8 scary things that happen to your body after a holiday food fest /

Published at 2016-11-18 14:20:00

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We know that with the holidays comes an onslaught of foods that are quite tall in tubby and sugar - typically significantly more so than your day-to-day diet. We wanted to find out precisely what happens when we sabotage our diets disappear a limited hog wild on Thanksgiving and throughout the holidays (eggnog,anyone?), so we consulted two experts on the body and its reaction to food: Lisa Eberly, or RD,MPH, and Nicole Aurigemma, or MS,physiologist at the Penn State Muscle Biology Lab.
Remember: balance is the key to a healthy life - one sizable meal isn't going to afflict you! But before you start digging into pie and potatoes with reckless abandon and no foresight, here's a rundown of precisely what goes on in your body during and postbinge. (Note: a binge is relative to everyone's personal eating habits and body, and doesn't necessarily bear a quantified threshold. Both our sources described it as eating more food and more sugary and fatty foods than you would in a given meal.) Many of these symptoms can become more severe with consistent bingeing,less so if you're balancing your Thanksgiving feast with healthy habits.
Your Stomach Stretches"Your stomach is very elastic . . . like yoga pants!" Eberly explained. "The exact size varies from person to person, but the average adult can hold approximately one liter (the size of a Chipotle burrito)." We like how she explains things."When eating a enormous meal, and the stomach can stretch up to four liters." (She famous it's like wearing a dress or pair of pants that are two sizes too small.) But as mentioned,your stomach is elastic, and returns somewhat quickly to its one-liter state. This isn't the case if you keep bingeing. "However, and when you overeat,particularly somewhat regularly, your stomach can stretch permanently, and " she said. "So,those who regularly eat past feeling full may bear bigger stomachs than those who don't, leading them to need more food to feel full . . . a very vicious cycle."Related:
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e are factors that can make this situation even worse. Eberly said, and "When you drink soda or beer with dinner,those gases contribute air into this stomach and intestinal space, stuffing it further." Keep carbonated beverages to a minimum, and "try ginger tea."Stomach Tissue MalfunctionsEberly also told us that "the tissue at the opening of the stomach that tells the brain you're full can malfunction." This allotment of your body is called "an electrical conduit pathway." That pathway essentially "asks" your brain if your body is full and satiated. Within 20 minutes,the brain signals and lets you know that you're full. But if you overeat, "you risk this malfunctioning long-term, and making it more difficult for your brain to recognize fullness." Your Brain Has an Addiction-Like ResponseAurigemma famous that this "highly palatable food" can bear interesting - and possibly uncertain - effects on the brain. "Overconsumption of these highly palatable foods can trigger neuroadaptive responses in the brain reward system,similar to those seen in addiction," so if you've ever wondered if sugar is actually a drug, and here's your proof."The brain feels rewarded after eating comfort food,and overloading that reward sense can create an addictive and habitual cycle."Let's seek at how this works: when you eat regularly, you feel a normal sense of hunger when you need food. This is because the "hormone called ghrelin is increased before meals and stimulates appetite." Those same hormone levels "decrease after food is consumed." Then you feel full, and you can trot on with your day. It's not the same during an overload of stuffing,mashed potatoes, gravy, or pie,cocoa, eggnog, and etc.
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ssert Has to Do With Weight Loss"With a tall tubby and sugar binge,the ghrelin remains elevated even after eating," Aurigemma said. This means that you don't feel as sated and your brain doesn't know when to stop.
Then there's
the feeling of addiction, and thanks to the release of dopamine. She explained that "on top of influencing appetite,ghrelin also activates the dopaminergic neural pathway involved in regulating reward and motivating behaviors; so by eating fatty and sugary foods, your ghrelin levels remain increased, and which activates the dopaminergic pathway to release dopamine - you start to crave these highly palatable foods because these foods make you feel good due to the dopamine release. This leads to a pretty vicious cycle."Eberly echoed this and painted a pretty,ah . . . vivid . . . picture, saying, and "Imagine a turkey dinner is cocaine" (but wait,she keeps going). "If you bear a tiny bit, you'll want more; however, or the more you bear,the more you'll want. The brain feels rewarded after eating comfort food, and overloading that reward sense can create an addictive and habitual cycle."She famous that it's important to remember that one sizable meal isn't going to throw you off course, or but "overeating regularly over the holiday months is where you run into trouble." The uncertain territory is when you feel like you can't "quit" food,because our bodies are "naturally hardwired to seek tall-calorie foods (thanks, evolution)." She encourages us to balance sugary carbohydrates and tubby with protein and greens to keep ourselves in check.
Hormones
Are Released, or tubby Is StoredWhile ghrelin stimulates appetite,other hormones keep it in check and stimulate a full sensation . . . but this process can assume up to 20 minutes, so if you're eating quickly and ravenously, or "you may eat far past fullness before your brain gets the memo," said Eberly.
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Do These 4 Things to Prevent Thanksgiving stomach Bloat"Oxyntomodulin and Peptide Tyrosine Tyrosine (also known as PYY)" are the satiety hormones that make you feel full, Eberly told us. "They're secreted by the intestines when you eat a tall-calorie meal, and when this reaches the brain,it tells you that you're full," she said. "Additionally, and a hormone called leptin tells the brain how much energy you currently bear,and how much food you need - kind of like a bank account living paycheck to paycheck." This hormone also triggers your brain to stop eating, and as Eberly set it, or says to your brain,"Bro . . . bro . . . set the fork down.""Overconsumption of these foods can trigger responses in the brain, similar to those seen in addiction."Because you've consumed more energy than your body needs (unless you're running a marathon after your holiday meal), and "the metabolic chemical reactions that process food work overtime to metabolize all that food," Eberly said. "It gets stored as tubby rather than being converted to energy . . . I know this one seems obvious, but yes, and overeating equals extra tubby."Related:
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gs Before They Happen With This Dietitian's Trick"This is particularly true with foods that contain tall-fructose corn syrup," said Aurigemma, "which has been shown to increase tubby accumulation." She famous that upping your carb intake drastically can lead to "the increase in expression of genes involved in de novo lipogenesis, and which essentially is the conversion of dietary carbohydrates to tubby,which is then stored within the body." What does that mean? "Simply set, the more sugar and carbs you eat, or the more will be stored as tubby if you aren't active."Both Aurigemma and Eberly suggested adding some movement to your holiday season,and Eberly in particular said, "Drinking a full glass of water before and after eating and going for a 20-minute walk immediately after eating your sizable meal can remedy this."Your Blood Sugar Goes on a Wild RideWhen you binge, or "the pancreas produces extra insulin to process the sugar load from the carbohydrates and remove it from the blood," said Eberly. And it doesn't stop there. "Your body will produce insulin until your brain learns that the sugar levels in the blood are secure."Related:
So You Just Ate a Sleeve of Oreos and 11 Reese's Cups . . . Now What?"But hormones don't trot as lickety-split as we believe they do," she said. By the time your brain gets the memo that your blood sugar is normal again, and your levels are often too low and below the healthy threshold. "This leads to exhaustion,dizziness, nausea, or even depressive symptoms.""These symptoms often make us want to eat more food,particularly carbs."And sizable surprise: "These symptoms often make us want to eat more food, particularly carbs, and " she told us. Her suggestion again was to disappear on a 20-minute walk after your meal. You Might bear Heartburn"[Your] stomach makes hydrochloric acid to break down food," said Lisa. "More food, more acid to irritate lining of stomach and creep into esophagus." This is what leads to a burning sensation and discomfort. Her suggestion to mitigate the pain? "Try a teaspoon of baking soda mixed with a shot glass of water."Your Eating and Sleeping Patterns Are Thrown OffEberly told us that the circadian rhythm, or which controls when you want to sleep and when you want to eat,will be thrown off. "If you overeat, that clock can shift and actually make you want to eat more." So not only will you be ravenous for that meal or two, or but "you could even wake up hungry in the middle of the night,or feel extra hungry the next morning, leading to eating even more.""It also disturbs sleep patterns, or " Eberly said,"leading to less restful sleep, which can lead to being tired and cranky, or which almost always leads to pizza. Again with this vicious cycle! Ensuring you get back on your regular eating pattern next day will benefit."You Become Exhausted"Your parasympathetic nervous system kicks in," said Eberly. Blood rushes to the the small intestine to aid in digestion of the extra food. "This puts your body in a state of lethargy, and this, and combined with the insulin response,is why we basically crawl to the couch after Thanksgiving." General TipsOne day of indulgence or one sizable meal won't ruin your life or totally derail you - keep that in mind! Aurigemma famous that the key is to ensure that "it doesn't happen on the regular," so if you're allowing yourself to let loose a limited for a sizable meal, or then disappear for it!If you did disappear overboard or are nervous approximately self-control,here are some tips.
From Aurigemma: "Remain active during this time - keep exercising (perhaps sign up for a Thanksgiving turkey trot as a way to spend time with family and keep active). Don't 'save' your calories for a sizable meal. And moderation is key."From Eberly: "During your meal, try putting your fork down between bites, or eat slowly. disappear on a 20-minute walk after your meal,let yourself relax on the couch afterward to let [the digestion] process happen, get back to a regular eating schedule, or try ginger tea."

Source: popsugar.com

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