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Posts Tagged ‘fat study’

Oregon University Studies the Effects of Milkshakes on Obesity

In Fat on October 17, 2008 at 8:01 am

And because this is such riveting news the Oregonian felt the need to post the same article, with different titles, in the news and living section of the website.

Few foods stir brain cells like the chocolate milkshake.

“It’s the cocaine of food,” says Eric Stice, a senior scientist at Oregon Research Institute in Eugene. “It’s really good at firing up reward circuitry.”

Does this mean it’s genetically impossible to not like chocolate milkshakes? I mean, seriously. How can a legitimate scientist even make a connection between an addictive drug and a /food/. As if the title of these “articles” weren’t off-putting enough, the first two lines of the article throw the creditability of the study out the window.

Here’s where chocolate milkshakes enter the picture. Stice and colleagues at the University of Oregon and two other centers wanted to compare how the brain’s reward center responds to pleasing foods in obese and lean individuals. They needed something delicious that people could eat with a minimum of jaw movement to avoid blurring the brain scans. Volunteers, ranging in age from 14 to 22, were all female because the researchers recruited them from an ongoing study on eating disorders.

The group of volunteers in this study seem to be the worst choices. The participants are already dealing with eating disorders. So likely they are consumed with the shamed and hatred that comes with this disease. These women belittle themselves for every sip of milkshake which tastes good, they are plagued with thoughts of how many calories they are intaking and how horrible of a person they are if they enjoy anything food related. These women do not have positive body image, couldn’t that play into the response their brains are giving off? Do these women have any other diseases which may alter their brain chemistry like depression, anxiety, or faltering taste buds? What effect does puberty have on these women’s body chemistry and brain processes? Again, the study comes across as so flawed right out of the gate. No consideration was giving to these outside forces. It’s a simply fat=bad standpoint, with no real science taking place.

The taste of a milkshake stirred activity in the brains of overweight volunteers, but far less than in the brains of lean volunteers. Reward center activity was even more blunted in overweight volunteers who tested positive for a particular gene variation, called TaqIA A1, which seems to reduce brain dopamine receptors.

Researchers tracked weight for one year in some volunteers. Those with low brain activation in response to the milkshake who also had the gene variant were significantly more likely to pack on pounds.

I think it’s just precious how the /one/ gene related to /possible/ obesity is thrown in to give this study just a molecule of legitimacy. They’re not reaching, no, honestly, they’re not. And the gene which is possibly related to obesity coupled with the low response to milkshakes is the perfect evaluational explanation of why people are fat. Just like the formula for weight loss is watching calories, or wait, maybe it’s carbs, oh no, wait, carbs are okay, it’s calories. Really, calories are the culprit. And you need to exercise at least 30 minutes a day, wait no, three to four times a week, oh wait, no, in order to maintain thinness one needs to exercise three to four hours a day. Yes, that’s the ticket. And for those people who have no restraint WLS is the answer, we’ll just cut off a piece of your stomach. Oh, that causes complications, well, how about if we just bind it to let as little food into their system as possible? That’s the ticket, starve these people. That’ll keep them from being fat. Serves them right for not having any self-control to begin with.

He says research shows that the brains of obese people differ in other significant ways. In experiments requiring subjects to complete tasks to earn food rewards, obese people tend to work much harder than lean people, evidence of greater cravings. Brain imaging studies show that obese people experience greater expectation of reward than lean individuals. But Stice is convinced they don’t receive the emotional rewards experienced by people of normal weight.

“The big implication,” he says, “is if you can get people to improve diet quality, you may be able to prevent this reward system from unraveling.”

I hate to repeat myself, but I am just so flabbergasted that scientists can’t seem to ask these questions themselves when performing such experiments. Are these test subjects completely equal and healthy in order to have a fair comparison? No, as has been answered, these volunteers suffer from eating disorders. Are we surprised that the thin people, who have the unhealthy compulsion to starve themselves or binge after eating, work less rigorously to receive a food reward? No, we are not. They have spent considerable time training themselves to hate themselves, their desire to eat, and food as a whole. Us fatties are a whole different ballgame, neither one “better” or “worse”, and so of course the reaction to “food rewards” is going to be different. Speaking from my own perspective, I thrive to get any kind of rewards. That’s one thing that can happen when a person suffers severe neglect and abuse as a child. That doesn’t mean my eating is compulsive or uncontrollable. Another consideration is a person’s need for acceptance, which can be due to low self-esteem or self-worth, and is not exclusive to overweight or “lean”.

Another aspect of this study that bothers me is the idea that fat people only consume unhealthy foods. I know several fatties who eat well and don’t touch refined sugar, chemicals, HFCS, and other “unhealthy” foods. Yet, they are still fat. I also know incredibly thin people who gorge themselves on processed foods. They never exercise and hate anything deemed “healthy”, yet they are still thin. I wonder when scientists are going to catch onto this fact. To be some of the most educated people in our society, they sure do have a penance for publishing the most idiotic and poorly thought out studies I’ve ever seen. This study is akin to a study showing how smoking kills based on research of 70-80 year old men with cancer.

Gastric Bypass Surgery Isn’t a Cure

In Fat on September 18, 2008 at 4:36 am

I am sure it’s no surprise to anyone here that I’m fat. I’ve been fat all my life and I probably will be fat all my life. I am slowly coming to terms with this, and learning to appreciate my body for what it is. I am learning to accept and embrace. Many of us Fatties have to face the world though, and even if we completely accept ourselves, we will always worry about getting eggs thrown in our face once the public is concerned. Despite the fact most of my family is overweight, they still make sure to talk to me about my weight whenever we’re together. Some of them, I know, do it because they have been brainwashed by the media and drug companies and ignorant doctors. Others do it just out of spite. The latter group I’ve learned to ignore, because they’re a bunch of racist, mysognist assholes anyway. The others though, hold a dear place in my heart. So it hurts when they pass judgment and tell me I’m not okay the way I am. I’ve had the conversation about gastric bypass surgery since I was 16 (and I only weighed between 200 and 250 then). With my weight reaching near the 400s, some of my family have really been hitting this issue. I actually tried to sit down with them and explain the harmful consequences of gastric bypass surgery, but they were having none of that. I stopped the conversation when my Aunt said “as I understand it, it teaches you how to eat”. I just couldn’t struggle through the ignorance anymore.

Now the population is being told that Why Gastric Bypass Surgery May Not Be The Answer. Those who have been in the fat acceptance movement for awhile have learned that there is no cure for fat. There is even folks who believe it isn’t even an illness. (While I am sure there is no cure, I’m not so sure about the illness factor just yet.) To everyone else though, I feel like this article is saying “Hey everyone! We know we’ve told you for years now that gastric bypass can help everyone! It’s the miracle everyone was looking for, despite the risk involved because we all know it’s better to be malnutrioned and even risk dying than it is to be fat. But, uh, maybe it won’t work for everyone now that we’ve been doing it for awhile.” Yes, and then some media source or doctor or drug company is coming to come up behind this and offer their interpretation of the facts. “Yes, yes. We’ve heard this information about how gastric bypass surgery doesn’t work for everyone. Very interesting indeed. It seems we don’t have conclusive information about which people this surgery doesn’t work for. Never worry, however! While we look into this and determine what the problem is, everyone should still have the surgery! Yes, indeed. The obesity epidemic is so very severe and it’s better to try this, with the hope of being one of the people it will work on, than not to try and be fat. It’s unhealthy afterall, and don’t you want to be beautiful and snag a husband?”

Yes, it’s wonderful people are stepping up to say that maybe they might have perhaps made a mistake and in reality they can’t prove that this surgery is a useful weightloss tool despite marketing and promoting it that way. I just get so frustrated because I see the aftermath pouring in. I see the little sleezeball marketing promoters sitting in their swanky officers, sipping 50 year old scotch and pinching their anorexic, ample bossomed secretary on the ass as they try to figure out how to turn this piece of news into something to fan the fires again the fear of obesity.

36 Million Fatties Deemed Healthy

In Fat on August 14, 2008 at 11:58 am

I am so excited about the new studies coming out in the media. One was on the front page of the Oregonian recently, and another “viewpoint” was also published on the Chicago Tribune. Kate Harding already wrote on the subject, but I thought it couldn’t hurt to spread the news around. Another feather in our hats ladies and gents.