Entries by Chet Zelasko

Dietary Supplements: Untested Energy Boosters

I often begin a review of a recent study by examining the health headlines; the same is true today. “Untested Stimulant Found in Dietary Supplements” and “Potentially Dangerous Stimulant Common in Diet Supplements”—both headlines refer to a recently published study (1). The stimulant in question is a synthetic chemical called DMBA which stands for 1,3 dimethylbutylamine. It’s also referred to as AMP citrate. Were the headlines justified? Yes and no—today I’ll cover yes.

The researchers purchased 14 products with either the chemical name or the common name on the label and had the products analyzed . . .

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Winning Art and Your Health

When something unexpected happens, I just have to go with it. It wasn’t my intention to follow-up Saturday’s message, but this is just too powerful to ignore.

The ArtPrize entry that Paula chose to put in the Saturday message, a 6.5 foot cube with a light inside, won and won big—it won the public vote, the juror’s vote of art professionals, and the Grand Prize in the Installation category as well. For her efforts, artist Anila Quayyum Agha will take home $300,000.

ArtPrize and Your Health

Each fall for the past six years, artists from all over the world bring or send their work to Grand Rapids to compete for over $500,000 in cash prizes. ArtPrize was the first of its kind when it began in 2009 and this year displayed over 1,500 entries by over 1,800 artists; it’s physically impossible to see them all. It has benefitted both the artists and the economy of West Michigan, because people come from all over the world to see the art.

Paula and I visited just a few of the venues to see some . . .

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Choose Wisely

You may remember Dr. Brian Wansink from earlier messages; he and his research team do a great job of looking at the subtle things that affect how much we eat as well as the food choices we make. The journal Appetite just published his group’s latest research findings (1), testing the theory that when eating with or near an overweight person, you may be less likely to adhere to your own health goals.

The researchers hired an actress to wear a “fat” suit and not wear it as she filled her plate. There were two food choices: salad and . . .

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Vitamin E: Foods and Supplements

Finishing up our look at vitamin E, the logical question is how much vitamin E do we need and where should we get it from? Let’s get right to it.

The RDA for vitamin E, in natural form as d-alpha tocopherol, is 15 mg per day in people 14 and over and 19 mg if a women is breast feeding. That corresponds to 22.4 IU and 26.8 IU. That would be the minimum intake per day from food or supplements. Why two units of measurement? Vitamin E is reported in mg in foods and IUs in . . .

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Symptoms of Vitamin E Deficiency

If 90% of us are deficient in vitamin E as recent research estimated, what are some of the issues we could face? That’s one of the problems the author was examining because there are no documented overt symptoms of vitamin E deficiency other than children who cannot absorb it or in times of extreme malnutrition (1). That’s one reason it’s so difficult to pinpoint vitamin E deficiencies in people.

The symptoms are mostly neurological disorders that continue to get worse. It can cause nerve death in the peripheral sensory nerves—the arms and legs—and ataxia, which . . .

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Vitamin E Update

As a member of the American Society of Nutrition, I receive three e-journals. I’m not going to tell you I read them cover to cover, but I check out what’s going on in nutrition research. That’s why a recent review article titled “Vitamin E Inadequacy in Humans: Causes and Consequences” caught my attention (1). See if this wouldn’t catch your attention:

It is estimated that more than 90% of Americans do not consume sufficient dietary vitamin E as alpha-tocopherol to meet estimated average requirements.

Wow! More than 90% of us come up short? How . . .

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The Low Carb Versus Low Fat Battle: No Decision

Today I’m finishing my review of the study that compared a low-fat diet with a low-carb diet. As Paula can attest, I’ve been muttering under my breath since I read that paper—not to mention the occasional rant. Here’s why.

First, the researchers tried to get the healthiest obese people they could get—completely understandable because the idea is to eliminate confounding variables. The problem is that when every measured variable is normal to begin with, the results are meaningless unless there are huge changes in something such as body weight, cholesterol, or triglycerides. Note . . .

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The Battle Continues: Low Carb Versus Low Fat

The diet battles never seem to end: “Low carb is the best!” “No, low fat is!” “Shut up. You’re wrong!” And it escalates from there. The research to assess which diet really is the best diet also continues. The latest study has gotten considerable press, so I thought I should review it for you (1).

Researchers at Tulane University in Louisiana recruited 148 of the healthiest obese people they could find. None were diabetics or had any symptoms of heart disease, although it appears hypertension controlled by medication was permitted. Participants were randomly assigned to either a low-fat . . .

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The Best Source of Calcium

Let’s go back to where we began. Is any form of calcium, whether from foods, supplements, or some new-fangled source, any better absorbed than another?

No—not enough that it would make a real difference, anyway. There are two primary forms of calcium available that have lead to this absorption controversy, so let’s take a look at them. In supplement form, calcium carbonate has the most calcium per mg at 40% while calcium citrate has about 20%. That means that fewer milligrams of calcium carbonate are needed to get the amount a person needs to take.

The . . .

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