5 Ways to Have Less Fat
Filed Under (Health) by Isabel on 09-13-2007
If you have been working on losing weight, those extra lumps and bumps are really nothing more than a stored form of energy known to most of us as fat. What we affectionately call fat is really just a friendly term for what scientists call triglycerides. Besides being stored as body fat, triglycerides can also be found floating freely in our blood stream. As you might expect, triglycerides can wreak havoc on our health if blood levels become too high.
Controlling triglycerides is an important part of protecting yourself from heart or other circulatory diseases. For people with diabetes, high triglycerides are even more risky since cardiovascular disease is two to four times more likely to occur when diabetes is present. The American Diabetes Association recommends that triglyceride levels should be below 150 mg/dl.
Although prescription medications are available, the first line of treatment for high triglycerides should be lifestyle change. Often, changes in diet and exercise can lower triglyceride levels significantly and therefore reduce one’s risk of cardiovascular disease.
1 . Cut Calories
One of the easiest ways to make an impact on your triglycerides is to reduce your calorie intake. By following a reduced calorie diet you not only reduce your body fat, but also your blood fats.
2. Lower Your Blood Glucose
If blood glucose levels are high, extra glucose in the blood may eventually convert into fat, therefore raising triglyceride levels. If you have been experiencing high blood glucose levels, the best way to lower your triglycerides is to get your diabetes under control.
3. Exercise
Fat is a source of fuel which is burned during exercise. Regular exercise will not only help your weight-loss efforts, but lower triglyceride levels. Even those who are not overweight can see the tremendous benefits exercise can have on lowering blood triglycerides.
4. Moderate Amounts of The Right Kind of Carbs
Although it may seem ironic, lowering fat intake is not the most effective way to lower triglycerides. Dietary carbohydrates have a much stronger impact on triglyceride levels. High carbohydrate diets have been shown to worsen triglyceride levels, especially when the carbohydrates consumed are sugary or refined. Moderate amounts of slower-digesting carbohydrates such as oatmeal, beans, vegetables, yogurt and most fruits have been shown to lower triglycerides when compared to equal amounts of rapidly digested carbohydrates from regular soda, sugary cereal, or other highly processed starches. With regards to triglycerides, attention should be placed on choosing good quality carbohydrates in moderate portions.
5. Fish And Fish Oil
The benefits of consuming two to three fatty fish meals each week from salmon, rainbow trout, sardines, mackerel or herring is clearly beneficial for promoting a healthy heart. Fatty fish contain a type of fat rarely found in other foods called omega-3 fatty acids.
Omega-3s are the primary reason why fish is so good for us. Higher intakes of omega-3 fatty acids in the form of fish oil supplements have been clinically proven to lower the risk for cardiovascular disease and lower triglyceride levels. The evidence is so strong that in 2002, the American Heart Association guidelines included the recommendation for two to three grams of omega-3 fatty acids per day for individuals with high triglycerides. For people with diabetes, this amount of omega-3 has been shown to lower triglyceride levels by up to 30 percent.
You have the power to reduce your risk for cardiovascular disease. Start today by asking your health-care provider about your triglyceride levels. Often, with effort and persistence, triglycerides can be lowered.
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