Sunday, June 13, 2010

Nutrition article...check it out!


Prevalence of micronutrient deficiency in popular diet plans

Jayson B Calton email

Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition 2010, 7:24doi:10.1186/1550-2783-7-24


Published: 10 June 2010

Abstract (provisional)

Background

Research has shown micronutrient deficiency to be scientifically linked to a higher risk of overweight/obesity and other dangerous and debilitating diseases. With more than two-thirds of the U.S. population overweight or obese, and research showing that one-third are on a diet at any given time, a need existed to determine whether current popular diet plans could protect followers from micronutrient deficiency by providing the minimum levels of 27 micronutrients, as determined by the U.S. Food and Drug Administrations (FDA) Reference Daily Intake (RDI) guidelines.

Methods

Suggested daily menus from four popular diet plans (Atkins for Life diet, The South Beach Diet, the DASH diet, The Best Life Diet) were evaluated. Calorie and micronutrient content of each ingredient, in each meal, were determined by using food composition data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture Nutrient Database for Standard Reference. The results were evaluated for sufficiency and caloric intake levels and deficient micronutrients were identified. The diet plans that did not meet 100% sufficiency by RDI guidelines for each of the 27 micronutrients were re-analyzed; (1) to identify a micronutrient sufficient calorie intake for all 27 micronutrients, and (2) to identify a second micronutrient sufficient calorie intake when consistently low or nonexistent micronutrients were removed from the sufficiency requirement.

Results

Analysis determined that each of the four popular diet plans failed to provide minimum RDI sufficiency for all 27 micronutrients analyzed. The four diet plans, on average, were found to be RDI sufficient in (11.75 +/- 2.02; mean +/- SEM) of the analyzed 27 micronutrients and contain (1748.25 +/- 209.57) kcal. Further analysis of the four diets found that an average calorie intake of (27,575 +/- 4660.72) would be required to achieve sufficiency in all 27 micronutrients. Six micronutrients (vitamin B7, vitamin D, vitamin E, chromium, iodine and molybdenum) were identified as consistently low or nonexistent in all four diet plans. These six micronutrients were removed from the sufficiency requirement and additional analysis of the four diets was conducted. It was determined that an average calorie content of (3,475 +/- 543.81) would be required to reach 100% sufficiency in the remaining 21 micronutrients.

Conclusion

These findings are significant and indicate that an individual following a popular diet plan as suggested, with food alone, has a high likelihood of becoming micronutrient deficient; a state shown to be scientifically linked to an increased risk for many dangerous and debilitating health conditions and diseases.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Athletic Performance Methodology Seminar Notes


Last week, I had the chance to attain a lecture by Dancy Norman (fitness/ rehab coach for FC Bayer Muchen) on injury prevention and integration.

Here are the most important notes from the lecture:

  1. Core Fundamentals such as evaluation, education, mindset, nutrition, movement, and recovery) are the most important fundamentals that an athlete should experience.
  2. 65% of sports injuries are non contact related.
  3. Some injury risk factors are: previous injuries, asymmetries, dynamic muscular balance and BMI.
  4. Posture and movement patterns are really important to prevent injuries.
  5. 3 key components that can affect movement are: joint mobility/ stability, strength and CNS function.
  6. Mobility and stability are the most important elements realted to optimum performance.
  7. Overhead activities and lower movements can activate the latissimus dorsi.
  8. Core strength and core stability should always taking into consideration when training the core.
  9. When hip flexor is tight, the gluteus might not work optimally.
  10. Scapular movement is vital for shoulder health.
  11. Always Quality over Quantity.
What's your opinion in all these?

Have a great weekend!