Sentences with word «hypercaloric»

(and conversely, there plenty of n = 1's who say a large hypercaloric high protein meal will blunt ketones.)
«Our results revealed that long - term exposure to hypercaloric diets impair the ability to control eating behaviour leading to negative effects on the cognitive processes responsible for a rational control of food intake» says Maldonado, head of the Neuropharmacology Laboratory at UPF.
While it is true that one explanation for increased cancer rates over the past 100 years is the mere fact that we are living longer, it is also abundantly clear that as diets have become hypercaloric and largely composed of highly processed and refined foods, our cancer risk has significantly increased.
«We need to focus on preventing obesity, and this study shows us that understanding and modifying behaviour could be the key,» as Maldonado states «these studies reveal the major behavioural and cognitive changes promoted by hypercaloric food intake, which could be crucial for the repeated weight gain and the difficulties to an appropriate diet control.»
In an iso - or hypercaloric individuals (those eating at maintenance or above), the minimal loss of muscle due to momentary amino acid needs is insignificant in comparison to rate of muscle synthesis, but severely hypocaloric individuals are a different story.
If you are dieting and in a caloric deficit any downsides of both protein and fat are negated, however in a maintenance or hypercaloric environment, not neccessarily so....
The scientists evaluated this relapse and found that extended access to hypercaloric diets impairs the control of food seeking behaviour and has deleterious effects on learning, motivation and behavioural flexibility.
He had participants consume 800 calories of protein over their maintenance needs and found, «consuming a hypercaloric high protein diet does not result in an increase in body fat».
Where the first study was considered «protein overfeeding» and hypercaloric, the second study is presented in the context of eating higher protein in the context of caloric restriction ***.
This is quite interesting in that the normal protein group was likely already in a hypercaloric state as they increased their body weight, yet the high protein group which consumed even more calories (about 20,000 kcals more over the whole study) did not see an increase in BW.
This is quite interesting in that the increase in total body weight suggests that the normal protein group was likely already in a hypercaloric state as they increased their body weight, yet the high protein group which consumed even more calories (about 20,000 kcals more over the whole study) did not see an increase in BW.
«Our current data,» the study's authors wrote, «indicate that exercise training in the fasted state is more effective than exercise in the carbohydrate - fed state to stimulate glucose tolerance despite a hypercaloric high - fat diet.»
«The collective body of evidence indicates that total daily protein intake for the goal of maximizing resistance training - induced gains in muscle mass and strength is approximately 1.6 g / kg, at least in non-dietary (eucaloric or hypercaloric) conditions.»
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z