24HR GYM
Frequently Asked Questions
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PROTEIN AND CALORIES MAKE A CHANGE
None of this can be achieved without controlling your calorie and protein intake.
HOW DO I LOSE BODY FAT?
Think of the body as a Bank account...
FOOD AND THE RACE
No new questions. No new answers.
HOW MUCH MUSCLE CAN YOU PUT ON IN A YEAR?
12lb!! Why? The body can only produce so much muscle per year.
ON THE BENEFITS OF ANCIENT DIETS
The fact that man is an OMNIVOROUS HUNTER-GATHERER is sometimes taken as an argument that western foods would be without adverse health effects.
PROTEIN REQUIREMENTS
Extracts from "Vegan Nutrition, a survey of research" by Gill Langley MA PhD.
THE EVOLUTIONARY DIET
The Basic Premise: The theory of evolution by natural selection is being applied to more fields than ever before.
MUSCLE? TONING? FIRMING?
Can you be toned but not muscled? Can you be firmed but not toned? Can you be all 3?
YOUR FUTURE IS IN YOUR DIETARY PAST
Human genes, formed by millions of years of evolution, are a bad match for highly processed modern diets.
TODAY'S MODERN DIET
Today's modern diet habits are equal to modern methods of treating disease.
ABOUT EFA'S
Essential Fatty Acids (EFAs) are the building blocks of fats.
DIETARY FATS AND ESSENTIAL FATTY ACIDS
Only recently have we developed an understanding of the role of dietary fats in health.
PREGNANCY ESSENTIAL FOR...
There is accumulating evidence to demonstrate the importance of omega-3s in the development of the unborn child.
FLAXSEED
A step forward on a journey back to basics.
WHAT IS FLAX?
Flax is a blue flowering crop grown on the Prairies of Canada for its oil-rich seeds.
ESSENTIAL FATTY ACIDS
Essential Fatty Acids , (EFAs) are fatty acids that researchers now regard to be as vital to human health as vitamins and minerals.
FOOD, PROTEIN AND COMPLEMENTARITY
The importance of balancing the diet so as to get sufficient levels of all the essential amino acids cannot be overstated.
STRENGTH TRAINING ?
10 reasons why every adult should strength train.
NUTRITION POINTERS
Some suggestions to work with.
ALCOHOL
We have put together some information on Alcohol, which you may find helpful.
CELLULITE
We have put together some information on Cellulite, which you may find helpful.
SUGARS
We have put together some information on Sugars, which you may find helpful.
NUTRITION FOR KIDS
Information about running a 'Nutrition For Kids' programme.
FOOD, PROTEIN AND COMPLEMENTARITY
The importance of balancing the diet so as to get sufficient levels
of all the essential amino acids cannot be overstated. It is
essential to health. This is why a diet containing a variety of
wholesome foods is important. Certain foods have one or two amino
acids that are in lower proportions than the others, and if one of
these foods, such as rice or corn, is a predominant part of the diet,
it can mean that protein production and the significant functions
that protein performs can be deficient.
Each food has a different mix of amino acids. Therefore, it is
important to have an understanding of protein composition and to
apply it to our diet. The meat foods (including fish and poultry),
dairy foods, and eggs almost all have sufficient quantities of amino
acids to sustain life; that is, they are complete proteins. When we
eat these foods daily, we do not really need to worry about amino
acid complementarily's; in fact, there are concerns that
over consumption of protein foods (particularly meat and milk) in many
societies contributes to some major illnesses, so we may not wish to
consume these foods daily, or at all.
Vegetarians or other people on diets that limit certain foods may
need to be more knowledgeable about combining food. Lacto-ovo-
vegetarians, who eat eggs and dairy foods-both complete proteins-need
have less concern than the pure vegetarian, or vegan. Of the
essential amino acids, we have seen that lysine, methionine, and
tryptophan are the deficient. They are present in all vegetable
proteins, but at lower levels than other amino acids. Since they are
not all low in the same foods, it is not as difficult as many think
to obtain a good protein balance from vegetables, grains, nuts, and
legumes. The simplest idea is to eat grains with some beans or seeds,
for example, millet and aduki beans or brown rice and sunflower
seeds. Other complete-protein combinations of vegetable sources
include soybeans and rice or soybeans with sesame, corn, wheat, or
rye; peanuts with grain or coconut; grain with legumes or leafy
greens; beans and corn or rice (South American diet); and peas and
wheat. The Nutrition Almanac, written by Nutrition Research, Inc.
(McGraw-Hill, 1984) has a food-by-food breakdown of amino acid
content that is very helpful in creating a diet to achieve proper
protein intake.
The body will make protein only as long as it has sufficient levels
of all necessary amino acids in the cellular "storage" pool. When one
amino acid is deficient, we will not be able to produce most
proteins, and then either muscle protein will be catabolized to
obtain adequate amounts of the needed amino acid(s) or the metabolism
will use protein for energy. The body breaks down an average of about
300 mg. (maybe much more under many stressful conditions) of protein
per day, which it replaces if there are sufficient nutrients. If
there are not, however, we experience net protein loss; thus the
importance of consuming all the amino acids through a daily intake of
50-60 grams of "balanced" protein in forms that are easily digested
and assimilated.
Protein foods have been classified according to their ability to be
digested and used by the body; that is, their biological
availability, or value. The measurement of this ability is termed net
protein utilization (NPU); it is also called biological value (BV).
Chicken eggs are considered to have the protein (ovalbumin) of
highest known NPU. Following eggs, in descending order, are fish,
cow's milk and cheese, brown rice, red meat, and poultry (Garrison
and Somer, Nutrition Desk Reference, Keats Publishing, 1985). Again,
this is not based on protein content but on biological value, how
efficiently the body utilizes the protein in the food. Clearly, the
amino acids in brown rice do not make it as complete a protein as the
others, though the protein in it is readily usable. Here is where the
vegetarian complementing with legumes may help as long as digestion
and assimilation are functioning properly.

Anne Widdecombe
10th Oct 2003
26th Oct 2003