Calorie Intake
Calorie Intake - most related articles:
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Weight gain from artificial sweeteners - 5.3
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High-calorie foods cheaper and increases obesity risk - 4.9
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Fast food customers cut calories after US food labeling system - 4.7
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Low calorie sweeteners helpful in weight control - 4.5
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Lower calorie foods purchased in restaurants contain more calories than listed - 4.5
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Eat out at restaurants and still lose weight - 4.4
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US children eating more and more frequently outside home - 4.4
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New York chain restaurants to display calorie information - 4.3
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Fast food menus with calorie information lead to lower calorie selection - 4.2
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Reducing television viewing lowers BMI and obesity - 3.8
Calorie Intake articles
Eat out at restaurants and still lose weightGoing out to eat has become a major part of our culture. Frequently eating out and consuming high-calorie foods in large portions at restaurants can contribute to excess calorie intake and weight gain. However, a study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior demonstrates that individuals can eat out and still lose weight.
Turning bad fat into good - A future treatment for obesityBy knocking down the expression of a protein in rat brains known to stimulate eating, Johns Hopkins researchers say they not only reduced the animals' calorie intake and weight, but also transformed their fat into a type that burns off more energy. The finding could lead to better obesity treatments for humans, the scientists report.
Chewing gum reduces snack cravingsMen and women who chewed ExtraŽ sugar-free gum three times hourly in the afternoon chose and consumed less snacks and specifically, less sweet snacks than they did when they did not chew gum.
Reducing television viewing lowers BMI and obesityUsing a monitoring device to reduce television viewing and computer use time by 50 percent over a two-year period appears to reduce calorie intake, sedentary behavior and body mass index in overweight children age 4 to 7, according to a report in the March issue of Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Reducing kids' salt intake lowers soft drink consumptionChildren who eat less salt drink fewer sugar-sweetened soft drinks and may significantly lower their risks for obesity, elevated blood pressure and later-in-life heart attack and stroke, researchers reported in the print and online issue of Hypertension: Journal of the American Heart Association.
Low calorie sweeteners helpful in weight controlA recent review of the scientific literature has concluded that low-calorie (or no-calorie) sweeteners can be helpful in resolving the obesity problem. Although they are not magic bullets, low-calorie sweeteners in beverages and foods can help people reduce their calorie (energy) intakes.
Weight gain from artificial sweetenersUse of no-calorie sweeteners may make it harder for people to control their intake and body weight. Cutting the connection between sweets and calories may confuse the body, making it harder to regulate intake, revealed by researchers.
7 Calorie Intake articles listed above.
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