Triacyclglycerol Lipase, as it is also known, actually stimulates lipolysis in fat tissues, safely raising blood fatty acid levels, which ultimately activates the beta-oxidation pathway in other tissues, such as liver and muscle. In the liver, lipolysis leads to the production of ketone bodies that are secreted into the bloodstream for use as an alternative fuel to glucose by peripheral tissues.

    Source

  2. Reduced thyroid levels (i.e. TSH levels above 5) for a lean individual following a low-carb diet may be normal and healthy!

    Now before you throw your chair at the computer, hear me out. As Dr. Ron Rosedale notes in the excerpt below, reduced thyroid levels are not necessarily synonymous with hypothyroidism. Your body chooses to lower thyroid hormones due to an increased efficiency of energy use and hormonal signaling. It is yet another example of how your body adapts and should not be viewed as abnormal.

    The knee-jerk reaction in many cases would be thyroid medication, which could potentially decrease your lifespan.

    Metabolic rate and temperature has long been connected with longevity. Almost all mechanisms that extend lifespan in many different organisms result in lower temperature. Flowers are refrigerated at the florist to extend their lifespan. Restricting calories in animals also results in lower temperature, reduced thyroid levels, and longer life.

    It should be noted that reduced thyroid levels in this case are not synonymous with hypothyroidism. Here, the body is choosing to lower thyroid hormones because the increased efficiency of energy use and hormonal signaling (including perhaps thyroid) is allowing this to happen.

    Anything will dissolve faster in hot water than cold water. Extra heat will dissolve, disrupt and disorganize. This is not what I try to do to make someone healthy. It is commonly advised to “increase metabolism” and increase “thermogenesis” for health and weight loss.

    Yet how many of you would put a brand of gasoline in your car that advertised that it would make your engine run hotter? What would that do to the life of your car? It is not an increase in metabolism that I am after; it is improved metabolic quality.

    Source

  3. Low cholesterol levels will promote aging.

    Cholesterol is the raw material for many hormones. If you lower your cholesterol you will also lower your hormone production … and if you lower hormone production, you increase aging! To make matters worse, low cholesterol has been associated with a broad complex of emotional, cognitive and behavioral symptoms including aggressiveness, hostility, irritability, paranoia, and severe depression.

    There is also an increase in deaths from trauma, cancer, stroke, and respiratory and infectious diseases among those with low cholesterol levels.

    Furthermore, a study in the British medical journal, Lancet, indicates that elderly men die earlier with low blood cholesterol levels.

    The human organism is in a state of dynamic equilibrium, know as homeostasis. One of the main roles in normal homeostasis belongs to multiple feedback loop mechanisms.

    Cholesterol is the precursor or the building block for the basic hormones: pregnenolone, DHEA, progesterone, estrogen, testosterone.

    Deterioration of the reproductive function, one of the most striking endocrine alterations occurring in aging, is related to a complex interplay of factors. Target organs may become less sensitive to their controlling hormone or may break them down at a slower rate. Hormone levels may change; some increasing, some decreasing and some remaining unchanged.

    Many of the diseases that middle-aged persons begin experiencing including depression, abdominal weight gain, prostate, breast and heart disease, are directly related to hormone imbalances.

    Conventional doctors are prescribing drugs to treat depression, elevated cholesterol, angina and other diseases that may be caused by hormone imbalance.

    A few years ago we found out that some patients who had high cholesterol levels before hormonorestorative therapy (HT) were free of cholesterol problems during therapy. We started pondering as to why this had happened?

    In our opinion, when the production of hormones starts to decline our body tries to correct this problem by increasing the production of cholesterol. A similar situation happens to women during pregnancy. When a female’s body needs more hormones for herself and her baby, cholesterol levels are elevated significantly. If a woman’s body is unable to increase the production of cholesterol the risk of an abortion and miscarriages is increased.

    Another situation is a low level of cholesterol. If your total cholesterol is less than 160, you have nothing to worry about. Wrong opinion!

    A low level of cholesterol means a low production of basic hormones (because of a limited amount of building blocks). Patients with a low level of hormones have life problems that include suicides, criminal behavior, depression, attention deficit disorder, cancer at young age, etc. Low cholesterol is a marker for poor underlying health.

    When patients take cholesterol-lowering drugs (CLD) we can surmise that hormonal production will decrease. That’s why many patients on CLD have severe fatigue, fibromyalgia-like pain, depression, high risk of cancer, suicides, weight gain and impotency.

    Normally our body tries to keep a normal ratio between different hormones: DHEA/cortisol, estrogen/progesterone, female/male hormones. When we have a malfunction in a feedback loop mechanism we start to have the problems related to the imbalance of hormones (for example: male or female dominance, estrogen dominance, etc.).

    Once again, when the production of hormones starts to decline, our body tries to correct the deficiency of hormones by the extra production of cholesterol. It looks like the elevation of total cholesterol serves as a compensatory mechanism for hormonal deficiency.

    Source

  4. Aerobic training can increase body fat.

    Specifically, long distance, low intensity, rhythmic-type aerobics done for a long duration/distance on a frequent basis can signal your body to store fat.

    Your body prefers fat for fuel at lower intensities. It adapts to aerobic activity by storing fat (usually in the hips and thighs) to become more efficient for future use. The more fat you store, the more you can use.

    Furthermore, aerobics are associated with increased cortisol levels without a concomitant increase in testosterone (as occurs during strength training) disrupting an optimal testosterone:cortisol ratio. In fact, average testosterone levels are significantly lower in endurance athletes. This, of course, equates to a decrease in muscle and strength along with an increase in (android) body fat, i.e., midsection fat.

    I will discuss this topic in greater detail during the Cutting Edge Techniques seminar in Toronto, Ontario on May 1-2, 2010. Visit www.StrengthWorkshop.com for more information.

  5. Static stretching will make you weak.

    This has been well documented in the literature, and yet a typical warm-up usually contains some form of (you guessed it) static stretching. The classic Bob Anderson style of stretching before exercise tends to sedate muscles, and research shows that it will decrease power and strength by as much as 30 percent for up to 90 minutes. By that time, your workout is over!

Sometimes you need to take a sledgehammer and crush what’s written in stone!

We’ve been told to reduce fat in our diets, lower our cholesterol levels, improve reduced thyroid production with medication, perform aerobic training almost daily, and definitely start each workout with some static stretching.

Dare I suggest otherwise?

You better believe it!

About The Author

John Paul Catanzaro, B.Sc., C.K., C.E.P., is a Certified Kinesiologist and Certified Exercise Physiologist with a Specialized Honours Bachelor of Science degree in Kinesiology and Health Science. He owns and operates a private gym in Richmond Hill, Ontario providing training and nutritional consulting services. For additional information, visit his website at www.BodyEssence.ca or call 905-780-9908.

Check out John Paul’s DVD, Warm-Up to Strength Training, for some powerful techniques to increase strength and improve performance. It has received a thumbs-up from many experts including Drs. Eric Serrano, Mark Lindsay, and Ken Kinakin as well as Olympic strength coach, Charles Poliquin. Visit www.StrengthWarmUp.com for more information.

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Are All Exercises Equally Beneficial?

April 7th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Exercise is important for preventing cardiovascular disease — but not all exercise is equally beneficial. New research reveals that high intensity exercise does more to protect your heart than traditional endurance training.

Researchers recruited a group of volunteer school children and randomly divided the group into moderate and high intensity exercise teams.  The high intensity group’s training consisted of a series of 20 meter sprints over 30 seconds. The moderate group ran steadily for a period of 20 minutes.

According to Science Daily:

“The results revealed that both groups demonstrated improved CVD risk factors. However, the total exercise time over seven weeks was six times higher for the [moderate exercise] group compared to the [high intensity] group. Thus, significant improvements in CVD risk factors in the [high intensity] group occurred in only 15 percent of the total exercise time.  These findings demonstrate that brief, intense exercise is a time efficient means for improving CVD risk factors”.

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Why it is Even MORE Important to Exercise After 65

April 6th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

It’s never too late for people in older generation groups to start exercising — and appreciate the rewards.  Studies show exercise and weight training can prevent bone loss, a concern for many older adults

According to USA Today:

“The ability to bid farewell to a past exercise love and adopt new ones is key … Exercise is a powerful tool in managing arthritis, research shows.”

New research also shows that physical activity can restore muscular strength in the elderly. Physical therapy can reverse the damage of inactivity, and even standing and walking improve muscle strength. And although in the past, cancer patients were advised to back off exercise and let their bodies rest, it is now believed that exercise has many benefits for people undergoing treatments.

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Imagine Starting Weight Lifting at 90 Years Old

April 5th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Charles Eugster was always a very sickly child. He was pale, sluggish and his growth was slow. He became athletic in his teens to improve his health, but when he reached middle age, he gradually became sedentary once again.

But then at 60, he discovered veteran’s rowing and started competing internationally, winning many gold medals. But at 85 he had a crisis. He was overweight, his posture was terrible and his muscle had deteriorated.  So in his late 80’s he joined a bodybuilding club.

According to his article in the Guardian:

“My circulation and posture improved, and I was told that there was a chance more muscle mass could protect my brain from Alzheimer’s. I stopped thinking about dying. As I approached 90, my focus was on getting my body back.  In 2008, I signed up for my first championship … Then, at last year’s event in Germany, I triumphed, scoring higher than any contestant in any age category for my 57 dips, 61 chin-ups, 50 push-ups and 48 abdominal crunches, each in 45 seconds.”

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How Exercise Slows Down the Aging Process

March 29th, 2011 by Dr. Mercola

Exercise slows many of the degenerative problems that result from aging. This appears to be the result of changes in a multitude of biological processes and systems — exercise actually adjusts the operation of your metabolism, making it work better.

There are a number of proposed mechanisms for the effects of exercise, including:

  • The induction of heat shock proteins
  • Increase in cardiac antioxidant capacity
  • Expression of endoplasmic reticulum stress proteins
  • Anatomical and physiological changes in the coronary arteries
  • Changes in nitric oxide production
  • Adaptational changes in cardiac mitochondria
  • Increased autophagy
  • Improved function of sarcolemmal and/or mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channels

According to Fight Aging:

“Being sedentary appears to be just as self-sabotaging as letting yourself become obese. It will lower your odds of living in good health for as long as you might like”.

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Better than a Scale — The 3 Best Tools to Assess Your Fitness Results …

March 28th, 2011 by Darin Steen

by Darin Steen

The only thing that can come from using only the scale to determine if your exercise program is working is “Bad News”.

If you really want to know if your fitness / fat loss program is working you need more tools. The scale simply will not give you the true answer to the question, “Am I gaining muscle and losing fat?”

What Can the Weight Scale Tell You?

Your body is made up of about 60-65 percent water.

A 160 lb. person contains about 100 lbs. of water. That water goes in and out of cells, muscle and organs, depending on many factors.

Judging by the weight registered on the scale, you cannot tell whether you’re gaining or losing fat, or gaining and losing muscle.

But with a little education and a couple of simple tools, you can be well on your way to monitoring the success of your program. Within minutes you will be able to deduce what is working and what is not working to get you closer to your fitness goals.

Then, do the things that work, and stop doing the things that don’t work. It’s as simple as that.

While some of these seem to be common sense, I have found that we are very emotional when it comes to fitness and fat loss. By working one on one with over 700 clients in the last eight years, I have found that most of my clients loose their common sense when it comes to their body fat level.

Below are only a few of the many reasons why your weight could be fluctuating on the scale:

  • Certain times of the month for women
  • Consuming more sodium in your diet than normal the day before
  • Overeating with a different type of carb than you usually eat
  • Drinking more water than normal
  • Sweating more, temperature change, altitude, etc.

My point is that your body weight fluctuates for so many reasons, you can’t easily determine what is causing it.

Three Tools to Determine the Effectiveness of Your Weight Loss Program

Three ways that are far better than just using the scale to see if your fitness program is working are:

  1. The fit of your clothes. If your pants are looser around the waist and you have more room in your clothes, then you are more than likely losing fat. (Just make sure you do not shrink-wash your jeans so they fit tighter. Just like everything else you have to keep all things the same, so you’re comparing apples to apples.)
  2. Use both a cloth tape and a scale. The waistline measurement and the scale give you a better feedback than the scale alone.

    If the scale stays the same and the waist measurement goes down, then you are losing fat and gaining muscle.

    If the scale stays the same and the waist measurement goes up, then you are gaining fat.

  3. A one site skin fold caliper kit. They’re very easy to use and very affordable. To find a kit, google search “one site skin fold caliper kit”. The feedback is much more precise than the other methods above.

    Within 1 minute you can calculate 3 important numbers that will tell you if you’re losing, gaining, or maintaining muscle and/or fat:

    1. Overall body fat percentage
    2. Fat weight
    3. Lean Body Mass

Monitor Your Progress and Keep Making Adjustments Until You Succeed

Using any one of these techniques will help you determine what works and what doesn’t when you’re trying to gain muscle and lose fat.

Monitoring my progress with a tape measure and a one site skin fold caliper kit for the last 25 years has allowed me to figure out what works for my body. Because what works for me will be slightly different than what works for you.

To get in great shape you have to become your own personal trainer and make small adjustments to food intake, resistance training, cardio routine, goal setting, etc, as needed, until you find the right balance and combination that works for you.

I suggest that you only change one aspect of your fitness / fat loss program and keep everything else the same for two weeks. By utilizing the monitoring techniques I mentioned above you can start to learn more about what works for you and what doesn’t.

Remember, anyone and everyone has the power to change!

Your Healthy LifeStyle Coach,
Darin

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