Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Don't Skip Breakfast If You Want To Remain Active

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Feb, 2016 12:33 PM
  • Don't Skip Breakfast If You Want To Remain Active
Eating breakfast may not only make people, especially obese, lose weight but can also make them more physically active and reduce food intake later in the day, reveals a study.
 
According to the team, increasing activity can improve health in sedentary people making them more active by controlling their blood sugar levels.
 
"Despite many people offering opinions about whether or not you should eat breakfast, to date, there has been a lack of rigorous scientific evidence showing how, or whether, breakfast might cause changes in our health,” said lead researcher James Betts from the University of Bath in Britain.
 
The results highlight some of these impacts, but "how important" breakfast is still really depends on the individual and their own personal goals, Betts added.
 
The team wanted to study the possible links between breakfast, body weight and health.
 
In the study, published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, researchers split obese individuals aged 21-60 into two groups "fasting" and "breakfasting" -- measuring several outcomes during a six-week period.
 
The "breakfasting" group was asked to eat at least 700 calories by 11 a.m., which the first half of the group consumed within at least two hours of waking up. The fasting group was allowed only water until noon.
 
"For example, if weight loss is the key, there is little to suggest that just having breakfast or skipping it will matter. However, based on other markers of a healthy lifestyle like being more active or controlling blood sugar levels, then there is evidence that breakfast may help," Betts noted.
 
It is important to bear in mind that not everybody responds in the same way to breakfast and that not all breakfasts are equal. 
 
"The effects of a sugary cereal compared to a high-protein breakfast are likely to be quite different,” said Enhad Chowdhury, another researcher.

MORE Health ARTICLES

'Good fat' could help manage diabetes

'Good fat' could help manage diabetes
Brown fat, nicknamed the ‘good fat’ because it warms up the body in cold temperatures, burning up calories in the process, could also be used to manage...

'Good fat' could help manage diabetes

Sleep apnea leads to poor aerobic fitness

Sleep apnea leads to poor aerobic fitness
  People with sleep apnea, in which breathing repeatedly starts and stops during slumber, are likely to have reduced aerobic fitness, even compared with those....

Sleep apnea leads to poor aerobic fitness

Protein 'switch' to turn off Alzheimer's identified

Protein 'switch' to turn off Alzheimer's identified
Blocking a protein that acts like switch to wake us up may help prevent Alzheimer's disease, new research has found, pointing towards a new target to prevent this...

Protein 'switch' to turn off Alzheimer's identified

Houses Should Be Checked For Radon Gas, Can Cause Lung Cancer

Houses Should Be Checked For Radon Gas, Can Cause Lung Cancer
TORONTO — It's a naturally occurring radioactive gas that can seep through cracks and crevices in houses and other enclosed spaces — and can cause lung cancer. Yet many Canadians aren't even aware of its existence or the health risk the substance can pose.

Houses Should Be Checked For Radon Gas, Can Cause Lung Cancer

Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions

Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions
The research on animals showed how intermittent fasting in rats and mice can enhance learning and memory and decrease the risk of degeneration of those...

Exercise and fasting could boost brain's functions

Permanent stress may lead to mental disorders

Permanent stress may lead to mental disorders
Permanent stress can activate immune cells that can cause changes in the brain, leading to mental disorders such as schizophrenia, shows a study....

Permanent stress may lead to mental disorders