Showing posts with label disease. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disease. Show all posts

Monday, 8 January 2018

Protein Shakes and Diet Changes

Protein Shakes and Diet Changes

Many young people make the mistake of having too many protein shakes when trying to add muscle mass. We always recommend eating solid food to get solid. Protein shakes are digested too quickly and can lead to some health issues if used to often as meal substitutes. They also spike insulin which can slow down the loss of body fat. The only time we recommend having a protein shake is post-workout and we also individualise the amounts and types of protein sources used as much as possible. When it comes to supplementing with protein shakes it is important you use a quality brand. We use whey protein that comes from grass-fed cows in New Zealand so we know that we are using a product that is beneficial. Many of the proteins that you can buy in a store use poor quality sources and have added sugars, flavours, etc. which can be detrimental to health.

When it comes to nutrition, it is important to follow your plan so that effective changes can be made. Dietary changes need to be made quite regularly to continue making gains but if you aren't following the plan or if you aren't reporting the correct information, any changes made could actually take you off track. There is no perfect diet just as there is no perfect training program. You must constantly change things and make the body adapt. 



Friday, 7 July 2017

IBD and Diet

IBD and Diet


In my world it has been known for a very long time that your diet can help you recover from pretty much all diseases including inflammatory bowel disease. Sadly, some medical experts tell their clients that diet has nothing to do with this disease. I have no idea how they come to this conclusion but it is what clients are hearing. So they go on eating foods that are problematic to them and just hope that somehow they will be cured by the drugs the doctor prescribes.

If you adjust your nutrition then the drugs they prescribe would more than likely work better anyway. Not looking after your nutrition while doing additional therapies would be like trying to use a bucket to bail water out of a sinking boat. No matter how good a job you do with the bucket, there is still water entering the boat. You have to fix the hole in the boat for a long term solution. You can’t just rely solely on one approach. It is multifaceted and many factors need to be addressed. Nutrition is the foundation.

Some of the foods we suggest removing from the diet are processed foods and sugar, wheat, grains, dairy, and eggs as these foods tend to be a problem for a lot of people. Obviously it is very individual but this seems to be a decent starting point.

You can suppress symptoms but you have to address the underlying cause.

For more information and a review of a study that demonstrated patients with inflammatory bowel disease could reach remission with diet alone, please see the link below:


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