Sunday, February 9, 2014

Learning How To Reverse Insulin Resistance

By Serena Price


Learning how to reverse insulin resistance can make you feel better and might save your life. Everyone should know about this malaise, which affects millions of people who are unaware that they have a problem at all. The fact is that the average western diet, high in animal protein and refined carbohydrates while lacking in essential fatty acids, fiber, and whole foods, makes health hard to sustain.

Many people live in ignorance about how their bodies work and how food affects them. Disorders like resistance to insulin develop over a long period of improper diet and living, so many are unaware that they have an imbalance. Anyone who includes in their diet a large amount of refined carbohydrates, commercial baked goods, fried and fast foods, and sweetened drinks is at risk.

Glucose is found in foods and is also made by the body from starches. This means that all carbohydrates turn to glucose, a sugar that feeds the cells. Insulin is a hormone that is secreted to remove excess glucose from the bloodstream and store it in fat cells for later use if needed. When the system is overloaded with glucose, and too much protective hormone is produced, cells become 'resistant' to absorption of the fuel they need.

To compound the problem, when people eat too much of the wrong food, their body is also deprived of essential nutrition. Fiber, vitamins, minerals, and healthy fats may all be deficient. The body craves these things, but this manifests as a desire for addictive sugars. As hunger increases, busy people reach for convenience foods and gain weight but not health.

Inexplicable fatigue is often the first signal that you're in trouble. Food, which once gave you almost instant energy, now makes you feel tired and bloated. It's time to analyze your diet and rethink your lifestyle before matters get out of hand. Life with energy to spare is fun, but being too tired to function turns it to drudgery.

The subject is complex but the solution is simple. The problem is caused by improper diet and a sedentary lifestyle. Restrict refined carbohydrates (it's sometimes easier to eliminate them all together), boost fiber-rich vegetables and fruit, and supplement with nutrients known to help balance insulin and glucose levels. Get enough protein from good sources and exercise regularly. Control your weight.

Supplements can help. Chromium, a trace mineral almost totally lacking in food grown for the mass market, keeps many people in balance when taken daily. Cinnamon is one herb that clinical tests show as helpful. Vitamin K, along with a daily multiple, citrus peel extract, and many other trace minerals and herbs have shown promise. Omega-3 fatty acids are hard to get in food and should be supplemented.

Reverse insulin resistance and feel better, have more energy, and stave off more serious conditions like diabetes and heart disease. This is a win-win situation for everyone, so don't miss the opportunity to learn how to stay healthy, keep fit, feel younger, and be happier.




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