TOM VENUTO'S BURN THE FAT
REPRINTABLE ARTICLES
How
Liquid Calories May Be Making You Fat...
Even Your Favorite Protein Drinks!
Affiliate
instructions: You
have permission to publish this article in your e-zine, on your
website, on your blog or on your forum, provided the entire column is
unaltered and the bio/about the author box is included in its entirety.
All you need to do is copy and paste. You may of course, replace all
www.burnthefat.com links with your affiliate hoplink. It's also great
idea to include a clickable book
cover graphic and or an author
photo with each Q & A column you print.
Please note: you
do NOT have permission to submit
this article to any article directories. This article is syndicated for
reprint on your own website, blog, forum or ezine only. The copyright
is still held by the author, Tom Venuto, and Burn The Fat Dot Com, A
Division of Fitness Renaissance, LLC
Title:
How Liquid Calories May Be Making You Fat...
Even Your Favorite Protein Drinks!
By line: By Tom Venuto, CSCS, NSCA-CPT
URL: www.burnthefat.com (replace with
your clickbank affiliate hoplink - click on "hoplink instructions in
navigation links to your left if you need help)
Word count: 994 words
Related keywords: calories, liquid
calories, appetite, appetite suppressant, suppress appetite, satiety,
hunger, protein and satiety, protein drink, shake, smoothie, lose
weight, loose weight, weight loss, fat loss,
burn the fat, burn the fat feed the muscle, BFFM, tom venuto
How
Liquid Calories May Be Making You Fat...
Even Your Favorite Protein Drinks!
At least 7
scientific studies have provided strong
evidence that energy
containing beverages (i.e., “liquid calories”) do
not properly activate the satiety mechanisms in the body and brain and
do not satisfy the appetite as well as food in solid form.
Epidemiological
research also supports a positive association between
calorie-containing beverage consumption and increased body weight or
body mass index. New research now suggests that soda may not be the
only culprit…
The primary
source of liquid calories in the United States Diet is
carbohydrate, namely soda. Now running a close second are specialty and
dessert coffees. Did
you know that a 16 ounce Frappucino can contain 500 calories or even
more!
That’s one-third of a typical female’s daily
calorie intake while on a
fat loss program.
A recent study
at Purdue University published in the International
Journal
of Obesity set out to learn even more about this bodyfat - liquid
calories relationship.
Researchers
compared solid and beverage forms of
foods composed primarily
of carbohydrate, fat or protein in order to document the independent
effect of food form in foods with different dominant macronutrient
sources.
Based on previous
research, some experts have
recommended targeting specific
beverages as being “worse” than others. High
fructose corn syrup and soda has
been singled out the most and you’ve probably seen that
yourself in the news.
There’s
no question that soda has been
on top of the “hit list” for some time now, by
virtue of the amounts and frequency of consumption alone.
However, this
recent study says that from a pure
energy balance perspective,
we should be cautious about ALL liquid calories, not just soda and not
just
carbohydrates!
Fruit juice for
example, appears to be an obvious
improvement over soda, so many people have swapped out their soda for
fruit juice. However, when fruit juice is compared to an equal amount
of calories from whole fruit, the whole fruit satisfies appetite better
(largely due to the bulk and fiber content), and so you tend to eat
fewer calories for the day.
[On an
interesting side note, soup does not seem to apply; soup has
higher satiety value than calorie containing beverages, possibly for
mere cognitive
reasons.]
If you were to
meticulously track your calories from beverages and you
made
sure that your calories remained the same for the day, whether liquid
or solid,
there would probably be little or no difference in your body
composition.
But
that’s not what usually happens in free-living humans.
Most people do not
accurately track or report their caloric intake. Our mistake is that we
tend
to drink calories IN ADDITION TO our usual food intake, not instead of
it.
Men are
especially guilty of this when they drink
alcohol - Men tend to drink
AND eat, while women tend to drink INSTEAD OF eating.
This new research
found that with all three
macronutrients - protein, carbs or fat - daily calorie intake was
significantly greater when the beverage form was consumed as compared
to the solid.
Yes,
it’s true! Even protein drinks did
not satisfy the appetite the way
that protein foods did!
While you would
think that protein drinks are
purely a good thing, because
protein foods have been proven to reduce appetite and increase satiety,
if
you turn a solid protein food into a protein drink, it loses
it’s appetite suppressive properties in the same way that
happens when you turn fruit
into fruit juice.
[NOTE: After
weight training workouts, liquid nutrition may have
benefits
that outweigh any downside, especially on muscle-gaining programs]
Why do
liquid calories fail to elicit the
same response as whole foods? reasons include:
- high calorie density
- lower satiety value
- more calories ingested in short period of time
- lower demand for oral processing
- shorter gastrointestinal transit times
- energy in beverages has greater
bioaccessibility and bioavailability
- mechanisms may include cognitive, orosensory,
digestive, metabolic, endocrine and neural influences (human appetite
is a complex thing!!!)
- last but not least, nowhere in our history
have our ancestors had access to large amounts of liquid calories.
Alcohol may have been around as far back as several thousand years BC,
but even that is a blip on the evolutionary
calendar of humanity.
As a result, our
genetic code has never developed
the physiological mechanisms
to properly register the caloric content in liquids the way it does
when you
eat, chew and swallow whole foods.
Bottom
line: This study
suggests that we shouldn’t just target one type
of liquid calories such as soda. If you’re trying to beat
body fat, it’s
wise to limit all types of liquid calories and eat whole foods as much
as possible.
Start by ditching
the soda. Then ditch the high
calorie dessert coffees.
Then cut back on the alcohol. From there, be cautious even about milk,
juice and protein drinks.
Drink water or
tea instead, or limited amounts of
black coffee - without all
the high calorie extras.
If you do consume
any beverages that contain
calories, such as protein shakes, be sure to account for those calories
meticulously and be sure you don’t drink them in addition to
your usual food intake, but in place
of an equal amount of food calories.
Remember, those
protein shakes you might be
drinking are called “meal replacements”
not “free calories!”
For many years I
have suggested focusing primarily
on whole foods rather
than liquids, even protein shakes. Unlike so many other fat reduction
programs, Burn
The Fat, Feed The Muscle does not require any kind
of liquid meal replacement or protein drinks and our company does not
exist to sell supplements; we are here to educate you and millions of
others about the realities of
body fat loss.
We now have even
more scientific data that
confirms what Burn The Fat
has been teaching all along.
I hope you found
this helpful. You can learn more
about “Burn The Fat” at www.BurnTheFat.com
Train hard and
expect
success,
Tom Venuto,
NSCA-CPT, CSCS
Fat Loss Coach
www.BurnTheFat.com
Reference:
Effects of food form on appetite and energy intake in lean and obese
young adults. International Journal of Obesity. 2007 Nov (11):1688-95.
Mourao DM, Bressan J, Campbell WW, Mattes RD. Department of Foods and
Nutrition, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN 47907-2059, USA.
About
the Author:
Tom Venuto is a
natural bodybuilder, certified
personal
trainer and freelance fitness writer. Tom is the author of "Burn the
Fat, Feed The Muscle,” which teaches you how to get lean
without
drugs or supplements using secrets of the world's best bodybuilders and
fitness models. Learn how to get rid of stubborn fat and increase your
metabolism by visiting: www.burnthefat.com
|