Thursday 6 November 2014

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes, Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

source:- Google.com.pk

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Biography

A low-fat diet is one that restricts fat and often saturated fat and cholesterol as well. Low-fat diets are intended to reduce diseases such as heart disease and obesity. Reducing fat in the diet can make it easier to cut calories. Fat provides nine calories per gram while carbohydrates and protein each provide four calories per gram, so choosing low-fat foods makes it possible to eat a larger volume of food for the same number of calories. The Institute of Medicine recommends limiting fat intake to 35% of total calories to help prevent obesity and to help control saturated fat intake.

Evidence

Reducing total fat intake leads to reductions in caloric intake, resulting in weight loss or less weight gain.[2] The overall benefit is small but beneficial.[3] With respect to weight loss low-fat diets do not appear to differ from other diets that also reduce overall calories.[4][5]
Low-fat diets have been promoted for the prevention of heart disease. Lowering fat intake from 35-40% of total calories to 15-20% of total calories has been shown to decrease total and LDL cholesterol by 10 to 20%; however, most of this decrease is due to a reduction in saturate fat intake.[6] Saturated fat has been shown to raise total and LDL cholesterol in a large number of studies[7] and has also been correlated with a higher risk of heart disease.[8] Furthermore, a high-fat diet can contain "unacceptably high" amounts of saturated fat, even if saturated fats from animal products and tropical oils are avoided. This is because all fats contain some saturated fatty acids. For example, if a person chose fats with only 20% saturated fatty acids, setting fat intake at 35% of total calories would mean that 7% of calories would come from saturated fat. For this reason, the Institute of Medicine recommends consuming no more than 35% of calories from fat.[9]
While low-fat diets lower total and LDL cholesterol, a sudden increase in carbohydrate has been "consistently" shown to raise triglycerides.[6] Increasing the carbohydrate content of the diet gradually has been shown to prevent hypertriglyceridemia.[10]

References

Jump up ^ "MyPyramid". USDA. Retrieved April 23, 2011.
Jump up ^ Food and nutrition board, institute of medicine of the national academies (2005). Dietary reference intakes for energy, carbohydrate, fiber, fat, fatty acids, cholesterol, protein, and amino acids (macronutrients). National Academies Press. pp. 774–777.
Jump up ^ Hooper, L; Abdelhamid, A; Moore, HJ; Douthwaite, W; Skeaff, CM; Summerbell, CD (Dec 6, 2012). "Effect of reducing total fat intake on body weight: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials and cohort studies.". BMJ (Clinical research ed.) 345: e7666. PMID 23220130.
Jump up ^ Pirozzo, S; Summerbell, C; Cameron, C; Glasziou, P (2002). "Advice on low-fat diets for obesity.". The Cochrane database of systematic reviews (2): CD003640. PMID 12076496.
Jump up ^ Strychar, I (Jan 3, 2006). "Diet in the management of weight loss.". CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne 174 (1): 56–63. PMID 16389240.
^ Jump up to: a b Lichtenstein AH, Van Horn L. Very low fat diets. Circulation. 1998;98:935–939.
Jump up ^ Food and nutrition board, institute of medicine of the national academies (2005). Dietary reference intakes for energy, carbohydrate, fiber, fat, fatty acids, cholesterol, protein, and amino acids (macronutrients). National Academies Press. p. 482.
Jump up ^ Food and nutrition board, institute of medicine of the national academies (2005). Dietary reference intakes for energy, carbohydrate, fiber, fat, fatty acids, cholesterol, protein, and amino acids (macronutrients). National Academies Press. p. 483.
Jump up ^ Food and nutrition board, institute of medicine of the national academies (2005). Dietary reference intakes for energy, carbohydrate, fiber, fat, fatty acids, cholesterol, protein, and amino acids (macronutrients). National Academies Press. p. 799.
Jump up ^ Ullmann D, Connor WE, Hatcher LF, Connor SL, Flavell DP. Will a high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet lower plasma lipids and lipoproteins without producing hypertriglyceridemia?

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

Low Fat Vegetable Recipes Vegetable Recipes in Urdu Indian Chinese Phlippines Pakistani Pinterest Without Oil Pinoy Style Panlasang Pinoy

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