
Can the right foods really reverse disease?by Mike Adams
Transform your health, reverse chronic disease and free yourself from dangerous pharmaceuticals by mastering the seven laws of nutrition.
Learn:
- Why most modern diseases are actually a result of nutritional deficiencies that can be easily corrected.
- The four key steps to changing your life and achieving any level of health you desire.
- How food processing companies strip away as much as 98% of the natural nutrition in foods.
- Why you can't afford to wait on conventional medicine: To be healthy, take charge NOW!
Click here to start learning now.
|
| (NaturalNews) New research appearing in the Dec. 11 issue of the journal Archives of Internal Medicine found that overweight people who restrict calories to lose weight experience greater loss of bone mineral density than those who exercise for weight loss.
Researchers from Washington University in St. Louis recruited 48 non-obese, healthy men and women for a one-year study. The participants were randomly assigned to one of three groups. The first group reduced caloric intake by 16 percent for the first three months of the study, then increased calorie restriction to 20 percent for the remaining nine months.
The second group exercised to burn an extra 16 percent of calories during the first three months of the study, then increased daily exercise to burn an additional 20 percent of calories for the last nine months. The exercise group's burned calories were tracked with heart rate monitors.
The remaining participants were used as the control group, and were not assigned a diet or exercise program.
At the end of the study, the dieting group lost an average of 17 pounds, while the exercise group lost an average of 14 pounds. However, the researchers found that the dieting group also lost an average of 2 percent bone mineral density at sites in the spine, hips and leg.
The exercising group experienced no such bone mineral density loss, while the control group lost neither weight nor bone density.
The study's lead author, associate professor of medicine Dr. Dennis T. Villareal, recommended overweight people combine exercise and diet to lose weight. "That way, you get the weight loss benefits of the diet, but prevent the negative effect on bone health," he said.
###
Related Articles
• Drinking cola raises osteoporosis risk in women, regardless of calcium intake
• Consuming cola may up osteoporosis risk for older women (press release)
• Drinking cola causes bone mineral loss in women, researchers find
• Medicine's assault on calcium: Quack science fuels calcium bashing frenzy
• Bone density sharply enhanced by weight training, even in the elderly
 |
Additional Resources:
bone mineral density
bone loss
bone density
|
Take Action: Support NaturalNews.com
Email this article to a friend
Share this article on: NewsVine | digg | del.icio.us
Permalink to this article: http://www.NaturalNews.com/021395.html
Reprinting this article: This article may not be reprintied without permission. Syndication available upon request.
|
 |
 |
Receive our Natural Health Newsletter for FREE
Subscribe now (it's free!) to win. We randomly choose a subscriber each month to send $100 in eco-home products or a RealGoods.com gift certificate (our choice). Plus, you'll receive FREE news, articles and action alerts from NaturalNews.com editors and join over 800,000 monthly readers who report extraordinary health improvements after becoming a subscriber!
- Receive breaking news alerts on natural health solutions, renewable energy, the environment, global warming and more.
- Receive a free instant download of our $29 Secret Sources guide that reveals top sources for little-known health and diet solutions.
|
|
 |
 |
Recommended Special Report:
Seven Words that can Change the World
by Joseph R. Simonetta
Read this special report now...
"Seven Words That Can Change the World reveals the astonishing, simple truths that have the power to forever transform our world for the better while freeing our minds from the enslavement of limiting beliefs. This is not a text for the simple-minded; it is a guiding philosophy for the mindful, intelligent few who are wise enough to seek out -- and recognize -- the higher simplicities of truly purposeful living." - Mike Adams, the Health Ranger, editor of NaturalNews.com
|
More on NaturalNews.com:
• Streaming Health Ranger Videos
• CounterThink Cartoons
• FREE Special Reports
• Podcasts
|
 |
|