Nothing and Everything

2012.03.22

Is red meat bad for you?

Filed under: Health — Tags: , , — kevenker @ 9:41 am

There was a study recently from Harvard with appears to conclusively point towards a diet heavy in red meat being bad for you. Example article: http://articles.latimes.com/2012/mar/13/health/la-he-red-meat-20120313

Bummer.

HOWEVER… there is apparently more to this story as Gary Taubes (author of Why We Get Fat and Good Calories, Bad Calories) explains in this post: http://garytaubes.com/2012/03/science-pseudoscience-nutritional-epidemiology-and-meat/

Finally, one point that is almost never mentioned anywhere is the quality of the meat consumed. Is the meat from a diabetic, unhealthy cow (i.e. your standard corn-finished industrial farm produced beef with a terrible Omega-3:6 ratio) or from a healthy cow that ate only grass (with an Omega 3:6 ratio on par with wild salmon and lots of CLA)?

 

2009.09.21

Get your Vitamin D!

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 10:00 am

http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/51913.php

This was forwarded to me by a friend of mine. I’ve seen other articles that have, dosage-wise, said the same thing: take 4000 – 5000 IU per day of Vitamin D in the wintertime to avoid the flu.

Give the various nasty flus that are running around this year, and the dangers of getting vaccinated, I think it is more important than ever to make sure you have adequate Vitamin D levels. It is so cheap these days that it’s almost criminal not to take enough! As with anything, do your research before taking something but I am taking 4000IU/day right now and will increase to 5000 IU/day when the weather gets really bad and I no longer see the sun!

2009.07.24

Sugar During Exercise Increases Power and Endurance

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 5:33 pm

Interesting info here. With my new workout program (Book Of Muscle, Beginner), I am working so hard that after only 30 minutes, I am literally shaking from low blood sugar. I am going to have to start bringing a workout drink with some carbs in it since next week I will be working out for nearly 60 minutes!

Dr. Gabe Mirkin’s Fitness and Health E-Zine July 26, 2009

Sugar During Exercise Increases Power and Endurance

A study from Copenhagen, Denmark shows that taking sugar while you exercise increases the amount of training you can do, and does not lessen the benefits of your increased training (Journal of Applied Physiology, June 2009). In this study, men trained one leg while ingesting a 6 percent sugar drink and the other leg while taking an artificially sweetened (sugarless) drink, two hours a day, on alternate days, five days a week. The legs trained with sugar had 14 percent more power and a 30 percent greater time to exhaustion.

Athletes in sports requiring endurance need to train in their sport many hours each day. They damage their muscles by taking a hard workout on one day, feel sore on the next, and then take less intense workouts for as many days as it takes for the muscles to heal and the soreness to go away. The more intense the training workout without injury, the more intensely they can compete. The longer they can go on their less intense recovery days, the tougher their muscles become to withstand the tremendous forces on them during their hard workouts and during competition.

Anything that can increase the intensity of their hard days or amount of work they can do on their recovery days will make them better in competition. Running out of muscle sugar makes you feel tired. So anything that preserves stored sugar in muscles during a workout will help you exercise longer. This study shows that taking sugar regularly during workouts allows you to extend the amount of training without lessening the benefits that you receive from the extra work.

The question had been asked whether restricting sugar during training could enhance performance by teaching the muscles to get along with less sugar. These authors showed that the enzymes used to convert sugar and fat to energy function just as well when sugar is taken continuously during exercise. The muscles trained on sugar had no loss in the amount of stored sugar or the ability to convert food to energy.

Another study showed that taking a drink containing both protein and sugar every three miles and at the finish of a 36-mile bicycle time trial was far more effective than a drink containing just sugar in 1) riding faster at the end of the time trial, 2) preventing next-day muscle soreness and 3) lessening muscle damage, as measured by a blood test called CPk (International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, April 2009). A protein-sugar drink taken immediately after intense exercise also hastens healing of the muscles damaged by hard exercise (Journal of Applied Physiology, April 2009).

Taking refined carbohydrates (sugar or flour) when you are not exercising can cause a high rise in blood sugar that increases risk for diabetes and heart attacks. Contracting muscles remove sugar so fast from the bloodstream that blood sugar usually does not rise too high during exercise and for up to half an hour after you finish exercising.

2009.07.06

Cut cancer death by building muscle

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 3:40 pm

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/5371468/Men-with-big-muscles-cut-cancer-risk-by-40-per-cent.html

Study in Sweden: men who regularly worked out with weights and had the highest muscle strength were between 30 and 40 per cent less likely to lose their life to a deadly tumour.

However, the authors end the article with strange advice quotes about how it is more important to get cardio and how there is no need to work very hard. Huh? Apparently they didn’t read their own article!

Fitness expert Will Brink had this to say: http://www.brinkzone.com/blog/general-brinkzone-news/post/anti-muscle-bias/#more-938

2009.07.04

Vigorous Exercise Protects Your Heart

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 11:59 am

http://www.drmirkin.com/public/ezine070509.html

Dr. Gabe Mirkin’s Fitness and Health E-Zine
July 5, 2009

Vigorous Exercise Protects Your Heart

This week, Norwegian researchers reported their findings that high intensity interval training maximally improves every conceivable measure of heart function and heart strength.  It also helps to prevent both the pre-diabetic metabolic syndrome and the heart damage it causes (Exercise and Sports Sciences Reviews, July 2009).

This is more evidence that older people who compete in vigorous sports, such as biking and running, live longer and suffer less disease than people who exercise at a more casual pace.  The most intense exercise includes interval training: running or cycling very fast to become severely short of breath, then resting and repeating these almost maximum efforts several times in the same workout.  Controlled interval training is now a treatment for heart failure.  High-intensity interval training raises the good HDL cholesterol far more than less intense exercise (Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, March 2009). Intense exercise for older people is still a controversial subject, but these new results concur with many earlier studies.

Intense exercise is far more effective than casual exercise in preventing and treating diabetes (Circulation, July 2008) and reducing belly fat (Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise
[MSSE], November 2008).  Vigorous exercise protects obese people from heart attacks and prolongs their lives, even if they don’t lose weight (MSSE, October 2006).  Intense exercise is more effective in preventing heart attacks than less intense exercise done more frequently (MSSE, July 1997).  Death rate from cardiovascular disease is lowered by high intensity activities such as jogging, swimming, hiking, tennis and climbing stairs, but not by lower intensity activities such as walking, bowling, sailing, golf and dancing (Heart, May 2003).  Paul Thompson, of the University of California at Berkeley, showed that the faster aged runners run, the lower their blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar levels (Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, October 2008).

2009.06.01

Everybody should read this…

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 1:16 pm

http://www.burnthefatblog.com/archives/2009/05/no_pain_no_gain_fitness_myth_o.php

A mixed success

Filed under: Daily Stuff, Health — kevenker @ 10:08 am

So at the beginning of the year, my fitness goal was to get down to 190 lbs and 18% body fat by June, as I’ve mentioned a few times in previous posts.

Today, June 1st, I am at 194. :( I find that number even more amazing because yesterday morning I was at 192 and I didn’t exactly party hard last night!!

BUT my body fat – as measured by my body fat calipers – is around 17%!

The “problem” is that I’ve recently gained some lean body mass (5-6 lbs) so even though my weight is higher than I want, my body fat (the much more important number in the grand scheme of things) is at or below my target number.

I know I should be happier, but I really wanted that “magic” 190lbs! :) Of course, I have to remind myself, I sort of picked that number out of thin air. There’s nothing truly magical about 190. I picked it mainly because it was about 25 lbs in 26 weeks, so I figured I could achieve it! Ironically, the 18% was my secondary goal and was chosen strictly because at my starting LBM of ~ 155lbs, 18% would be my LBM at 190. Basically, my body fat % goal was chosen simply to not lose LBM during my weight loss program.

So from here through STP (July 11th) my plan was go into maintenance mode and stay at 190 and give my body time to acclimate to the new weight w/o stressing it with more weight-loss. However, being the engineer that I am, I still want to hit my number, so I’m going work for a couple more weeks on getting down to 190. That will put me near 15% BF.

2009.04.30

Say hello to the swine flu

Filed under: Daily Stuff, Health — kevenker @ 3:18 pm

Reports have been popping up all over the place about the Swine Flu. Now there are a number of cases of it in Washington state. In fact, Stacy just told me that a doctor in Mill Creek has the swine flu and her family got sick as well!

I’m surprised at how fast it spread. Less than a week from the time I heard about it to the time it arrived down the street!

Fortunately, the strength of it here in the states seems to be weaker than in Mexico where it has killed a couple of hundred people. Here it behaves more like normal flu: unpleasant but generally not life-threatening.

Everybody stay healthy and wash your hands frequently!

2008.07.07

Improve your learning

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 12:40 pm

http://ririanproject.com/2007/04/15/7-little-known-ways-to-drastically-improve-your-learning/

I don’t know much about this site. There are other links to articles/blog posts on learning related issues. I have to say that I agree with the 7 items on the list.

2008.05.16

Handy calculator for caloric intake requirements

Filed under: Health — kevenker @ 11:02 am

I found this handy calculator that calculates your caloric intake.

http://www.realage.com/NutritionCenter/calorieCount.aspx

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