The Secret To A Faster Metabolism Is In Your Gut
Here's how to take control of your cravings and lose weight for good by improving your gut health.
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Feed the Slim Bugs
For example, when 21 people increased their daily intake of fiber by 21 grams, they had more Bacteroidetes and fewer Firmicutes in their systems after 3 weeks, according to a University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Bacteria, especially the good guys, love munching on the fiber found in abundance in clean foods like fruits, vegetables, and whole grains.
But loading up on processed junk food takes things in the other direction in a hurry. In a headline-grabbing study, a British genetics professor asked his college-student son to munch nothing but fast food for 10 days. The son’s microbiome was checked at Cornell University and the British Gut Project, using stool samples, before and after. In just 10 days, his microbiome was “devastated” by the steady diet of burgers, chicken nuggets, fries, and soda, according to an informal report from his father published on the British science Web site TheConversation.com. Forty percent of the bacterial species in his gut were wiped out—a loss of 1,400 types. “I felt good for 3 days, then slowly went downhill, I became more lethargic, and by a week my friends thought I had gone a strange grey color,” the son noted. When the study ended, he rushed to the supermarket for fruit and salad. (Need help ditching processed foods? Here's your plan.)
While the young man didn’t gain much weight during the 10-day study, his father commented that the shift in gut bacteria could lead to that over time. “Loss of diversity is a universal signal of ill health in the guts of obese and diabetic people,” he noted.
There are clear-cut differences in the ways clean foods and processed foods affect your microbiome—and by extension, may affect your weight. Here are a few examples, all backed by science.
Fiber feeds the good guys.
One science magazine calls it the “workhorse” that feeds “a healthy gut microbiome.” Your good bacteria love all sorts of fiber, but two especially beneficial types—Bifidobacteria and Lactobacilli —love fibers called fructans, especially a type called inulin. You’ll find inulin in plant foods including bananas, onions, garlic, leeks, asparagus, Jerusalem artichokes, chickory root, soybeans, and whole grain foods like rye and barley.
In other research, people who ate whole grains such as whole wheat bread saw an increase in beneficial Bifodobacteria, while those munching refined wheat products saw levels decline. You’ll get plenty of good-for-you natural fiber from food when you eat clean. In fact, experts call fiber a “prebiotic”—a compound that primes your digestive system for optimal good-bug health. (Fuel your gut health with simple, 30-minute recipes from Eat Clean, Lose Weight & Love Every Bite.)
Probiotic-rich foods invite more good bacteria in.
Yogurt, kefir (a fermented milk drink), and fermented foods such as sauerkraut, kimchi, and tempeh (a soy-based meat alternative) all contain beneficial bacteria. Case in point: Yogurts that contain “live, active cultures” contain good bacteria including Lactobacillusgasseri, shown in at least two recent studies in animals to discourage weight gain and even help with weight loss. That’s why you should only buy yogurt that says right on the label that it contains live, active cultures. And yes, these bacteria can survive your digestive system and thrive. Evidence of this comes from research on people who’ve taken antibiotics, which can wipe out some good bacteria. Those who had yogurt daily cut their risk for antibiotic-related diarrhea by two-thirds.
Good fats favor good bugs, too.
A diet rich in omega-3 fatty acids—found in fatty fish like salmon and trout, as well as in walnuts and flaxseeds—fostered a mix of gut bacteria that kept mice slim in a recent University of Gothenburg study. In contrast, a diet packed with saturated fat in the form of lard encouraged bacteria that caused weight gain. That’s a great reason to grill salmon instead of a fatty steak for dinner tonight! (Let this clean-eating meal plan be your guide!) While this was a lab study on mice, results like these can spark or stem important lessons for humans, too.
Artificial sweeteners feed obesity bugs.
In a 2014 lab study from Israel’s Weizmann Institute of Science, mice fed aspartame, sucralose, or saccharin developed a microbiome strikingly similar to that of obese mice. The researchers note that in some studies, people who used artificial sweeteners were more likely to be overweight and have impaired glucose tolerance than those who didn’t—and differences in their microbiome may explain this difference.
Get Energized!
Giving your body the nutrients it needs, stopping the exhausting cycle of blood sugar peaks and valleys that comes with eating processed foods, and sweeping chemical additives out of your system—that’s a fatigue-fighting, metabolism-boosting recipe for renewed physical and mental energy! And the more energy you have, the easier it is to make healthy, clean food choices and to be more active all day, whether that means taking a morning Zumba class, getting outside for a lunchtime stroll, or jumping on your exercise bike while you watch television at home tonight.
Feeling tired is a top reason Americans skip exercise and make less-than-stellar food choices, surveys reveal. And too often, processed food bears some of the blame. Highly-processed, low-nutrient food makes it more difficult to fall asleep, stay asleep, and wake up refreshed—a huge energy drain. Unhealthy, high-fat stuff can also make you more tired in a matter of minutes after a meal.
(Stop sugar cravings, lose belly fat, and take control of your health with Eat Clean, Lose Weight & Love Every Bite.)
In a 2013 Pennsylvania State University study, participants who ate the most fat at lunch felt the sleepiest afterward. According to another study published in the British Journal ofNutrition, a high-fat meal significantly reduced mental energy (alertness and sustained attention), compared to a lower-fat meal. It turns out that eating fat triggers the release of a digestive hormone called cholecystokinin that lulls your brain into a foggy slump that scientists call “postprandial somnolence.” (That kind of sleepiness can quickly lead to a mid-afternoon trip to the vending machine for a cola and a candy bar!)
In contrast, clean foods support high energy. Start with breakfast. In one study, people who ate a whole grain cereal felt 10% less fatigued than usual. In another, people who ate protein in the morning felt 12% more alert at midmorning and 18% more alert by lunchtime than people who skimped on this important metabolism-boosting nutrient.
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