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#653 From: Daniel Lurie <dl1021@...>
Date: Sun Jun 7, 2009 3:13 pm
Subject: Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
eirulleinad
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Speed of eating 'key to obesity'

Wolfing down meals may be enough to nearly double a person's risk of being overweight, Japanese research suggests.

Osaka University scientists looked at the eating habits of 3,000 people and reported their findings in the British Medical Journal.

Problems in signalling systems which tell the body when to stop eating may be partly responsible, said a UK nutrition expert.

He said deliberately slowing down at mealtimes might impact on weight.

The old wives' tale about chewing everything 20 times might be true - if you did take a bit more time eating, it could have an impact
Professor Ian McDonald
Nottingham University

The latest study looked at the relationship between eating speed, feelings of "fullness" and being overweight.

Just under half of the 3,000 volunteers told researchers they tended to eat quickly.

Compared with those who did not eat quickly, fast-eating men were 84% more likely to be overweight, and women were just over twice as likely.

Those, who, in addition to wolfing down their meals, tended to eat until they felt full, were more than three times more likely to be overweight.

Stomach signals

Professor Ian McDonald, from the University of Nottingham, said that there were a number of reasons why eating fast could be bad for your weight.

He said it could interfere with a signalling system which tells your brain to stop eating because your stomach is swelling up.

He said: "If you eat quickly you basically fill your stomach before your gastric feedback has a chance to start developing - you can overfill the thing."

He said that rushing meals was a behaviour that might have been learned in infancy, and could be reversed, although this might not be easy.

"The old wives' tale about chewing everything 20 times might be true - if you did take a bit more time eating, it could have an impact."

'Biological imperative

In an accompanying editorial, Australian researchers Dr Elizabeth Denney-Wilson and Dr Karen Campbell, said that a mechanism that helps make us fat today may, until relatively recently, have been an evolutionary advantage, helping us grab more food when resources were scarce.

They said that, if possible, children should be encouraged to eat slowly, and allowed to stop when they felt full up at mealtimes.

Dr Jason Halford, Director of the Kissileff Human Ingestive Behaviour Laboratory at the University of Liverpool, said that the way we eat was slowly being seen as a key area in obesity research, especially since the publication of studies highlighting a genetic variant linked to "feelings of fullness".

His own work, recently published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, found that anti-obesity drug sibutramine worked by slowing down the rate at which obese patients ate.

He said: "What the Japanese research shows is that individual differences in eating behaviour underlie over-consumption of food and are linked to obesity.

"Other research has found evidence of this in childhood, suggesting that it could be inherited or learned at a very early age."

He said that there was no evidence yet that trying to slow down mealtimes for children would have an impact on future obesity rates.

--
Thanks,
Daniel Lurie

#658 From: "Russ Farris" <russ@...>
Date: Tue Jun 23, 2009 2:38 am
Subject: Re: Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
tryggvicaid
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Interesting article, Daniel. It makes me wonder what would make us eat fast.
        Acute anxiety would probably kill our appetites, but chronic anxiety might make us eat fast. Anxiety would raise our cortisol levels, and the cortisol would tend to make us gain weight. I wonder how fast the children in orphanages eat, and what happens to their weight. Russ www.potbellysyndrome.com
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Sunday, June 07, 2009 8:13 AM
Subject: [infection-cortisol] Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
Speed of eating 'key to obesity'

Wolfing down meals may be enough to nearly double a person's risk of being overweight, Japanese research suggests.


#661 From: "Daniel Lurie" <dl1021@...>
Date: Tue Jun 23, 2009 1:41 pm
Subject: Re: Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
eirulleinad
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On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 22:38:38 -0400, Russ Farris
<russ@...> wrote:

> Interesting article, Daniel. It makes me wonder what would make us eat
> fast.
> Acute anxiety would probably kill our appetites, but chronic
> anxiety might make us eat fast. Anxiety would raise our cortisol levels,
> and the cortisol would tend to make us gain weight. I wonder how fast
> the children in orphanages eat, and what happens to their weight. Russ
> www.potbellysyndrome.com
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: Daniel Lurie
> To: The_Tao_of_Calories_FAD@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Sunday, June 07, 2009 8:13 AM
> Subject: [infection-cortisol] Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
> Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
> Wolfing down meals may be enough to nearly double a person's risk of
> being overweight, Japanese research suggests.
>
> Story from BBC NEWS:
> http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/7681458.stm

Well, if you eat a high carb diet you might eat fast just to get your
serotonin up. Food can have drug like effects and if you're constantly
stressed you'll want to get your high as quickly as possible.

The book "The Slow Down Diet" by Marc David stresses that eating in an
anxious state impairs digestion, satiety and nutrient absorption. Its a
pretty good read for those with overeating issues.


--
Thanks,
Daniel Lurie



#662 From: "Russ Farris" <russ@...>
Date: Tue Jun 23, 2009 4:15 pm
Subject: Re: Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
tryggvicaid
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Very interesting, Daniel. Maybe eating dessert first would result in a net
reduction in caloric intake? I will have to read Marc David's book when I
get back. Russ www.potbellysyndrome.com

----- Original Message -----
From: "Daniel Lurie" <dl1021@...>
To: <infection-cortisol@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, June 23, 2009 6:41 AM
Subject: Re: [infection-cortisol] Speed of eating 'key to obesity'


> On Mon, 22 Jun 2009 22:38:38 -0400, Russ Farris
> <russ@...> wrote:
>
>> Interesting article, Daniel. It makes me wonder what would make us eat
>> fast.
>> Acute anxiety would probably kill our appetites, but chronic
>> anxiety might make us eat fast. Anxiety would raise our cortisol levels,
>> and the cortisol would tend to make us gain weight. I wonder how fast
>> the children in orphanages eat, and what happens to their weight. Russ
>> www.potbellysyndrome.com
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Daniel Lurie
>> To: The_Tao_of_Calories_FAD@yahoogroups.com
>> Sent: Sunday, June 07, 2009 8:13 AM
>> Subject: [infection-cortisol] Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
>> Speed of eating 'key to obesity'
>> Wolfing down meals may be enough to nearly double a person's risk of
>> being overweight, Japanese research suggests.
>>
>> Story from BBC NEWS:
>> http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/health/7681458.stm
>
> Well, if you eat a high carb diet you might eat fast just to get your
> serotonin up. Food can have drug like effects and if you're constantly
> stressed you'll want to get your high as quickly as possible.
>
> The book "The Slow Down Diet" by Marc David stresses that eating in an
> anxious state impairs digestion, satiety and nutrient absorption. Its a
> pretty good read for those with overeating issues.
> --
> Thanks,
> Daniel Lurie





 
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