This Week in Food, Health, and Fitness

This week, read about simplifying fitness, gluten sensitivity, salt and headaches, bogus health claims, women lifting weights, and more.

Simplifying Fitness 

Julia Beluz (Vox.com) wrote an excellent piece this week about how we tend to overcomplicate exercise (We make exercise way too complicated.  Here’s how to get it right). She summarizes and simplifies what we know into the following five points:

  1. “If you’re not exercising regularly, doing any activity will help”;
  2. “Cardiovascular exercise will keep you on the earth for longer”;
  3. “If you are exercising regularly, mix it up”;
  4. “Exercise probably wont help you lose a lot of weight — but you need it to keep weight off and stay healthy”;
  5. “You shouldn’t do extreme workouts all the time”

jumpropeThe article highlights pertinent research and draws on the expertise of leaders in the field – I highly recommend reading it!

Along those lines, Dr. Micheal Joyner wrote a blog post on a simple and underrated piece of exercise equipment that is inexpensive, transportable, works on agility, footwork, cardiovascular fitness. . . a skipping rope!  It’s nice to see such a simple message from one of the world’s leading experts on human performance and exercise physiology, who has been involved in complex studies of physical activity and performance.

Gluten sensitivity: New Epidemic or New Myth?

Researchers from Upstate Medical Center in Syracuse, New York, join a growing number of scientists raising concern about the the best-selling books spreading misinformation and pseudoscience about the “evils” of gluten and grains. Their article focuses on David Perlmutter’s book “Grain Brain,” which promotes a low-carb/high-fat/high cholesterol diet. Dr. Perlmutter includes a list of 38 different diseases or symptoms, including autism, infertility, and schizophrenia that he believes can be prevented or cured by a gluten-free diet. The book claims that a high-grain/low-fat diet is responsible for obesity (I talked about the lack of evidence for this last week) and many other chronic illnesses.

In their paper, the researchers present  evidence-based findings that dispell Perlmutter’s gluten myth. Like most fad diet books, Grain Brain follows the popular formula of promising the reader great health, telling them their health problems are not their fault, that most of the standard nutrition advice is wrong, citing only studies that support their ideas while ignoring those that don’t, and blaming all illnesses on one thing (in this case, grains). (Proc (Bayl Univ Med Cent). Oct 2014; 27(4): 377–378.)

You can read about gluten-free diets for athletes here.

Other Links of Interest This Week: 

 

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