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Category Archives: Diet And Food

The Best Way to Prevent Diabetes: An Affordable Plant-Based Diet – The Beet

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

November is National Diabetes Month.In the U.S., its estimated that some 30 million adults ages 18 and older are living with diabetes and 84 million with pre-diabetes. While these dire statistics arent going to change overnight, the power to change our health is in our hands, a new study says. One of the simplest things we can do to change our risk? Go plant-based.

Back in August, we reported on a study out of the University of Bergen in Norway, that found that plant-based diets help you metabolize glucose, lose weight (particularly for people who are overweight), and prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes. Now, were back with more encouraging news for implementing a plant-based diet as an affordable, effective way to ward off type 2 diabetes.

In a recent review published in Practical Diabetology titled The Affordability of a Plant-Based Eating Pattern for Diabetes, the papers author, nutritionist Meghan Jardine, MS, MBA, RDN, LD, CDCES, Associate Director of Diabetes Nutrition Education, Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, recommends that anyone at high-risk go plant-based and that doctors and nutritionists should make it clear that there are affordable options when ditching meat and dairy.

Plant-based eating has become more popular as a healthy eating pattern for the prevention and treatment of diabetes, Jardine writes. Both observational and interventional studies have reported that plant-based diets reduce diabetes risk as well as improve diabetes outcomes, she later states, referencing this 2016 comprehensive review on the use of a plant-based diet for management of type 2 diabetes.

Worth mentioning: When it comes to eating a plant-based for diabetes management or prevention, its important to consider carbohydrates. Its heavily processed, refined carbohydrateslike white bread and chipsyou want to avoid. As Jardine points out, A healthy, affordable, plant-based diet is high in [carbohydrates]. Patients with diabetes are often told to avoid foods high in carbohydrate, as these foods have the greatest effect on postprandial glucose levels. She also notes that studies, such as this 2017 study from the Journal of Geriatric Cardiology, show that a high intake of carbohydrates, such as whole grains and cereal fibers, are associated with a reduction in diabetes risk, whereas refined carbohydrates increase risk. (For more on healthy carb options, check out our guide to whole grains here.)

While vegan eating may have the rap as a costly lifestyle, as Jardine argues and research supports, eating a healthy, plant-based diet can actually be quite wallet-friendly, and even save you money compared to other dietary regimes with animal products. Some healthy, affordable plant-based options the piece suggests include apples, bananas, oranges, broccoli, spinach, carrots, whole wheat bread, rolled or steel-cut oats, quinoa, black beans, pinto beans, and peanut butter, to name a few.

Buying foods when theyre in season and purchasing items like fruits, vegetables, legumes, and grains in bulk can also go a long way in reducing spending. Ditto for shopping the frozen aisle for fruits and vegetablesjust make sure there is no added salt, sugar, or other icky ingredientsand loading up on vegan pantry items when they are on sale. (If youre looking for more ways to save, check out 7 Ways to Save Money on Your Vegan Grocery List, According to Nutritionists.)

Bottom line: Eating a high-quality, plant-based eating pattern can be affordable and palatable and may offer specific benefits in preventing and treating diabetes, including quality of life and psychological health, offers Jardine. Frequent consumption of animal products has been associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, certain types of cancer and overall mortality. A diet thats good for our health and good for our wallets? Well take it. Spread the word, and spread the overnight oats recipes, dear readers.

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Grain extrusion may be cost effective in swine diets – FeedStrategy.com

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

Extrusion improves the availability of energy and amino acid in swine diets, potentially reducing the diets cost enough to make up for the added processing, according to new research from the University of Illinois.

Previous research, according to University of Illinois animal science professor Hans Stein, had indicated that extrusion would increase the digestibility of starch, which would in turn increase the availability of energy in the diet and therefore decrease the overall amount of grain needed to feed the animal. The resulting research determined this relationship held true for corn and sorghum, but did not observe the same increase in red winter wheat.

The research team tested all three ingredients, extruding half of the corn, sorghum and wheat collected for the study. They then formulated diets with either extruded or non-extruded grains and analyzed the difference in digestibility.

By gelatinizing the starch contained within the grains, the experiment increased the energy available from corn and sorghum. Extrusion also appeared to increase the digestibility of amino acids, particularly in corn.

The overall increase in digestibility would reduce the need for key inputs in swine diets, and the increased availability of amino acids from corn would further reduce the need for soybean meal, according to Stein.

While Stein said the team did not calculate the potential difference in cost, he thought the benefits observed in the study would easily pay for the extrusion here.

The caveat, he said, is that extruded diets for swine are difficult to come by.

It would be better, he said, but Im not sure you can find it, because we have very little extrusion capacity.

Unless the U.S. animal feed industry undergoes a shift and extrusion becomes more widely available in livestock feed, Stein said the limited availability and specialty nature of extrusion would remain a hurdle for producers looking to try extruded grains in diets of their own.

Its probably not something that will be economical for a small producer who is producing his own feed, Stein said.

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Proinflammatory Dietary Pattern Linked to Higher CV Risk – Medscape

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

Dietary patterns with higher inflammatory potential were significantly associated with a higher incidence of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and stroke in a new pooled analysis of three prospective cohort studies.

The analysis included 210,145 US women and men followed for up to 32 years in the Nurses' Health Studies I and II and the Health Professionals Follow-up Study.

After adjustment for use of anti-inflammatory medications and CVD risk factors, those whose dietary pattern ranked in the highest quintile of inflammatory potential had a 38% higher risk of CVD (hazard ratio comparing highest to lowest quintiles, 1.38), a 46% higher risk of coronary heart disease (HR, 1.46), and a 28% higher risk of stroke (HR, 1.28), all P for trend < .001.

Jun Li, MD, PhD, and colleagues at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts, published the findings of their study in the November 10 issue of theJournal of the American College of Cardiology.

The inflammatory potential of a diet was assessed using a food-based, dietary index called the "empirical dietary inflammatory pattern" or EDIP.

In an interview, Li explained that the EDIP was developed 4 years ago by many of the same authors involved with this study, including nutrition heavyweights Walter C. Willett, MD, DrPH, and Frank B. Hu, MD, PhD, both from Harvard.

"We summarized all the foods people eat into 39 defined food groups and did a reduced-rank regression analysis that looked at these 39 food groups and three inflammatory markers interleukin-6 (IL-6), C-reactive protein (CRP), and tumor necrosis factor alpha receptor 2. We found 18 food groups that are most predictive of these biomarkers, and the EDIP was calculated as the weighted sum of these 18 food groups."

Individuals who had higher intakes of green leafy vegetables (kale, spinach, arugula), dark yellow vegetables (pumpkin, yellow peppers, carrots), whole grains, fruits, tea, coffee and wine had lower long-term CVD risk than those with higher intakes of red meat, processed meat, organ meat, refined carbohydrates, and sweetened beverages.

The associations were consistent across cohorts and between sexes and remained significant in multiple sensitivity analysis that adjusted for alcohol consumption, smoking pack-years, use of lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medications, sodium intake, and blood pressure.

In a secondary analysis, diets with higher inflammatory potential were also associated with significantly higher biomarker levels indicative of more systemic, vascular, and metabolic inflammation, as well as less favorable lipid profiles.

"We wanted to be able to provide guidance on dietary patterns and food combinations," said Li. "If you tell people to eat more polyunsaturated fats instead of saturated fat or trans fat, most people don't know what foods are higher and lower in those nutrients. Also, many foods have different nutrients some of which are good and some of which are bad so we wanted to help people find the foods with the higher proportion of healthy nutrients rather than point out specific nutrients to avoid."

Researchers used prospectively gathered data from the Nurses' Health Studies I and II starting from 1984 and from the Health Professionals Follow-up Study. After excluding participants with missing diet information or previously diagnosed heart disease, stroke or cancer, over 210,000 participants were included in the analysis. Participants completed a survey every 4 years to ascertain dietary intake.

In an editorial comment, Ramon Estruch, MD, PhD, from the Hospital Clinic in Barcelona, Spain, and colleagues suggested that it might be time for better dietary guidelines.

"A better knowledge of health protection provided by different foods and dietary patterns, mainly their anti-inflammatory properties, should provide the basis for designing even healthier dietary patterns to protect against heart disease," the editorialists write.

They added extra-virgin olive oil, fatty fish, and tomatoes to the list of foods with "established anti-inflammatory activity."

In comments to theheart.org | Medscape Cardiology, Estruch said the findings of this new study are confirmatory of the PREDIMED trial, which showed a reduction in risk of major CV events in individuals at high cardiovascular risk assigned to an anti-inflammatory Mediterranean diet pattern supplemented with extra-virgin olive oil or nuts as compared with those assigned to a reduced-fat diet.

"The study of Jun Li et al confirms that an anti-inflammatory diet is useful to prevent cardiovascular events and, more important, that healthy dietary patterns may be even healthier if subjects increase consumption of foods with the highest anti-inflammatory potential," he said, adding that "mechanistic explanations add plausibility to the results of observational studies."

Estruch was the principal investigator of PREDIMED. This trial was originally published in 2013 and then retracted and republished in 2018, with some required corrections, but the results had not materially changed.

Li is supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and Boston Nutrition Obesity Research Center. Estruch has disclosed no financial relationships relevant to the contents of this article.

J Am Coll Cardiol. Published online November 3, 2020. Full text, Editorial

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How to dine with dietary restrictions, allergies at Butler – The Butler Collegian

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

STASIA RAEBEL | STAFF REPORTER | smraebel@butler.edu

Dining with dietary restrictions and allergies can be a challenge for some Butler students. In order to ensure they will get food that is safe for their needs, these students often need to be especially careful when choosing their meals.

There are eight major allergens defined under the Food Allergen Labeling and Consumer Protection Act of 2004: eggs, fish, crustacean shellfish, tree nuts, peanuts, wheat, milk and soy. Many Butler students deal with these allergies, along with other dietary restrictions, such as vegetarianism, veganism and gluten intolerance. These restrictions affect their daily experiences in the dining halls, and the dining staff are prepared to help students navigate the menu if they have any concerns.

Kayla Hayes, a junior critical communications and media studies major, is allergic to peanuts, tree nuts, eggs and seafood. Her allergies are very severe, and she carries an Epipen in case she has a reaction.

Growing up with allergies, you kind of know what you can and cant have, Hayes said.

About three times a week, Hayes will see foods in the dining halls that she knows she cannot have, so she will steer clear of it. There are also menus listed on televisions throughout the dining halls. However, Hayes explained that there was a time this year where she did not read the menu and had an allergic reaction. She got what she assumed was chicken and peppers, but it was actually a chicken-peanut stir fry.

I was fine, I took Benadryl and everything, but that definitely made me more cautious, Hayes said.

The menu does not include a label indicating peanuts or tree nuts, so Hayes explained that after the meal did not sit right with her, she found the ingredients by looking in the dining section on the Butler App. There, she was able to see the name of the menu item and the nutritional value.

I kind of put two and two together, and I saw that it had peanuts in there instead of peppers, Hayes said.

She explained that she probably would not have realized that there were peanuts without looking on the app. To help prevent this in the future, Hayes said she will try to be more aware. She also suggests that a label should be put on the food in the dining hall, so people with allergies can clearly see when there is an allergen.

Butler Universitys dietician Katy Maher highly advocates for a one-on-one approach between students with either food allergies or dietary restrictions and the dining staff. In this approach, students will speak directly with staff members when ordering their food to ask about the food items contents. This ensures students will find food items they can have.

We believe a one-on-one approach is safer than attempting to label dishes with all possible allergens, Maher said. Things can get substituted at the last minute after menus are printed or posted online.

Maher said she along with Bon Apptit Management Company staff take food allergies very seriously. While the eight major allergens can be found in all dining cafs on Butler, Maher explained that they will try to clearly indicate them in the dishes in which they appear. For example, they will label mashed potatoes with butter or milk as creamy mashed potatoes on the menu, so a student with these allergies would be able to avoid it.

To provide the best experience for students, Maher suggests students identify themselves to her or another staff member to help them navigate the menu.

Since everything is cooked from scratch onsite, we can easily tell you what ingredients are in a specific dish and make modifications if necessary, or prepare and set aside food ahead if necessary, Maher said.

Students can also request specially-plated meal options to meet their needs by filling out a form, usually the day before. Additionally, in the Marketplace Cafe at Atherton, students can go to Latitude station to receive a meal prepared without any of the major 8 allergens or gluten.

If students prefer to go to the regular stations in the dining halls, they will still be able to find something they can eat.

Before each meal period, Maher said they will pull aside the people who work at the front of the house, by the food, to tell them what is included in the meals. All questions about allergies are directed to a chef or a manager to ensure students will get through the lines in a timely manner.

Dining employees have orientation and on-the-job training to get Food Allergy and Research Education, known as FARE. Maher said staff members switch out their gloves, knives and boards between each task. They also use different utensils when serving separate items to prevent cross-contamination.

If students are ever uncertain, Maher encourages them to ask questions. She said they can always make something for them, and they are always happy to answer any of the students concerns.

Tom Pieciak, a senior jazz studies major, is allergic to milk protein, which means he cannot eat milk, dairy and beef. He said he feels Bon Apptit has done a better job than the previous food provider in terms of helping students with allergies.

A new food provider was definitely a great first step [in helping students with food allergies] because they are definitely a lot more transparent with the ingredients and the allergies, Pieciak said.

Because he is allergic to something that is commonly found in many foods, Pieciak explained that there were days where the options were pretty slim for him.

When choosing a meal, Pieciak usually relied on what he knew, as there were options that hed confirmed were dairy-free. If he was uncertain, Pieciak said he would usually ask the workers, but sometimes he would not feel like taking a risk and just avoid certain foods altogether.

I think one thing that would help would be to get more alternatives to whatever that allergy or dietary preference is, Pieciak said.

There are many dairy-free options at Butler, and there are plant-based cheeses, milks and meats that are popular for vegans and vegetarians. Pieciak believes these options should be expanded in the dining halls, and they should be as available and accessible as the regular food being served.

Olivia Throop, a first-year dance arts administration major, is a vegetarian, and agrees that she would like to see more options available.

While Throop explained she is able to find enough food options that are free of meat, she sometimes worries she is not getting enough of the right kind of food, because she said there are typically just one, sometimes two, main vegetarian options.

There are many times where there wont be a protein for me, or it wont be appealing to me, Throop said. It isnt hard for me to get all the food I need, but it is hard to get all the nutrients I need.

Throop said it can also be challenging to distinguish the vegetarian options from the options with meat. Throop said that asking workers usually helps clarify this, especially if the workers asked their supervisors, however she would appreciate more clear labels.

I really do think that by providing a clear explanation of what food dishes are and what they contain will help the students at the university feel more safe with the food options they are eating, Throop said.

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Gayle King went on a 5-day fast diet to fit into her yellow election night dress: ‘The results are in!’ – Yahoo Lifestyle

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

Refinery29

NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE OCTOBER 22: U.S. President Donald Trump (L) and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden participate in the final presidential debate at Belmont University on October 22, 2020 in Nashville, Tennessee. This is the last debate between the two candidates before the election on November 3. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)Update: As of Election Night, many states have been called, but several critical ones are still in flux. According to FiveThirtyEight, we can expect near-complete results from Wisconsin and Michigan tomorrow. Pennsylvania, however, likely wont have a final outcome until Friday, November 6, reported The New York Times.This story was originally published on November 3, 2020 at 12:08 p.m.After saying goodbye to a couple dozen Democratic candidates (at least, it felt like that many), enduring countless Donald Trump Twitter meltdowns, and somehow surviving two Trump-Biden debates later, weve finally made it to Election Day. As this year has seen nationwide anti-racism protests, the COVID-19 pandemic, and rising poverty and unemployment rates in America, very few elections if any have felt as important as this one. In response, Americans are voting like never before. As of Sunday, a majority of states reported record early voting numbers; Texas has already officially surpassed its total turnout from 2016. But since many states are also seeing record numbers of mail-in ballots, it could take awhile for the final results to roll in. So, its no wonder that everyone is asking: When, exactly, will we know the election results?Though it is possible that we will have the results on Tuesday night, experts are warning Americans to prepare for an Election Week (or possibly even an Election Month) instead of an Election Day. But this actually isnt uncommon: In the last presidential election, for instance, it took officials in Michigan over two weeks to call Trumps victory over Hillary Clinton. And technically, even when results are called the night of Election Day, those are just projections.From a legal perspective, there are no results on Election Night, and there never have been, election law professor Edward B. Foley told The Atlantic. The only thing that has ever existed on Election Night are projected results that the media has helpfully provided to its audiences.Historically, absentee ballots have also slowed down election results. In 2012, Barack Obama was already reelected before election officials announced that he had officially beat out Mitt Romney in Florida by just 74,000 votes. Not coincidentally, several key counties in the state reported unusually high numbers of absentee ballots that year: About 28% of Floridas voters sent in their ballots by mail.However, there is some reason to think that states like Florida might be called sooner this year. The majority of the U.S. allows officials to begin sorting and counting mail-in ballots prior to Election Day, which should speed up the process, as people have been mailing in their ballots for many weeks now. That said, there are four states that will only begin processing mail-in ballots today, and some counties in one of these states Pennsylvania, a critical battleground state wont even begin counting ballots until tomorrow. Officials in Pennsylvania and Michigan also a key swing state have both warned that results could take days to report, according to the New York Times.Delayed mail-in ballots could also affect when we get results. Washington, D.C. and 22 states which, in total, comprise 59% of the Electoral College will count all mail-in ballots postmarked before or on November 3, even those that dont arrive until after Election Day. Despite the Republican Partys incessant efforts to squash it, Pennsylvanias election board implemented a three-day extension, promising to count all mail-in ballots that arrive on or before November 6. However, if the race is tight and Pennsylvanias results have a narrow enough margin, the Supreme Court might revisit or challenge the extension; in preparation, the election board agreed to separate the mail-in votes they receive after the polls close on November 3.Trumps threat to fight against the outcome if Biden wins in Pennsylvania could also complicate matters. The president logged onto Twitter to express his frustration with both the states extension and the possible delay. The Election should end on November 3rd., not weeks later! he tweeted over the weekend. Before that, he wrote, A 3 day extension for Pennsylvania is a disaster for our Nation, and for Pennsylvania itself. The Democrats are trying to steal this Election.Trump is likely afraid of what Foley dubbed the blue shift essentially, an explanation as to why Democratic votes are often counted later. Foley noted a pattern thats taken hold since 2004: Almost every election, officials have counted large swaths of Democratic votes after Election Day. He connected this trend to the Help America Vote Act, which was signed into law in 2002 and allows voters to cast provisional ballots if they believe they are eligible but dont appear on the register. By nature, provisional ballots are not counted until they are verified by officials days after the election.Voters who cast them also predominantly belong to demographics that typically vote Democrat. It is not unreasonable to expect Trumps Democratic opponent in 2020 to gain on Trump by over 20,000 votes in Pennsylvania during the period between Election Night and the final, official certification of the canvass, Foley predicted in 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic complicated matters even further.Now, its likely that mail-in votes, not just provisional ones, will cause this shift. According to an NBCLX/YouGov poll, 65% of Democrats voted by mail this year, compared to 49% of Independents and just 35% of Republicans. This makes sense, since, you know, Trump has tried to convince his voters that mail-in voting increases the risk of fraud and that mailmen are selling the ballots and dumping them in rivers. Checks out, right? (All of these claims have been disproven.)But even with provisional ballots and mail-in votes and Republican attempts to suppress the latter slowing down the process, theres still a lot well know by the end of the day. For example, North Carolinas Board of Elections predicts that 80% of votes will be released as early as 7:30 p.m. Governor Tony Evers also said that Wisconsins results will be in by Election Night or, at the latest, the next morning. And although states like Pennsylvania and Arizona might not have results until next week, theres a good reason: Officials are just ensuring every vote is counted and every voice is heard, even if it takes a little longer than usual.Like what you see? How about some more R29 goodness, right here?On Election Day, Trump Throws Insults At KamalaWhat Trump & Biden Tweeted Before The ElectionWhy Businesses Are Boarding Up Before The Election

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OTC Diet Products Market Reviewed in a New Study The Think Curiouser – The Think Curiouser

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

Industry Insights:

The Global OTC Diet Products market is anticipated to reach XX USD billion with CAGR of xx% over the forecast period 2020 2026.

The updated research report on The Global OTC Diet Products market which offers insights on key aspects and an overview of the fundamental verticals of the market. The OTC Diet Products report aims to educate buyers on the crucial impactful factors like drivers, challenges and opportunities for the market players, and risks. It comprises a thorough analysis of current OTC Diet Products market trends as well as future trends. It also throws light on various quantitative and qualitative assessments of the market. The OTC Diet Products research report covers every crucial aspect of the industry that impacts the existing market share, market size, profitability status, and more. A comprehensive evaluation on impacting factors the influence growth opportunities for OTC Diet Products market players and remuneration.

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The following manufacturers are covered in this report:

GSK

Amway

Hydroxycut

21st Century HealthCare, Inc.

Herbalife International

Bluebonnet Nutrition

ESTEEM MD

Absolute Nutrition

Revolution

BSN

MuscleTech

Applied Nutriceuticals

Genesis Today

OTC Diet Products

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Breakdown Data by Type

Over-the-Counter Weight Loss Pill

Over-the-Counter Diet Supplements

OTC Diet Products Breakdown Data by Application

Drugstore

Online Sales

Weight Loss Agency

Other

Regional and Country-level Analysis

The OTC Diet Products market is analysed and market size information is provided by regions (countries).

The key regions covered in the OTC Diet Products market report are North America, Europe, China and Japan. It also covers key regions (countries), viz, the U.S., Canada, Germany, France, U.K., Italy, Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, Taiwan, Indonesia, Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, Vietnam, Mexico, Brazil, Turkey, Saudi Arabia, U.A.E, etc.

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In addition, the report focuses on the key technological improvements in the products and key growth strategies adopted by OTC Diet Products market players to expand their business vertically and horizontally. Company information, recent strategies, highly demanding products by manufacturers, and manufacturing units including other essential details are mentioned in the OTC Diet Products study. Research and development activities and new product development and other trending factors are highlighted in the OTC Diet Products report to offer deeper insights to the buyers. The OTC Diet Products report is also beneficial to investors for their investment planning and company information.

Study Objective of the OTC Diet Products market includes:

The key objective of the study is to evaluate global OTC Diet Products market size (volume and value) by market players, major regions, product, application, and end-user, historical data, and predictions for 2026.

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Table and Figures Covered in This Report:

OTC Diet Products Market Overview, Scope, Status, and Prospect

Global OTC Diet Products Market Competition by Manufacturers

Global OTC Diet Products Capacity, Production, Revenue (Value) by Region

Global OTC Diet Products Supply (Production), Consumption, Export, Import by Region

Global OTC Diet Products Production, Revenue (Value), Price Trend by Type

Global OTC Diet Products Market Analysis by Application

Global OTC Diet Products Manufacturers Profiles/Analysis

OTC Diet Products Manufacturing Cost Analysis

Industrial Chain, Sourcing Strategy and Downstream Buyers

Marketing Strategy Analysis, Distributors/Traders

Market Effect Factors Analysis

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Latest Update 2020: Dietary Supplements Market by COVID19 Impact Analysis And Top Manufacturers: Amway, Abbott Nutrition, Bayer Healthcare, BASF,…

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:58 am

Dietary Supplements market report examines the short-and medium-term economic and profitability outlook for Dietary Supplements industry. The Dietary Supplements market accounted for $XX million in 2018, and is expected to reach $XX million by 2024, registering a CAGR of XX% from 2019 to 2026.

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Major Classifications of Dietary Supplements Market:

Major Key players covered in this report:1. Amway 2. Abbott Nutrition3. Bayer Healthcare4. BASF5. GlaxoSmithKline6. Pfizer 7. Archer Daniels Midland 8. HerbalLife9. Bionova10. Kemin Health11. Nu Skin Enterprices Inc. 12. Capsugel 13. Himalaya Global Holdings Inc. 14. Nutranext Clorox 15. DSM 16. Neptune Wellness Solutions 17. Glanbia 18. Carlyle Group NBTY 19. Dupont20. Neutraceutics Corporation.

By Product Type:By Ingredient:BotanicalsVitaminsMineralsAmino acidsEnzymesBy Product:TabletsCapsulesPowder LiquidsSoft GelsGel Caps

By Applications:End-use: 1. Infants Dietary Supplements2. Children Dietary Supplements 3. Pregnant Women4. Adults Dietary Supplements5. Old-aged Application:1. Additional dietary supplements2. Medicinal dietary supplements 3. Sports nutrition

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The global Dietary Supplements market is segmented based on product, end user, and region.

Region wise, it is analyzed across North America (U.S., Canada, and Mexico), Europe (Germany, UK, Italy, Spain, France, and rest of Europe), Asia-Pacific (Japan, China, Australia, India, South Korea, Taiwan, and, rest of Asia-Pacific) and EMEA (Brazil, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, UAE, rest of EMEA).

Moreover, other factors that contribute toward the growth of the Dietary Supplements market include favorable government initiatives related to the use of Dietary Supplements. On the contrary, high growth potential in emerging economies is expected to create lucrative opportunities for the market during the forecast period.

Impact of COVID-19:Dietary Supplements Market report analyses the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on the Dietary Supplements industry. Since the COVID-19 virus outbreak in December 2019, the disease has spread to almost 180+ countries around the globe with the World Health Organization declaring it a public health emergency. The global impacts of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are already starting to be felt, and will significantly affect the Dietary Supplements market in 2020.

The outbreak of COVID-19 has brought effects on many aspects, like flight cancellations; travel bans and quarantines; restaurants closed; all indoor events restricted; emergency declared in many countries; massive slowing of the supply chain; stock market unpredictability; falling business assurance, growing panic among the population, and uncertainty about future.

COVID-19 can affect the global economy in 3 main ways: by directly affecting production and demand, by creating supply chain and market disturbance, and by its financial impact on firms and financial markets.

Download Sample Table of Content PDF of COVID-19/CoronaVirus Impact Analysis of Dietary Supplements Market 2020.https://inforgrowth.com/CovidImpact-Request/3468013/dietary-supplements-market

Key Benefits for Stakeholders from Dietary Supplements Market Report:This report entails a detailed quantitative analysis along with the current global Dietary Supplements market trends from 2019 to 2026 to identify the prevailing opportunities along with the strategic assessment.The Dietary Supplements market size and estimations are based on a comprehensive analysis of key developments in the industry.A qualitative analysis based on innovative products facilitates strategic business planning.The development strategies adopted by the key market players are enlisted to understand the competitive scenario of the Dietary Supplements industry.

Attributes such as new development in Dietary Supplements market, Total Revenue, sales, annual production, government norm, and trade barriers in some countries are also mentioned in detail in the report. Dietary Supplements Report discusses about recent product innovations and gives an overview of potential regional market shares.

FOR ALL YOUR RESEARCH NEEDS, REACH OUT TO US AT:Address: 6400 Village Pkwy suite # 104, Dublin, CA 94568, USAContact Name: Rohan S.Email:[emailprotected]Phone: +1-909-329-2808UK: +44 (203) 743 1898

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Latest Update 2020: Dietary Supplements Market by COVID19 Impact Analysis And Top Manufacturers: Amway, Abbott Nutrition, Bayer Healthcare, BASF,...

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How to Follow a Low FODMAP Diet to Cure Bloat, IBS and More – The Beet

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:55 am

Thoughno one likes to talk about it, roughly60 to 70 million Americans suffer from digestive problems and while doctors havetrouble diagnosing exactly what's causing the issue, there is one way to ease symptoms and relieve pain, called a "low-FODMAP diet." Essentially this is a way of eliminating foods that may be the likely culprit, to see if symptoms clear up as the result of this diet change.

Digestive problems can be linked to food intolerances or allergiesthat may be near-impossible to detect by blood work or an allergy "scratch" test. That's why more medical professionals are suggesting anyone with issues try the low-FODMAP diet as a natural way to alleviate symptoms, before adding back in food groups one by one, to figure out which food groupis the worst offender.Following a low-FODMAP diet has been effective in "up to 86% of patients with IBS find improvement in overall gastrointestinal symptoms as well as individual symptoms such as abdominal pain, bloating, constipation, diarrhea, abdominal distention, and flatulence following the diet," according to astudy.

The low-FODMAP diet has been used by medical professionalsin recent years to help patients suffering from gastrointestinal disorders, such as Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), which is a catch-all phrase for anything that causes gastro distress, or Celiac Disease, which is an allergy to gluten, the protein that is found in wheat products.

FODMAP, which stands forFermentable Oligosaccharides,Disaccharides,Monosaccharides andPolyols, are naturally occurring sugar molecules in the fruits, vegetables,and legumes that the body has trouble digesting.

Foods that need to be eliminated on a low-FODMAP diet include:

In order to not eliminate everything all at once (and have little plant-based foods to choose from), doctors suggest eliminating one FODMAP food group at a time, such as not eating fruit one day and then cutting out dairy the next, until your body tells you what it is that has been causing the bloat and gastric distress. Here is the list of FODMAP foods to eliminate:

Eating a diet highin FODMAP foods, such as sugar, starch, and fiber, can lead to gas,bloat, and stomach pain or diarrhea. This is because the small intestine (which lies below the stomach and above the large intestine) has troublebreaking down these types of foods, leadingthe body to try even harder, and increasing the amount of fluid it secretes inan effort to break down the sugar and fiber. The combination of gas in your stomach and excess digestive fluid leads people to experience bloat and pain and resultsin "poor digestion."

The goal of a low-FODMAP diet is to eliminate foods one by one until youfind thetrigger food (or foods)causingyour pain.Those suffering from nonstop stomach pain relating to food sensitives or allergiesshould reach out to a doctor since there could be serious causes not related todiet, and doctors recommend not doing a low-FODMAP diet for longer than six weeks. Here is how to do it, according toMonash University, a top university in Australia.

Once you pinpoint the aggravating foods, youshould be able to get back to a less restrictive diet, which is important since many of these FODMAP foods are full of healthy nutrients and should not be avoided for long if they don't cause gastro distress.

A low-FODMAP diet means cutting back on fiber-rich foods butthat doesn't mean you can't eat any fruits or vegetables. Plant-based foods that classify as low-FODMAP include soy, dairy-free milk alternatives, grains, nuts, seeds, and certain legumes.The goal is to find foods that are easy to digest and don't harm your gut or identify methods that allow you to eat whole food without suffering. "Eating cooked food seems to be easier to digest," even those foods that cause issues for some people, according to Dr. Angie Sadeghi, a specialist in gastroenterologybased in Newport Beach, California,on a recent webinar hosted by Forks Over Knives on the topic of How to Eat to Beat IBS and Heal Your Gut.

As you eliminate healthy whole foods like legumes or cruciferous vegetables, if you find that they are not the cause of your problems, re-introduce them since the healthy fiber, protein, antioxidants, and nutrients are key to eating a healthy plant-based diet. So try incorporating small amounts of these healthy whole foods back into your diet in small amounts of about 1/4 of a cup daily, according to the Monash University plan.

Fiber foods are essential for a healthy gut and should be slowly increased back into your diet points out Dr. Sadeghi, who adds that eating a low-FODMAPdiet can cause more problems than it cures.

"I am not a fan of low-FODMAP for your health, because the foods you eliminate are good for us. You may be hurting your gut, not helping it," says Dr.Sadeghi.She recommendscutting dairy out of your diet before any other food, which has helped many of her patients manage their symptoms.

One caveat: People use a low-FODMAP diet asa restrictive way of eatingora type of disordered eating, which is why doctors don't recommend it for longer than six weeks. "As a restrictive diet, the low-FODMAP diet carries risks of nutritional inadequacy and of fostering disordered eating, which has received little attention," according to astudy on the controversial nature of the diet.As foods are eliminated,the dieter is deprived of vital nutrients found in whole foods.Low-FODMAP dieting is meant to be a short-term approach that doesn't restricteatingbut helps find the food(s) to avoid and ease IBS symptoms or pain.

To follow the low-FODMAP plan you should avoid mostlegumes but you can havesmall amounts of butter beans, chickpeas, lentils, and lima beans since these are not 1/4 of a cup daily.

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How to Follow a Low FODMAP Diet to Cure Bloat, IBS and More - The Beet

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Early Evidence Shows Fasting, Keto Diet May Make Chemo and Some Other Cancer Treatments More Effective and Easier to Tolerate – Curetoday.com

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:55 am

Jocelyn Aguilar felt bad enough after the first of a scheduled four rounds of chemotherapy that she thought about quitting.

She had no detectable cancer after undergoing double mastectomy for breast cancer, so the chemotherapy was an optional treatment that Aguilar, age 37 when diagnosed in October 2019, had chosen to reduce the risk of recurrence.

She ultimately decided to continue because, starting with her next round of chemotherapy, she was going to help test a counterintuitive-but-promising strategy for reducing chemotherapys side effects and increasing its cancer-fighting power: a very low-calorie diet designed to mimic the effects of fasting.

On weeks (when) I was due to receive chemo that Friday, I got four boxes of food labeled Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The only food I ate those days came from that days box. On Saturday morning, I woke up and eased myself back into normal eating, says Aguilar, a nurse who works at the University of Southern California (USC), where the trial took place.

The pain I experienced with that first round of chemo, before the fasting, was so terrible that I didnt think I could go on, says Aguilar, who described the sensation as aches and pains all over her body. With the fast, there were still some effects, but they were not nearly as bad. It was a huge difference.

Aguilar says that her food boxes each contained about 300 calories worth of plant-based food. The diet is billed by its distributor as containing micro- and macronutrients that are nourishing but not recognized as food by the body, which mimics fasting.

Its hard to imagine a more counterintuitive cancer treatment than fasting why deprive the body of vital nutrients when it would seem to need them most? but a growing body of research suggests that fasting decreases the toxicity of cancer treatments and may increase their efficacy too.

Some evidence also shows that a ketogenic diet, which deprives the body of carbohydrates rather than all calories, may increase the efficacy of some cancer treatments. In fact, there is even some thought that the two diets may help prevent cancer, although evidence for this is currently limited.

When it comes to supplementing cancer therapies, the benefits of either dietary intervention also have yet to be definitively proven unless youre a mouse. The animal data for fasting, which started in our lab but is now coming from many labs, is extraordinary. Its hard to think of anything in the past, ever, that has done better, says Valter Longo, who holds a doctorate in biochemistry and is the Edna M. Jones Professor of Gerontology and Biological Sciences and the director of the Longevity Institute at the USC Leonard Davis School of Gerontology.

Healthy cells and tumor cells respond differently to fasting. Healthy cells shut down their growth-promoting pathways shortly after the food stops coming in and focus on cell repair. Cancer cells, on the other hand, rarely slow their unrestrained growth enough to engage in this self-protective behavior.

Fasting thus increases the ability of healthy cells to withstand stressors such as chemotherapyor radiotherapy, but it leaves cancer cells, which suddenly have less nutritional support to sustain their rapid growth, unusually weak and vulnerable.

Fasting also depletes stored carbohydrates. Normal cells can adapt to this by running mostly on two fat-derived energy sources fatty acids and ketones but cancer cells are far more reliant on sugars, starches and the insulin that drives them into cells.

Most of the mouse studies to date have assessed fastings effect on chemotherapy or radiotherapy, but at least one study has found that a low-calorie fasting- mimicking diet (FMD) plus simple vitamin C can slow the progression of KRAS-mutated colon cancer. Another study, this one published in the prestigious journal Nature, found that both fasting and a FMD increased and extended the efficacy of the hormonal treatments tamoxifen and Faslodex (fulvestrant) in mouse models of hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer.

The first clinical trial of short-term fasting in humans, which was published in 2009, reported results in 10 patients with various types of cancer. It found that fasting reduced chemotherapy-related toxicities fatigue, weakness and gastrointestinal side effects in the six patients who fasted 48 to 140 hours before and five to 56 hours after some (but not all) of their chemotherapy sessions.

Several other trials in humans, all of them following small patient populations for short periods of time, have also found that fasting reduced treatment-related toxicities such as fatigue or DNA damage in healthy cells. For example, one Dutch trial assigned six patients with breast cancer to follow normal dietary guidelines and seven others to fast 24 hours before and after chemotherapy. Nonhematological toxicity did not differ between the two groups, but the researchers found evidence that fasting reduced bone marrow toxicity and reduced chemotherapy-induced DNA damage in some healthy blood cells.

Data from several of these small trials also suggested that fasting increased treatment efficacy, but none of them were large enough (or lasted long enough) to prove that fasting extended patients survival. There is even less evidence to support the use of fasting or the ketogenic diet in combination with immunotherapy treatments, although that remains a tantalizing possibility.

The only large trial in humans to have reported results so far was inconclusive for a somewhat unexpected reason.

Investigators randomly assigned 131 Dutch women, all of whom were slated to receive chemotherapy for stage 2/3 HER2-negative breast cancer, either to eat according to standard guidelines or to follow the FMD. Sixty-six of the women were assigned to follow the FMD but, unfortunately, so few actually complied that it was impossible to evaluate the diets effects. Just 32% of women in the fasting group fasted before at least half of their chemotherapy cycles, and just 24% of them fasted before all of them.

Patient noncompliance was particularly disappointing because the FMD was designed by Longo who has a financial interest in a company that sells FMD meal kits as a less demanding way to get all the effects of a true, zero-calorie fast.

It wasnt easy, says Aguilar, but it was doable. Im not normally a healthy eater, and I was being given steroids at the time, so my appetite was out of control, but I still managed it because it reduced the pain so much.

Hopefully, patients in several other large studies, all of which are nearing their scheduled completion dates, will comply with fasting protocols well enough to help researchers determine whether short-term fasting can extend life, reduce treatment toxicity or both for patients with glioblastoma, non-small cell lung cancer, lung adenocarcinoma, ovarian cancer, breast cancer and colorectal cancer.

Positive results could change standards of care for all those tumor types within the next couple of years.

For patients who cant wait that long to select their treatment plan, the obvious question is whether they should ask their oncologists about starting now with short- term fasts or the FMD.

Some experts believe its too early to use fasting anywhere outside of clinical trials.Indeed, a group of Italian clinicians recently published a letter in Nature Reviews Cancer that cautioned against what they perceive as excessive enthusiasm about fastings potential benefits and insufficient caution about its potential to harm some patients.

It is worrying that the application of fasting in oncology has been prematurely reported by the media as a potential advance in medical oncology, to the point where FMD kits have recently been commercialized, the clinicians wrote. These may negatively interfere with cancer care, as patients at risk of malnutrition or sarcopenia (muscle loss) could autonomously decrease protein-calorie intake during treatment.

Longo agrees that neither malnourished patients nor those who are responding to their current treatment should try fasting or the FMD outside of clinical trials. However, he believes the data from both animal models and early human trials are strong enough to make fasting an option when approved treatments stop working.

I think (the evidence so far) is enough for an oncologist to say, Look, your therapy isnt working. Im out of options here. This fasting-mimicking diet is so effective in mice. Why dont we give it a shot? You have to understand there are risks, but you also have to understand that were out of options. That conversation would be appropriate now, Longo says.

Fasting isnt the only way to drive blood sugar and insulin down. Patients can achieve nearly equivalent reductions by following a ketogenic diet that provides about 80% of calories from fat, 12% from protein and 8% from carbohydrates.

Low sugar consumption means low blood sugar, which, in turn, means low levels of insulin a hormone secreted by the pancreas to drive sugar into muscles and fuel their growth and/or activity. Healthy tissue, as mentioned before, can adapt to deriving nearly all its energy fromfat, although many people feel pretty drained for a week or so at the beginning of that adjustment. (This lousy feeling is known as keto flu.) Many tumors, on the other hand, seem far less able to overcome their dependence on insulin and sugar (aka glucose).

Weve known for 100 years that cancer cells take up glucose at a much higher rate than do the normal tissues from which those cancer cells emerge, says Lewis Cantley, who holds a doctorate in biophysical chemistry and is the Meyer Director of the Sandra and Edward Meyer Cancer Center and a professor of cancer biology in medicine at Weill Cornell Medical College.

This does not mean that patients can starve their tumors to death simply by following ketogenic diets, but it has led many researchers to speculate that adding a ketogenic diet to standard treatment protocols might increase the efficacy of many of those regimens.

It has been difficult to test this theory, however. Because no pharmaceutical company canpatent a ketogenic diet, no one has a financial incentive to spend the millions of dollars that largestudies cost. Instead, studies get funded through the National Institutes of Health and foundation grants. Tests of FMDs face the same issue.

The ketogenic diet also runs into the same problem that makes it hard to test fasting: patient compliance. Indeed, researchers who work for the Department of Veterans Affairs in Pittsburgh enrolled 11 patients with cancer in a 16-week trial of the ketogenic diet. Only four of them actually followed the diet all 16 weeks.

In spite of the challenges, several recent discoveries suggest that ketogenic diets may be particularly helpful for certain cancer treatments helpful enough to drive funding and convince patients to follow the diet.

Cantley discovered a previously unknown link between sugar, insulin and cancer growth more than three decades ago: an enzyme called phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) that helps drive sugar into cells. Mutations in the genes that regulate PI3K causing an increase in PI3K activity are among the most common of all cancer mutations.

His discovery eventually led to the creation of PI3K- inhibiting medications, three of which have been approved for the treatment of several cancers. But all three have a big drawback.

When you give patients a PI3 kinase inhibitor, which hits the same enzyme that propagates the insulin response, you get the unsurprising result that the patient instantly becomes insulin resistant. Many of the patients in the trials of these drugs had to drop out because of high blood sugar, Cantley says.

Extra insulin, whether created by the body in response to rising blood sugar or deliberately injected, will solve the problem by driving the sugar into muscles, but it also drives sugar into tumors and destroys treatment efficacy.

Cantleys team hypothesized that PI3K inhibitors would be far safer and more effective if used in combination with some tool that would control blood sugar without driving it into tissues. They saw dramatically improved results in mice when they paired PI3K inhibitors with a class of diabetes medications called SGLT2 inhibitors, which reduce the bodys absorption of glucose via the kidneys so that excess glucose is excreted through the urine. Results were better still when they fed mice a ketogenic diet.

Blood sugar levels hardly went up. Insulin levels hardly went up. Tumors melted away, says Cantley, who also has a financial interest in a company that makes prepackaged meals for patients with cancer. Every tumor we tried essentially disappeared whenever we gave a PI3 kinase inhibitor with a ketogenic diet.

A large human trial will compare the current standard for using PI3K inhibitors against treatment plans that combine PI3K inhibitors with either SGLT2 inhibitors or a ketogenic diet. The ongoing global pandemic delayed the trial for several months, but enrollment has now begun.

And its not the only trial thats testing the ketogenic diets effect on cancer treatments. At least 18 other such studies are either recruiting patients or preparing to do so.

The whole thing comes down to energy. Without energy, nothing can grow, says Thomas N. Seyfried, who holds a doctorate in genetics and biochemistry and is a biology professor at Boston College who studies how metabolic therapies such as a ketogenic diet can affect cancer and other diseases. Tumor cells make energy by fermenting glucose and the amino acid glutamine. If we restrict the availability of glucose and glutamine, this will create tremendous metabolic stress on the tumor cells.

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Early Evidence Shows Fasting, Keto Diet May Make Chemo and Some Other Cancer Treatments More Effective and Easier to Tolerate - Curetoday.com

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Gayle King went on a 5-day fast diet to fit into her yellow election night dress: ‘The results are in!’ – Yahoo Sports

Posted: November 5, 2020 at 1:55 am

After fasting for five days, Gayle King pulled an all-nighter all while wearing her favorite yellow dress.

The journalist, who covered the 2020 election on live TV, shared that after finishing Tuesday nights election coverage, that went well into Wednesday, she didnt have time to go home before her call-time for her CBS This Morning hosting duties. Marathon hours means no time to go home to change, she wrote on Instagram, noting that she slept for 45 minutes on a couch in the office. TV news so glamorous!

King didnt change into pajamas for her power nap. Rather, she stayed in the dress to rest and then woke up and went back to work.

King staying in her dress may have been a necessity but its clear shes not exactly mad about getting to show off her look two days in a row. Why? Because she put in the work to look and feel her best in, as she called it, THEEE yellow dress aka Elex nite dress!

The 65-year-old shared ahead of Tuesdays broadcast that she had been on a five-day soup fast in order to fit in the dress and lost more than 7 pounds. While theres no questioning that King looks fantastic in the yellow mustard dress, a color that she frequently wears, it might be fair to question if her methodology for fitting into the dress was actually healthy for her.

So what is a soup diet? Well, as you may have guessed, its a diet where you only eat soup, usually in hopes of losing weight quickly. It can certainly be an effective strategy but its not exactly a sustainable way to keep off weight and get healthy.

"The concept of eating soup to lose weight has spanned decades, but experts say an all-soup diet lacks nutrients and is not sustainable, Chrissy Carroll, RD, MPH told Very Well Fit. They do agree it can be smart to eat vegetable-packed soups for some meals though, as these are filling, nutrient-dense, and low in calories."

Why is it not sustainable? A few reasons. First, if taken to extremes, a soup diet could lead to a dangerously low daily caloric intake, which comes with all sorts of risks, including increasing stress levels, not meeting your nutrient needs and slowing your metabolism. A soup diet can also reduce your intake of grains and fruits, which are both recommended as part of a balanced diet.

Fortunately, it seems unlikely that King is going to adopt the soup diet as a permanent part of her life, as she has spoken openly in the past about how she is not willing to go to extremes when it comes to her diet.

Some people dont eat pasta or bread or sweets ever, she said in O, The Magazine. I love those foods too much. So for the most part, I eat healthy, but if I go to a party or on vacation, Im going to enjoy it; then I work extra hard to get back to where I was.

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