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  • Why don't we give a big, warm welcome to Dr. Michael Greger!

  • [Applause]

  • Surely, if there was some safe, simple, side-effect-free solution

  • to the obesity epidemic, we would know about it by now, right?

  • I'm not so sure.

  • It may take up to 17 years before research findings make it

  • into day-to-day clinical practice.

  • To take one example that was particularly

  • poignant for my family: heart disease.

  • You know, decades ago, Dr. Dean Ornish and colleagues published evidence

  • in one of the most prestigious medical journals in the world

  • that our leading cause of death could be reversed with diet

  • and lifestyle changes aloneyet, hardly anything changed.

  • Even now, hundreds of thousands of Americans continue to needlessly die

  • from what we learned decades ago was a reversible disease.

  • In fact, I had seen it with my own eyes.

  • My grandmother was cured of her end-stage heart disease

  • by one of Dean's predecessors, Nathan Pritikin, using similar methods.

  • So, if effectively the cure to our number-one killer of men and women

  • could get lost down some rabbit hole and ignored,

  • what else might there be in the medical literature

  • that could help my patients, but that just didn't have

  • a corporate budget driving its promotion?

  • Well, I made it my life's mission to find out.

  • That's why I became a doctor in the first place and why I started

  • my nonprofit site, NutritionFacts.org.

  • Everything on the website is free.

  • There are no ads, no corporate sponsorship.

  • It's strictly noncommercial, not selling anything.

  • I just put it up as a public service, as a labor of love,

  • as a tribute to my grandmother.

  • [Applause]

  • New videos and articles nearly every day

  • on the latest in evidence- based nutritionwhat a concept.

  • Ok, so, what does the science show is the best way to lose weight?

  • If you want testimonials and before-and-after pictures,

  • you have come to the wrong place.

  • I'm not interested in anecdotes; I'm interested in the evidence.

  • When it comes to making decisions as life-and-death-important

  • as the health and well-being of yourself and your family,

  • there's really only one question:

  • What does the best available balance of evidence show right now?

  • The problem is that even just sticking to the peer-reviewed medical literature

  • is not enough as, “False and scientifically [misleading] unsupported beliefs

  • about obesity are pervasiveeven in scientific journals.

  • The only way to get at the truth, then, is to dive deep

  • into the primary literature and read all

  • the original studies themselves.

  • But, who's got time for that?

  • There are more than half a million scientific papers

  • on obesity with a hundred new ones published every day.

  • Even researchers in the field might not be able to keep track

  • beyond their narrow domain.

  • But that's what we do at NutritionFacts.org.

  • We comb through tens of thousands of studies a year so you

  • don't have to.

  • Very nice!

  • And indeed, we uncovered a treasure trove of buried data,

  • like today I'll cover simple spices, for example, proven in

  • randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled trials to accelerate weight loss

  • for pennies a day, but with so little profit potential,

  • it's no wonder these studies never saw the light of day.

  • The only profiting I care about, though, is your health.

  • That's why 100% of all the proceeds I receive from all of my books,

  • and DVDs, and speaking engagements are all donated to charity.

  • I just want to do for your family what Pritikin did for my family.

  • But wait, isn't weight loss just about eating less and moving more?

  • I mean, isn't a calorie a calorie?

  • That's what the food industry wants you to think.

  • The notion that a calorie from one source is just as fattening

  • as any other is a trope broadcast by the food industry

  • as a way to absolve itself of culpability.

  • Coca-Cola itself even put an ad out there emphasizing

  • thisone simple common-sense fact.”

  • As the current and past chairs of the Harvard's nutrition department put it,

  • thiscentral argumentfrom industry is that theoverconsumption of calories

  • from carrots would be no different than the overconsumption of calories from soda

  • If a calorie is just a calorie, why does it matter what we put in our mouths?

  • Let's explore that example of carrots versus Coca-Cola.

  • It's true that in a tightly controlled laboratory setting,

  • 240 calories of carrots (10 carrots) would have the same effect

  • on calorie balance than the 240 calories in a bottle of Coke,

  • but this comparison falls flat on its face out in the real world.

  • You could chug those liquid candy calories in less than a minute,

  • but eating 240 calories of carrots would take you more than

  • two-and-a-half hours of sustained constant chewing.

  • Not only would your jaw get sore, but 240 calories of carrots

  • is like five cupsyou might not even be able to fit them all in.

  • Our stomach is only so big.

  • Once we fill it up, stretch receptors

  • in our stomach wall tell us when we've had enough,

  • but different foods have different amounts of calories per stomachful.

  • Some foods have more calories per cup, per pound, per mouthful than others.

  • This is the concept of calorie density:

  • the number of calories in a given amount of food.

  • Three pounds is about what the average American eats in a day.

  • As you can see, for example, oil, is a high calorie density,

  • meaning a high calorie concentration, lots of calories packed into a small space, so

  • drizzling just a tablespoon of oil onto a dish adds over a hundred calories.

  • For those same calories, you could have instead eaten about

  • two cups of blackberries, for example, a food with a low calorie density.

  • So, these two meals have the same number of calories.

  • You could swig down that spoonful of oil

  • and not even feel anything in your stomach,

  • but eating a couple of cups of berries could start to fill you up.

  • That's why yes, biochemically a calorie is a calorie,

  • but eating the same amount of calories in different foods,

  • can have different effects.

  • The average human stomach can expand to fit about four cups of food;

  • so, a single stomachful of strawberry ice cream, for example,

  • could max out our caloric intake for the entire day.

  • For the same 2,000 calories, to get those same 2,000 calories

  • from strawberries themselves

  • you'd have to eat 44 cups of berries.

  • That's 11 stomachfuls.

  • As delicious as berries are, I don't know if I could fill my stomach

  • to bursting 11 times a day.

  • Some foods are just impossible to overeat.

  • They're so low in calorie density, you just physically

  • couldn't eat enough to even maintain your weight.

  • In a lab, a calorie is a calorie, but in life, far from it.

  • Traditional weight-loss diets focus on decreasing portion size,

  • but we know theseeat lessapproaches can leave people

  • feeling hungry and unsatisfied.

  • A more effective approach may be to shift the emphasis from restriction

  • to positiveeat moremessaging of increasing intake of healthy,

  • low-calorie-density foods, but you don't know, until you

  • put it to the test.

  • Researchers in Hawaii tried putting people on more of a traditional,

  • Hawaiian diet with all the plant foods they could eat,

  • unlimited quantities of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, beans.

  • And, the study subjects lost an average of 17 pounds in just 21 days.

  • Calorie intake dropped by 40%, but not because they were eating less food.

  • They lost 17 pounds in three weeks eating more food,

  • in excess of four pounds a day.

  • How could that be?

  • Because whole plant foods tend to be so calorically dilute,

  • you can stuff yourself without getting the same kind of weight gain.

  • They lost 17 pounds in three weeks eating more food.

  • That's why in my upcoming new book, How Not to Diet,

  • which I am very excited about, [clears throat],

  • that's whyLow in Calorie Densityis on my list of the 17 ingredients

  • for an ideal weight loss diet.

  • As noted before, Americans appear to average about three pounds of food a day.

  • So, if you stuck with mostly these foods, you can see how you can eat more food

  • and still shed pounds.

  • A landmark study set to be published next month, found that

  • even when presented with the same number of calories,

  • and the same salt, sugar, fat, fiber and protein,

  • processed foods led to weight gain, two pounds gained over two weeks;

  • and unprocessed foods led to weight loss, two pounds down in the same two weeks.

  • Here's one of their processed food meals

  • which is probably healthier, actually, than what most people eat.

  • Non-fat Greek yogurt, baked potato chips, sugar-free diet lemonade

  • with a turkey sandwich, has the same number of calories as this

  • what the unprocessed-meal-food folks were eating,

  • a kind of a southwest entrée salad with black beans, avocados, nuts

  • that's the calorie density effect.

  • Same calories but there's just more food,

  • no wonder it satisfied their hunger.

  • And they ended up four pounds lighter in two weeks eating more food.

  • So, how can you decrease the calorie density of your diet?

  • Well, just a quick peek at the two extremes should suggest two methods:

  • abandon added fats and add abandoned vegetables.

  • Method number one: Covertly put people on a relatively low-fat diet,

  • and they tend to lose body fat every day even though

  • they can eat as much as they want.

  • But if you instead give those same people the same meals,

  • but this time sneak in enough extra fats and oils

  • to change it to a high-fat diet, they gain body fat every day.

  • In fact, in a famous prison experiment in Vermont,

  • lean inmates were overfed up to ten thousand calories a day

  • to try to experimentally make them fat.

  • This turned out to be surprisingly difficult.

  • Most starting dreading breakfast and involuntarily threw it up.

  • The researchers learned how difficult it was to have people gain weight

  • on purpose, unless... you feed them lots of fat.

  • To get prisoners to gain 30 pounds on a regular diet,

  • it took about 140,000 excess calories per certain amount of body surface area.

  • To get the same 30-pound weight gain just by adding fat to their diets,

  • all they had to do was feed them about an extra 40,000 calories.

  • When the extra calories were in the form of straight fat,

  • it took as many as a hundred thousand fewer calories

  • to gain the same amount of weight.

  • A calorie is not a calorieit depends on what you eat.

  • In this case, lowering fat content effectively

  • made up to 100,000 calories, disappear.

  • That's whyLow in Added Fatis on my list

  • of ideal weight loss ingredients as well.

  • There are, however, two important exceptions.

  • Processed foods withreduced-fat claimsare often so packed with sugar

  • that they can have the same number of calories as a higher fat product.

  • SnackWell's fat-free cookies, for example, at 1700 calories

  • per pound are as calorie- dense as a cheese danish.

  • The other exception to the low-fat rule is that vegetables

  • are so calorically dilute that even a high-fat veggie dish,

  • like some oily broccoli with garlic sauce, tends to be less calorie dense

  • overall, which brings us to the second strategy for lowering calorie density:

  • instead of sneaking out fat, sneak in vegetables.

  • The biggest influence on calorie density is not fat, but water content.

  • Since water adds weight and bulk without adding calories,

  • the most calorie-dense foods and the most calorie-dense diets

  • tend to be those that are dry.

  • Some vegetables, on the other hand, are more than 95% water,

  • and not just iceberg lettuce.

  • Cucumbers, celery, turnips, cooked napa cabbage,

  • bok choy, summer squash, zucchini, bean sprouts, and bamboo shoots

  • can top out at 95% water.

  • They're basically just water in vegetable form.

  • A big bowl of water-rich vegetables is practically

  • just a big bowl of trapped water.

  • The effect on calorie density is so dramatic

  • the food industry wants in on the action.

  • They figure they could use nanotechnology

  • tostructure a solid processed food similar to a celery stalk

  • with self-assembled, water-filled,… nanocells or nanotubes.”

  • No need, as Mother Nature beat you to it.

  • When dozens of common foods, pitted head-to-head

  • for their ability to satiate appetites for hours,

  • the characteristic most predictive was not how little fat

  • or how much protein it had, but how much water it had.

  • That was the number one predictor of how filling a food is.

  • That's whyHigh in Water- Rich Foodsis on my list, too.

  • Water-rich foods like vegetables, topping the charts

  • with most more than 90% water by weight,

  • followed by most fresh fruit, coming in around the 80s.

  • Starchier vegetables, whole grains, and canned beans

  • are mostly 70s, meaning three- quarters of their weight: pure water.

  • In general, when it comes to water- rich foods, most whole plant foods

  • float towards the top, most animal foods fall somewhere in the middle,

  • and most processed foods sink to the bottom.

  • In a famous series of experiments, researchers at Penn State University

  • decided to put water-rich vegetables to the test.

  • Study subjects were served pasta

  • and told to eat as much or as little as they'd like,

  • and on average, they consumed about 900 calories of pasta.

  • What do you think would happen if as a first course, you gave them

  • a hundred calories of salad composed largely

  • of lettuce, carrots, cucumber, celery, and cherry tomatoes?

  • Would they go on to eat the same amount of pasta

  • and end up with a thousand calorie lunch, 900 plus 100?

  • Or would they eat maybe a hundred fewer calories of pasta,

  • effectively canceling out the added salad calories?

  • It was even better than that.

  • They ate more than 200 fewer calories of pasta.

  • Thanks to the salad, a hundred calories in, 200 calories out.

  • So, in essence, the salad had negative 100 calories.

  • Preloading with vegetables can effectively subtract

  • a hundred calories out of a meal.

  • That's how you can lose weight by eating more food.

  • Of course, the type of salad matters.

  • The researchers repeated the experiment, this time adding a fatty dressing,

  • extra shredded cheese, which quadrupled the salad's calorie density.

  • Now, eating this salad as a first course didn't turn

  • a 900-calorie meal into one with less than 800 calories.

  • Instead, it turned it into a meal with calories in the quadruple digits.

  • It's like preloading pizza with garlic bread

  • you could end up with more calories overall.

  • So, what's the cut-off?

  • Studies on preloading show that eating about a cup of food before a meal

  • decreases subsequent intake by about 100 calories;

  • so, to get a “negative calorieeffect, the first course would have to contain

  • fewer than a hundred calories per cup.

  • As you can see in the chart, this includes most fresh fruit

  • and vegetables, but having something like a dinner roll wouldn't work.

  • But, hey, give people a large apple to eat before that same pasta meal,

  • and rather than consuming two hundred calories less,

  • it was more like three hundred calories less, so...

  • how many calories does an apple have?

  • It depends on when you eat it.

  • Before a meal, an apple could effectively have about negative 200 calories.

  • You can see the same thing giving people vegetable soup as a first course.

  • Hundreds of calories disappear.

  • One study tracked people's intake throughout the day

  • even found that overweight subjects randomized to pre-lunch vegetable soup

  • not only ate less lunch, but deducted an extra

  • bonus hundred calories at dinner, too, a whole seven hours later.

  • So, the next time you sit down to a healthy soup,

  • you can imagine calories being veritably

  • sucked out of your body with every spoonful.

  • Even just drinking two cups of water before a meal immediately

  • caused people to cut about 20% of calories out of the meal,

  • taking in more than 100 fewer calories.

  • No wonder overweight men and women randomized to two cups of water

  • before each meal lost weight 44% faster.

  • Two cups of water before each meal, 44% faster weight loss.

  • That's why so-calledNegative Calorie Preloadingis on my list

  • of weight loss boosters - which are all the things I could find

  • that can accelerate weight loss regardless of what you eat the rest of the time.

  • Negative calorie preloading just means that starting a meal with foods

  • containing less than a hundred calories per cup.

  • That includes many fruits, vegetables, soups, salads,

  • or simply, a tall glass of water.

  • Anything we can put on that first-course salad to boost weight loss even further?

  • In myAmping AMPKsection I talk about ways to activate an enzyme

  • known as thefat controller.”

  • Its discovery is considered one of the most important

  • medical breakthroughs in the last few decades.

  • You can activate this enzyme through exercise, fasting, and nicotine,

  • but is there any way to boost it for weight loss without sweat, hunger,

  • or the whole dying-a-horrible- death-from-lung-cancer thing?

  • Well, Big Pharma is all over it.

  • After all, obese individuals may be

  • unwilling to perform even a minimum of physical activity,”

  • wrote a group of pharmacologists, “thus, indicating that drugs mimicking

  • endurance exercise are highly desirable.”

  • So, “it's crucial that oral compounds with high bioavailability

  • are developed to safely induce chronic AMPK activation

  • forlong-term weight loss and maintenance…”

  • But, there's no need to develop such a compound since you can already buy it

  • at any grocery store. It's called... vinegar.

  • When vinegaracetic acidis absorbed and metabolized,

  • you get a natural AMPK boost.

  • Enough of a boost to lose weight

  • at the typical dose you might use dressing a salad?

  • Vinegar has evidently been used to treat obesity for centuries,

  • but only recently has it beenput to the test.

  • Randomized, double-blind, placebo- controlled trial on the effects

  • of vinegar intake on the reduction of body fat in overweight men and women.

  • The subjects were randomized to drink a daily beverage

  • containing one or two tablespoons of apple cider vinegar

  • or a controlled beverage developed to taste the same as the vinegar drink,

  • but prepared with a different kind of acid

  • so it didn't have actual vinegar in it.

  • Three months in, the fake vinegar group actually gained weight

  • (as overweight people tend to do), whereas the genuine vinegar groups

  • significantly lost body fat, as determined by CT scan.

  • A little vinegar every day led to pounds of weight loss achieved

  • for just pennies a day without removing anything from their diet.

  • That's why one of my 21 tweaks to accelerate weight loss is...

  • two teaspoons of vinegar with each meal, either sprinkled on your salad

  • or even just added to tea with some lemon juice.

  • The beauty of the vinegar studies is that they were not just randomized,

  • controlled trials, but placebo-controlled trials.

  • Some studies aren't controlled at all.

  • Women asked to eat a ripe tomato before lunch every day for a month

  • lost about two pounds, but without a control group you don't know

  • if the tomato had anything to do with it.

  • Just being enrolled in a weight- loss study where you know

  • they're going to come back and weigh you in a month

  • can have people change their diets in other ways.

  • I mean it's certainly possible.

  • A tomato is 95% water;

  • so, you'd be filling up a fist- sized portion of your stomach

  • with only about fifteen calories before a meal, so it's certainly possible,

  • but we'd need a better study to prove it for weight loss.

  • Stronger studies have control groups,

  • at least, for example, randomize people

  • to a weight-loss diet with or without one to two cups of low-sodium

  • vegetable juice, and those drinking the vegetable juice

  • lose significantly more weight.

  • Or split people into two groups and give half about two tablespoons

  • of goji berries a day, and forty-five days later,

  • the goji group appeared to cut two-and- a-half inches off their waistline

  • compared to no change in the control group.

  • But any time you have one group do something special,

  • you don't know how much of the benefit is due to the placebo effect.

  • In drug trials it's easy: you give half the people the actual medication

  • and the other half an identical- looking sugar pill placebo.

  • Both groups are then doing the same thingtaking identical-looking pills

  • and so, if you see any difference in outcomes,

  • we can suspect it's the due to the actual drug.

  • But what would placebo broccoli look like?

  • That's the problem.

  • You can't stuff cabbage into a capsule, but there are some foods

  • so potent that you could actually fit them into a pill

  • to pit them against placebos: spices.

  • Want to know if garlic can cause weight loss?

  • Give people some garlic powder compressed

  • into tablets versus placebo pills and...

  • Garlic worked, resulting in both a drop in weight

  • and in waistlines within six weeks.

  • They used about a half teaspoon of garlic powder a day,

  • which would cost less than four cents.

  • Four cents too steep?

  • How about two cents a day?

  • A quarter teaspoon of garlic powder a day,

  • about a hundred overweight men and women were randomized

  • to a quarter teaspoon worth of garlic powder a day or placebo,

  • and those unknowingly taking the two cents worth of garlic powder a day

  • lost about six pounds of straight body fat over the next fifteen weeks.

  • Now if you can splurge up to three cents a day, there's black cumin.

  • A meta-analysis of randomized, controlled trials shows weight-loss

  • efficacy again with just a quarter teaspoon a day.

  • Not regular cumin, this is a completely different spice known as black cumin.

  • What is black cumin?

  • You obviously haven't been reading your bibles.

  • Described as a “miracle herb,” besides the weight loss,

  • there are randomized controlled trials showing daily black cumin consumption

  • significantly improves cholesterol and triglycerides,

  • significantly improves blood pressureand blood sugar control.

  • But I use it, just cause it tastes good

  • I just put black cumin seeds in a pepper grinder and grind it like pepper.

  • With more than a thousand papers published in the medical literature

  • on black cumin, some reporting extraordinary results like dropping

  • cholesterol levels as much as a statin drug.

  • Why don't we hear more about it?

  • Why weren't we taught about it in medical school?

  • Presumably because there's no profit motive.

  • Black cumin is just a common, natural spice.

  • You're not going to thrill your stockholders selling something

  • that you can't patent, that costs three cents a day.

  • Or you can use regular cumin, the second most common popular spice on Earth.

  • Those randomized to half of a teaspoon at both lunch and dinner

  • over three-months lost four more pounds and an extra inch off their waist,

  • found comparable to the obesity drug known as orlistat.

  • That's theanal leakagedrug you may have heard about,

  • though the drug company evidently prefers the termfecal spotting

  • to describe the rectal discharge it causes.

  • The drug company's website offers some helpful tips, though,

  • it's probably a smart idea to wear dark pants

  • and bring a change of clothes with you to work.”

  • You know, just in case their drug causes you to crap your pants at work.

  • I think I'll stick with the cumin.

  • Cayenne pepper can counteract the metabolic slowing that accompanies

  • weight loss and accelerate fat burning as a bonus.

  • Ginger powder!

  • Over a dozen randomized controlled trials

  • starting at just a quarter teaspoon of ground ginger a day,

  • showing significantly decreased body weight for just pennies a day.

  • Proven in placebo-controlled trials to work,

  • but you probably never heard about any of this

  • because they can't make enough profit.

  • Don't get me started.

  • Let me go back to the Coke versus carrots example.

  • A calorie is not a calorie because drinking this, is not the same as eating this.

  • But even if you consumed the same number of calories,

  • chewed for hours to pack in all those carrots,

  • a calorie may still not be a calorie, because it's not what you eat,

  • it's what you absorb.

  • As anyone who's ever eaten corn can tell you,

  • some bits of vegetable matter can pass right through you.

  • A calorie may still be a calorie circling your toilet bowl,

  • but flushed calories aren't going to make it onto your hips.

  • That's where fiber comes in.

  • If you bump people's fiber intake up,

  • even to just the recommended minimum daily intake, they start losing weight,

  • because they experience about a 10% drop in daily caloric intake.

  • Why should more fiber mean fewer calories?

  • Well first, it adds bulk without adding calories.

  • Cold-pressed apple juice, for example, is basically just apples minus fiber.

  • And you could chug a bottle of juice in a couple of seconds,

  • but to get the same number of calories,

  • you would have to eat about five cups of apple slices.

  • That's the difference fiber can make, but it's not just a calorie density thing.

  • Imagine what happens next: The apple juice would get rapidly absorbed

  • as soon as it spilled out of your stomach into the gut, spike your blood sugars,

  • whereas the sugar trapped in the mass of chewed apple slices

  • would be absorbed more slowly along the length of your intestines.

  • Nutrients can only be absorbed when they physically come in contact

  • with the side of your intestine, with your gut wall.

  • Fiber never gets absorbed; so, it can act as a carrier to dilute

  • or even eliminate calories out the other end.

  • And fiber doesn't just trap sugars.

  • It acts as a fat- and starch-blocker, too.

  • Those on a Standard American Diet lose about 5% of their calories

  • through their waste every day, but on a higher-fiber diet we double that.

  • It's not what you eat, but what you absorb;

  • so, you can lose weight on a high-fiber diet eating the exact same number

  • of calories simply because some of those calories get trapped,

  • get flushed down the toilet, and never make it into our system.

  • And it's not just the calories in the high-fiber foods themselves

  • that are less available.

  • High-fiber foods trap calories across the board.

  • So, eat a Twinkie on a high-fiber diet and you absorb fewer Twinkie calories.

  • It's like every calorie label you look at gets instantly discounted

  • when you're eating lots of fiber-rich foods,

  • which is why it makes it onto my list.

  • My section on other fat-blocking foods starts out with a command

  • toEat Your Thylakoids”, doctor's orders.

  • What on earth is a thylakoid?

  • Just the source of nearly all known life and...

  • the oxygen we breathe. No biggie.

  • Thylakoids are where photosynthesis takes place,

  • the process by which plants turn light into food.

  • Thylakoids are the great green engine of life, microscopic sac-like

  • structures composed of chlorophyll-rich membranes

  • concentrated in the leaves of plants.

  • When we eat thylakoids, when we bite into a leaf of spinach, or something,

  • those green leaf membranes don't immediately get digested.

  • They last for hours in our intestines and that's when they work their magic.

  • Thylakoid membranes bind to lipase.

  • Lipase is the enzyme that our body uses to digest fat;

  • so, you bind the enzymeyou slow fat absorption.

  • But if all the fat is eventually absorbed, what's the benefit?

  • Location, location, location.

  • There's a phenomenon known as the ileal brake.

  • The ileum is the last part of the small intestine

  • before it dumps into your colon, and when undigested calories

  • are detected that far down in your intestines,

  • your body thinks “I must be full from stem to stern,”

  • and puts the brakes on eating more by dialing down your appetite.

  • This can be shown experimentally.

  • If you insert a nine-foot tube down people's throats and drip in any calories:

  • fat, sugar, protein, and you can activate the ileal brake.

  • Sit them down to an all-you-can-eat meal, and compared to the placebo group

  • who had just gotten a squirt of water down the tube,

  • people eat about a hundred calories less.

  • You just don't feel as hungry.

  • You feel just as full, eating significantly less.

  • That's the ileal brake in action.

  • This can then translate into weight loss.

  • Randomize overweight women on a diet togreen-plant membranes

  • (in other words, just covertly slip them some powdered spinach),

  • and they get a boost in appetite suppressing hormones,

  • a decreased urge for sweets.

  • Yes indeed, spinach can cut your urge for chocolate.

  • And boom, accelerated weight loss.

  • All thanks to eating green,

  • the actual green itself, the chlorophyll- packed membranes in the leaves.

  • Now, the researchers used spinach powder just so they can create

  • convincing placebos, but you can get just as many thylakoids

  • eating about half a cup of cooked greens, which is what I recommend

  • people eat two times a day in my Daily Dozen checklist of all the healthiest

  • of healthy things I encourage people to fit into their daily routine.

  • In the Journal of the Society of Chemical Industry,

  • a group of food technologists argued that given their fat-blocking benefits,

  • thylakoid membranes could be incorporated in the functional foods

  • as a new promising appetite- reducing ingredient”—

  • or you can just get them the way Mother Nature intended.

  • Which greens have the most?

  • You can tell just by looking at them.

  • Because thylakoids are where the chlorophyll is, the greener the leaves,

  • the more potent the effect.

  • So, go for the darkest green greens you can find.

  • Where I shop that's the lacinato (a.k.a. dinosaur) kale.

  • Now, if you overcook greens too long, you know how they turn that drab olive brown,

  • that's the thylakoids physically degrading, but blanched for fifteen seconds or so

  • in steaming or boiling water, you know greens get an even brighter green

  • that actually translates into a boost in the fat-blocking ability.

  • So, you can gauge thylakoid activity in the grocery store,

  • in your kitchen with your own two eyes by going for the green.

  • Though thylakoids eventually get broken down,

  • fiber makes it all the way down to our colon.

  • While it's technically true that we can't digest fiber,

  • that's only applicable to the part of us that's actually human.

  • Most of the cells in our body are bacteria.

  • Our gut flora, which weigh as much as one of our kidneys,

  • are as metabolically active as our liver, has been called ourforgotten organ,”

  • and it's an organ that runs on MAC, Microbiota-Accessible Carbohydrates.

  • So, when you see me writeEat Lots of Big MACs

  • I don't want anyone to get the wrong idea.

  • MAC is just another name for prebiotics - what our good gut flora eats,

  • in other words... fiber.

  • There's that fiber again.

  • What do our good bacteria do with the fiber?

  • We feed them and they feed us right back.

  • They make short-chain fatty acids that get absorbed from the colon

  • into our bloodstream, circulate through our body,

  • and even make it up into our brain.

  • That's like the way our gut flora communicates with us,

  • dialing down our appetite, all the while increasing the rate

  • at which we burn fat and boosting our metabolism at the same time.

  • All thanks to fiber. Check this out.

  • Put people on a brain scanner and show them a high-calorie food

  • like a donut and the reward centers in their brains instantly light up.

  • But, if you repeat the experiment, but this time,

  • secretly deliver fiber-derived short-chain fatty acids

  • directly into their colon, you get a blunted reward center response

  • and subjects report that high-calorie foods just seemed less appetizing,

  • and subsequently ate less of an all-you-can-eat meal.

  • But fiber supplements like Metamucil don't work,

  • which makes sense because they're non fermentable,

  • meaning our gut bacteria can't eat them;

  • so, yeah, they can improve bowel regularity,

  • but can't be used by our good bacteria

  • to make those compounds that can block our cravings.

  • For that, we have to actually eat real food.

  • Our good gut bugs are trying to help us, but when we eat a diet deficient in fiber,

  • we are in effect starving our microbial self.

  • Less than 5% of Americans reach even the recommended minimum daily

  • adequate intake of fiber, no surprise since the number one sources

  • are beans and whole grains, and 96% of Americans don't even reach

  • the recommended minimum intake of legumes

  • (which are beans, split peas, chickpeas, and lentils),

  • and 99% don't reach the recommended minimum for whole grains.

  • Most people don't even know what fiber is.

  • More than half of Americans surveyed think that steak

  • is a significant source of fiber.

  • However, by definition, fiber is only found in plants.

  • There is zero fiber in meat, eggs, or dairy, and typically little

  • or no fiber in processed junk, and therein lies the problem.

  • But wouldn't at least the protein in that steak fill you up?

  • Surprisingly, even a review supported by the meat, dairy, and egg industries

  • acknowledged that protein intake does not actually translate

  • into eating less later on, whereas you

  • eat a fiber-rich whole grain for supper,

  • and it can cut your calorie intake more

  • than 12 hours later at lunch the next day!

  • You feel full a hundred calories quicker the following day

  • because by then, your good gut bugs are feasting

  • on the same bounty and dialing down your appetite.

  • Today, even our meat could be considered junk food.

  • For more than a century, one of the great goals of animal agriculture

  • has been to increase the carcass fat content of farm animals.

  • Take chicken, for example.

  • A hundred years ago, the USDA determined chicken was about

  • 23% protein by weight and less than 2% fat.

  • Today, chickens have been genetically manipulated

  • through selective breeding to have about ten times more fat.

  • Chicken Little has become Chicken Big and may be making us bigger too.

  • Meat consumption in general is associated with weight gain,

  • but poultry appeared to be the worst.

  • Even just an ounce a daywhich is like a single chicken nugget,

  • or like one chicken breast every ten days,

  • was associated with weight gain compared to eating no chicken at all.

  • You know, it's funny, when the meat industry funds obesity studies

  • on chicken, they choose for their head-to-head comparison,

  • foods likecookies and sugar-coated chocolates.”

  • This is a classic drug industry trick to try to make your product

  • look better by comparing it to something worse.

  • Apparently, just regular chocolate wasn't enough to make chicken look better.

  • But what happens when chicken is pitted against a real control,

  • like chicken without the actual chicken?

  • Chicken chickens out.

  • Both soy-based proteins and Quorn, which is a plant-based meat

  • made from the mushroom kingdom, were found to have

  • stronger satiating qualities than chicken.

  • Feed people a chicken and rice lunch, and four-and-a-half hours later,

  • they eat 18% more of a dinner buffet than had they

  • instead been given a chicken- free chicken and rice lunch.

  • These findings are consistent with childhood obesity research

  • that found that meat consumption seemed to double the odds

  • of school children becoming overweight,

  • compared to the consumption of plant-based meat products.

  • Whole-food sources of plant protein such as beans did even better though,

  • associated with cutting in half the odds of becoming overweight.

  • So, that's why I consider these kinds of plant-based meats

  • more of a useful stepping stone towards a healthier diet,

  • rather than the end-game goal/ideal.

  • Part of the reason plant-based meats may be less fattening

  • is they cause less of an insulin spike.

  • A meat-free chicken like Quorn causes up

  • to 41% less of an immediate insulin reaction.

  • It turns out animal protein causes almost exactly

  • as much insulin release as pure sugar.

  • Just adding some egg whites to your diet can increase insulin output

  • as much as a 60% within four days.

  • And fish may be even worse.

  • Why would adding tuna to mashed potatoes spike up insulin levels,

  • but adding broccoli instead cut the insulin response by about 40%?

  • It's not the fiber, since giving the same amount of broccoli fiber

  • alone provided no significant benefit.

  • So, why does animal protein make things worse

  • but plant protein makes things better?

  • Plant proteins tend to be lower in the branched-chain amino acids

  • which are associated with insulin resistance, the cause of type 2 diabetes.

  • You can show this experimentally.

  • Give some vegans branched-chain amino acids,

  • and you can make them as insulin resistant as omnivores.

  • Or, take some omnivores and put them even through a “48-hour vegan diet

  • challenge,” and, within two days, you can see the opposite

  • there's a significant improvement in metabolic health.

  • Why?

  • Because decreased consumption of branched-chain amino acids

  • improves metabolic health. Check this out.

  • Those randomized to restrict their protein intake were averaging literally

  • hundreds more calories a day; so, they should have become fatter right?

  • But no, they actually lost more body fat.

  • Restricting their protein enabled them to eat more calories,

  • while at the same time they lost more weight.

  • More calories, yet a loss in body fat.

  • And this magicprotein restriction”?

  • They were just having people eat the recommended amounts of protein.

  • So, maybe they should have just called this group the normal protein group,

  • or the recommended protein group, and the group that was eating more typical

  • American protein levels and suffering because of it,

  • the excess protein group.

  • Given the metabolic harms of excess branched-chain amino acid exposure,

  • leaders in the field have suggested the invention of drugs

  • to block their absorption, topromote metabolic health and treat diabetes

  • and obesity without reducing caloric intake.”

  • Or, we can just try not to eat so many

  • branched-chain amino acids in the first place.

  • They are found mostly in meat, including chicken and fish, dairy products,

  • and eggs, perhaps explaining why animal protein is associated

  • with higher diabetes risk, whereas plant protein appears protective.

  • So, defining the appropriate upper limits of animal protein intake may offer

  • a great chance for the prevention of type 2 diabetes and obesity,

  • but it need not be all or nothing.

  • Even an intermittent vegan diet has been shown to be beneficial.

  • If there was one piece of advice that sums up

  • the recommendations in my upcoming book it would be:

  • Wall Off Your Calories.”

  • Animal cells are encased only in easily digestible membranes,

  • which allows the enzymes in our gut to effortlessly

  • liberate the calories in a steak, for example.

  • Plant cells, on the other hand, have cell walls that are made out of fiber,

  • which present an indigestible physical barrier;

  • so, many of the calories remain trapped.

  • Now, processed plant foods, however, fruit juice, sugar, refined grains,

  • even whole grains if they have been powdered into flour,

  • have had their cellular structure destroyed, their cell walls cracked open

  • and their calories are free for the taking.

  • But when you eat structurally intact plant foods, chew all you want

  • you're still going to end up with calories completely surrounded by fiber,

  • which then blunts the glycemic impact, activates the ileal brake,

  • and delivers sustenance to your friendly flora.

  • So, bottom line, try to make sure as many of your calories as possible

  • your protein, your carbs, your fatare encased in cell walls,

  • in other words from whole, intact plant foods.

  • That's what nature intended to happen.

  • Millions of years before we learned

  • how to sharpen spears and mill grains and boil sugar cane,

  • our entire physiology is presumed to have evolved in the context

  • of eating what the rest of our great ape cousins eat: plants.

  • The Paleolithic period, when we started using tools,

  • only goes back about two million years.

  • We and the great apes have been evolving since back in the

  • Miocene era, more like twenty million years ago.

  • So, for the first 90% of our hominoid existence,

  • our bodies evolved on mostly plants.

  • It's no wonder then that our bodies may thrive best

  • on the diet we were designed to eat.

  • So, maybe we should go back to our roots.

  • [clears throat]

  • With enough portion control, anyone can lose weight.

  • Lock someone in a closet, and you can force them to lose

  • as much body fat as you want.

  • Chaining someone to a treadmill could probably have a similar effect.

  • But what is the most effective weight-loss regimen

  • that doesn't involve calorie restriction or exerciseor a felony?

  • I scoured through the medical literature and all

  • the randomized controlled trials, and the single most successful

  • strategy to date is a diet of whole plant foods.

  • The single most effective weight loss intervention like that ever published

  • in the peer-reviewed medical literature, a whole food, plant-based diet.

  • That works better than anything else studied to date.

  • And, no wonder given what we just learned about

  • fiber and branched-chain amino acids.

  • We've known for more than forty years that those eating predominantly

  • plant-based diets weigh, on average, about thirty pounds less

  • than the general population, but you don't know if it's the diet itself...

  • until you put it to the test.

  • In 2017, a group of New Zealand researchers published the BROAD study,

  • a twelve-week randomized controlled trial in the poorest

  • region of the country with the highest obesity rates.

  • Overweight individuals were randomized to receive either standard medical care

  • or semi-weekly classes offering advice and encouragement to eat a low-fat diet

  • centered around fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes.

  • And that's all it was, just empowerment, and information,

  • empowerment with knowledge.

  • No meals were provided, the intervention group was merely informed

  • about the benefits of plant- based living and encouraged

  • to fit it into their own lives at home.

  • No significant change in the control group, but the plant-based intervention group,

  • even though there were no restrictions on portions and being able to eat freely

  • all the healthy foods they wanted, lost an average of nineteen pounds

  • by the end of the three-month study.

  • Nineteen pounds is a respectable weight loss, but what happened next?

  • At the end of those twelve weeks, class was dismissed,

  • and no more instruction was given.

  • The researchers were curious to see

  • how much weight the subjects had gained back

  • after being released from the study. So, everyone was invited back

  • at the six-month mark to get re-weighed.

  • The plant-based group had left the three-month study

  • nineteen pounds lighter on average.

  • But, six months later they were only down about

  • twenty-seven pounds!

  • They got better.

  • The plant-based group had been feeling so good both physically and mentally

  • and had been able to come off so many of their medications,

  • that they were sticking to the diet on their own

  • and the weight continued to come off.

  • What about a year later?

  • Even in studies that last a whole year,

  • where people are coached to stay on a particular diet for the entire years' time,

  • by the end of the year, any initial weight lost typically tends to creep on back.

  • The BROAD study only lasted three months, yet after it was all over,

  • those who had been randomized to the plant-based group

  • not only lost dozens of pounds, but they kept it off.

  • They not only achieved greater weight loss at six and twelve months

  • than any other comparable trial

  • that was months after the study had already ended!

  • A whole food, plant-based diet achieved

  • the greatest weight loss ever recorded

  • compared to any other such intervention published in the scientific literature.

  • You can read the record-breaking study yourself for free, in full, at

  • nature.com/articles/nutd20173 or you can just

  • point your phone camera up at the screen and pick off the QR code.

  • Any diet that results in reduced calorie intake can result in weight loss.

  • Dropping pounds isn't so much the issue.

  • The problem is keeping them off.

  • A key difference between plant-based nutrition

  • and more traditional approaches to weight loss is that people are encouraged,

  • on plant-based diets, to eat ad libitum, meaning eat as much as they want.

  • No calorie counting, no portion controljust eating.

  • The strategy is to improve the quality of the food rather

  • than restricting the quantity of the food.

  • If you put people on a diet packed with fruits, vegetables, whole grains,

  • and beans and allow them to eat as much as they want,

  • they end up eating about 50% fewer calories than they might have otherwise.

  • Just as full on half the calories.

  • How can you keep people satisfied

  • cutting more than a thousand calories from their daily diet?

  • By eating more high-bulk, low-calorie-density foods

  • (vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and beans)

  • and fewer calorie-dense foods, like meats, cheeses, sugars, and fats.

  • But it may not just be the calories-in side of the equation;

  • those eating more plant-based appear to effectively

  • be burning more calories in their sleep.

  • The resting metabolic rate of those eating more plant-based

  • may be 10% higher, or more; a boosted metabolism that can translate

  • into burning off hundreds of extra calories a day more without doing a thing.

  • Eating more plant-based you burn more calories just existing.

  • So, no wonder why those who eat more plant-based tend to be slimmer.

  • Start packing your diet with real foods that grow out of the ground,

  • and the pounds should come off naturally,

  • taking you down towards your ideal weight.

  • OK, so that's what I spent the first half of the book doing,

  • laying out the optimum weight-loss diet, “Plant Yourself.”

  • Then I spend the second half of the book on all the tools I unearthed

  • to drive further weight loss for any stubborn pounds that remain.

  • We already learned that a calorie is not necessarily a calorie.

  • A hundred calories of chickpeas have a different impact

  • than a hundred calories of chicken or Chiclets,

  • based on factors like absorption and appetite,

  • but in the second half I go a step further and explore

  • how even the exact same foods eaten differently can have different effects.

  • Even if you eat the same amount, even if you absorb the same amount,

  • a calorie may still not be a calorie.

  • It's not only what we eat, but how and when.

  • Just to give you a taste, the exact same number of calories at breakfast

  • are significantly less fattening than the same number of calories at dinner.

  • What?! That's just mind-blowing.

  • Same calories, different weight loss.

  • A diet with a bigger breakfast causes more weight loss

  • than the same diet with a bigger dinner.

  • So, my recommendation to stop eating after 7 PM is not just because,

  • you know, I'm afraid people are mindlessly snacking on the couch or something.

  • The same snack at night is literally more fattening

  • than eating the exact same snack during the daytime,

  • all thanks to our circadian rhythms, ourChronobiology.”

  • Something I spend a whole chapter on.

  • Some of the sleep data is really crazy too.

  • Overweight adults were randomized to eight weeks

  • of either a calorie-restricted diet or the same diet combined

  • with five days a week of just one less hour of sleep a night.

  • Now, they ended up sleeping an hour later on the weekends.

  • So, overall, they just cut three hours of sleep out of their week.

  • Now, surely 3 hours a week of sleep difference is not going

  • to change how much weight they lost, right?

  • And on the scale that was true.

  • But in the normal sleep group,

  • 80% of the weight loss was fat,

  • whereas in the group missing just a few hours of sleep,

  • it was the opposite, with 80% of the loss being lean body mass.

  • So, you snooze you losefat!

  • A few hours of missed sleep seemed to totally flip fat loss on its head,

  • but just looking at the scale you wouldn't know it.

  • It's like when people fast.

  • Stopping eating completely

  • for a week or two can cause more weight loss

  • than just restricting your calories, but paradoxically,

  • it may actually lead to less loss of body fat.

  • Wait, how can eating fewer calories lead to less fat loss?

  • Because during fasting your body starts cannibalizing itself

  • and burning your own protein for fuel.

  • The scale made it look as though they were doing better

  • when they were fasting, but the reality is they were doing worse.

  • They would have lost more body fat if they had kept eating;

  • they would have lost more body fat, eating more calories.

  • Short-term fasting can interfere with body fat loss, not accelerate it,

  • and you see the same thing, with the keto diet.

  • Body fat loss actually slows down when you switch to a ketogenic diet.

  • Just looking at the bathroom scale, though, the keto diet seems like

  • a smashing success, losing less than a pound a week on a regular diet

  • to boomthree-and-a-half pounds in seven days after switching to keto,

  • but what was happening inside their bodies told a totally different story.

  • On the ketogenic diet, their rate of body fat loss was slowed by more than half;

  • so, most of what they were losing was water,

  • but they were also losing protein, they were also losing lean mass.

  • That may help explain why the leg muscles of CrossFit trainees

  • placed on a ketogenic diet can shrink as much as 8% within two months.

  • Of course, even if keto diets worked, the point of weight loss

  • is not to fit into a skinnier casket.

  • People whose diets even tend to trend that way

  • appear to significantly shorten their lives.

  • On the other hand, even just drifting in the direction of eating more

  • healthy plant foods is associated with living longer.

  • Those going the other way, though, those who start out more plant-based

  • but then add meat to their diet at least once a week

  • not only appear to double or triple their odds of diabetes,

  • stroke, heart disease, and weight gain,

  • but may also suffer an associated 3.6-year drop in life expectancy.

  • That's going from no meat to just once-a-week meat or more.

  • Low-carb diets have been shown to impair

  • artery function and worsen heart disease.

  • Whereas, whole food, plant- based diets have been shown

  • to actually reverse heart diseasethat's what Ornish used.

  • So, what appears to be the most effective weight-loss diet

  • just so happens to be the only diet ever proven

  • to reverse heart disease in the majority of patients.

  • If my grandma didn't have to die like that,

  • no one's grandma has to die like that.

  • If that's all a plant-based diet could doreverse the number-one killer

  • of men and women, shouldn't that be the

  • default diet until proven otherwise?

  • And the fact that it can also be so effective in treating, arresting,

  • or reversing other leading killers, like type 2 diabetes

  • and high blood pressure, would seem to make the case

  • for plant-based eating simply overwhelming.

  • Only one diet has ever been shown to do all that:

  • a diet centered around whole plant foods.

  • You don't have to mortgage your health to lose weight.

  • The single healthiest diet also appears to be

  • the most effective diet for weight loss.

  • After all, permanent weight loss requires permanent dietary changes

  • healthier habits just have to become a way of life.

  • And if it's going to be life-long, you want it to lead to a long life.

  • Thankfully, the single best diet proven for weight loss

  • may just so happen to be the safest, cheapest way to eat,

  • for the longest, healthiest life.

  • Thank you.

  • [Applause]

Why don't we give a big, warm welcome to Dr. Michael Greger!

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Evidence-Based Weight Loss: Live Presentation

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    9jc7xz9nmp 發佈於 2022 年 05 月 15 日
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