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RealAge Tip

Eating Complex

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Good carbs versus bad carbs: Do you know the difference?

Carbohydrates have gotten a bad rap, and that's a shame. Eat the right kind of carbs -- the low-glycemic index (GI) kind -- and you'll lose weight and lower both LDL and total cholesterol. Eat the wrong kind and . . . well, your heart suffers the consequences. GI index refers to how quickly starches break down and affect your blood sugar. Opt for low-GI lentils, beans, bran cereal, and high-fiber fruits and veggies to reach your lighter, heart-healthier goals.

Don't be swayed by low-carb diets. You need carbs to supply your body with energy, fiber, B-vitamins, magnesium, and other important nutrients. Completely eliminating carbs from your diet isn't healthy. Instead, go for low-GI carbs, the kind your body digests slowly, to help keep your blood sugar steady. You'll stay full longer, have more consistent energy, and feel better overall.

Researchers recently tested this out with four groups of obese men and women. Each group followed a different diet, but calorie intake was the same (women 1,400 calories a day, men 1,900). The diets varied in their percentage of protein, high-GI carbs, and low-GI carbs. After 12 weeks, all groups lost weight, but the people who got the most calories from low-GI carbs also lowered their LDL and total cholesterol levels. The people in the high protein/fewer carbs (mostly high-GI carbs) group experienced an increase in LDL and total cholesterol levels. Ouch!

Read this study and use this table to look up the GI index of common foods.
RealAge Benefit: Eating 25 grams (38 grams if you are a man under 50) of fiber per day makes your RealAge 2.5 years younger than eating 12 grams of fiber per day.

RealAge Smart Search: Find more information on the glycemic index (GI) with these hand-selected articles.

References Published on 09/20/2006.
Comparison of 4 diets of varying glycemic load on weight loss and cardiovascular risk reduction in overweight and obese young adults: a randomized controlled trial. McMillan-Price, J., Petocz, P., Atkinson, F., O'neill, K., Samman, S., Steinbeck, K., Caterson, I., Brand-Miller, J., Archives of Internal Medicine 2006 Jul 24;166(14):1466-1475.

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Dree1
0 of 0 people found this helpful.
6/27/2008 10:40:29 PM

I can't believe that a site that professes to be so knowledgeable as this one is still glibly talking about "wheat bread" buns without being [Show More]
lmetz32447
4 of 6 people found this helpful.
6/17/2008 5:52:38 AM

This GI table was impossible to discern. We are not doctors. A list of the foods that are GOOD or BAD would have been more helpful without [Show More]
CalleJ
3 of 3 people found this helpful.
6/17/2008 12:45:43 AM

I agree with MLLC that the table is practically impossible to read. A simple list of foods would have been better. I will try LYNND's sugg [Show More]
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