Science Catch-up. Sat Fat Debate: ‘Butter Is Not Back’


by The Health Sciences Academy — Get free science updates here.


Welcome to our Thursday’s Science Catch-up: curated links by The Health Sciences Academy. Get our email updates every other Thursday here (it’s free).

Let’s catch you up with studies and news that recently made the headlines!

Click on your favourite topics to read our summary:

1. Probiotics may reduce fat gain during a high-fat, high-calorie diet

2. Sat fat debate: ‘Butter is not back’, warn authors of new review

3. Can a placebo make you run faster?

4. Possible carcinogen (potassium bromate) not yet banned in US foods

5. The seasonal epigenetics of your immunity

6. Healthier friends, healthier you?

Probiotics may reduce fat gain during a high-fat, high-calorie diet

Study link

This study showed that probiotic supplements reduced body fat gain by 52% during a 4-week high-fat diet (55% fat), also high in calories (35% above daily caloric needs). The saturated fat content was about 25% of the total daily caloric intake.

The participants who were given probiotics gained body fat, but not as much as the group who didn’t get the probiotics. The fat gain in those taking the probiotics was reduced by 52%.

Just be mindful that the experiment only lasted 4 weeks, so we don’t know if the fat-gain preventive effects would persist beyond that period of time.

In case you’re curious, the probiotics included 450 million bacteria and the strains were as follows: Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Lactobacillus paracasei, Lactobacillus plantarum, Bifidobacterium longum, Bifidobacterium infantis, and Bifidobacterium breve.

Here’s the full study in PDF:

Probiotic supplementation attenuates increases in body mass and fat mass during high-fat diet in healthy young adults. Osterberg et al., 2015. Obesity.

Sat fat debate: ‘Butter is not back’, warn authors of new review

News link

Harvard researchers haven’t yet exonerated saturated fat.

They explain that if you replace saturated fat (mainly found in meat and dairy) with refined carbs (like white bread or added sugars) you don’t really lower your heart disease risk, but if you replace saturated fats with unsaturated fats you might. Rich sources of unsaturated fats include avocados, olive oil, and flaxseeds. Their conclusion is based on an observational study following 84,628 women and 42,908 men.

For more on the saturated fat debate, have a look here.

Can a placebo make you run faster?

News link

Yes, apparently it can!

This new study shows the power of “placebos” in athletic performance. In a recent Science Report, we talked about how your brain can fabricate an illusion of exhaustion to protect you from injury, and placebos seem to trick the brain the other way around: making you push harder and feel less tired.

All of this happens at a subconscious level, based on what you believe to be true!

Possible carcinogen (potassium bromate) not yet banned in US foods

News link

Potassium bromate is an additive used in baked foods to improve elasticity and consistency, so they taste better. However, it’s a possibly cancer-causing substance and has been banned in the UK, EU, Canada, and some South American and Asian countries. Not yet in the US.

The baking process converts potassium bromate into an inoffensive salt: potassium bromide. But if the ingredients aren’t mixed at the correct ratios, or aren’t cooked properly, the food can contain potassium bromate residues.

Here’s the list of US foods that are likely to contain these residues, in case you live or travel there.

The seasonal epigenetics of your immunity

Study link

Scientists estimate that our genes are sensitive to seasonal variations. Warm and cold seasons may have an epigenetic impact on our immunity, cyclically switching genes on and off. However, things like global warming, moving to a different climate, or keeping indoor thermostats constant all year round might disrupt these internal immune timers.

For example, the body responds to colder weather by increasing the production of proteins that help us fight off things like the flu, but if we keep our thermostats fixed to very warm temperatures during winter, our internal timers might be “misled” into thinking that it’s still summer, possibly leaving our immune systems more vulnerable.

Scientists gave this a name: “seasonal de-synchronisation” – a mismatch between environmental factors and our internal rhythms. Interesting facts to keep in mind!

Healthier friends, healthier you?

Study link

I always enjoy reading studies about the “contagion effect”. In this one, the researchers highlight that those around you can have an impact on your health-related behaviours – getting fitter, eating better, reducing alcohol, exercising.

This is because the “standard” of our reference group seems to be a motivator to change. We are more likely to increase a healthy behaviour if we aren’t at the “level” of what may be a healthy norm.

We have a Science Report explaining how exactly you can “catch” others’ eating behaviours (good or bad!): Are eating habits contagious? (premium subscription needed).

If you want to get the latest science and our tips, make sure you sign up to our Thursday emails HERE.

What has inspired you this week? What are your thoughts on some of these topics? Leave a comment and let us know!

The-Health-Sciences-Academy-Alejandra-Ruani-small1-right Alex Ruani, Doctoral Researcher, is the Chief Science Educator at The Health Sciences Academy, where her team of accomplished scientists and PhDs are training a new breed of over 100,000 highly-specialised nutrition professionals who are leveraging the latest personalisation strategies to help their clients. She is a Harvard-trained scientist and UCL Doctoral Researcher who is fanatical about equipping health professionals with the latest science-based tools so they can succeed in their practices – from identifying the unique nutrient needs to building highly personalised nutrition programs. Besides investigating and teaching the latest advances in health and nutrition biochemistry, Alex makes it easier to be smarter with her free email updates.


Did you enjoy this? Sign up to receive our FREE email updates!

See Also

Continuing Education Bundle

Upcoming Webinar

Free Menopause Workbook

Free Contrast Method

© Copyright

Everything on this site is original content, created and owned by or through The Health Sciences Academy ® or licensed accordingly.
Training Nutritionists of the Future™
© Copyright The Health Sciences Academy. The content, graphs and charts on this page have been exclusively prepared for The Health Sciences Academy and its prospect students, existing students and graduates. None of the content on this page and website may be reproduced, copied or altered without our explicit permission. Criminal and legal penalties for copyright and other infringement apply. All Terms and Conditions apply.
The Health Sciences Academy® is the world’s largest 100% science-based, nutrition-focused online educational institution.
✔ helping health and wellness professionals grow successful client practices
✔ raising industry standards since 2012 through personalised nutrition science
© Copyright The Health Sciences Academy. The content, graphs and charts on this page have been exclusively prepared for The Health Sciences Academy and its prospect students, existing students and graduates. None of the content on this page and website may be reproduced, copied or altered without our explicit permission. Criminal and legal penalties for copyright and other infringement apply. All Terms and Conditions apply.

Discover

Free Courses

Resources

Connect

About Us

© 2022 The Health Sciences Academy ® All Rights Reserved.

Send this to a friend