2019-09-01 Reader\'s Digest

(National Geographic (Little) Kids) #1
Medical School. If you wait too long to
eat between meals, your body thinks
it’s starving and releases the stress hor-
mone cortisol to correct your glucose
levels. “Cortisol will cause the release
of inflammatory substances like cyto-
kines and leukotrienes, which can pro-
duce symptoms of depression and
anxiety,” Dr. Nadkarni explains. Again,
snacking helps you sidestep this trap.
Fasting and meal-skipping, along
with dehydration, are also migraine
triggers. As Dr. Graham explains,
“When the brain is starved of both
sugar and water, it will talk in the form
of a headache.” His prescription? In
addition to drinking water, snacking
on fresh fruit, with its natural sugars,
can help. A small study published in
the Journal of Clinical Neuroscience
also found that snacking at night,
rather than earlier in the day, de-
creases the odds of having a headache
the next day by 40 percent.

A Word of Caution
Except in the case of preventing mi-
graines, researchers generally advise
skipping that midnight snack. People
are more likely to make bad food
choices late at night, which can con-
tribute to weight gain. And studies
show that nighttime snacks increase

problems with blood sugar regulation,
inflammation, cholesterol and tri-
glyceride levels, and cognitive ability.
If you must have a snack at night,
try cottage cheese. A 2018 study pub-
lished in the British Journal of Nutri-
tion found that eating 30 grams of it
30 to 60 minutes before bedtime can

fill you up without making you gain
weight. It can also have a favorable
effect on metabolism and improve
muscle quality and overall health.

The Bottom Line
There are different ways to go about
this whole snacking thing. The one
constant is to choose a healthy, filling
option in an appropriate portion size.
Do that, and the benefits don’t stop at
weight loss and improved health; your
general approach to life might be af-
fected. When you snack mindfully,
says Dr. Nadkarni, “it’s easier to take
a deep breath, focus on exactly what
you’re eating at that moment, and en-
joy the day around you too.”

SNACKING CAN
POSITIVELY AFFECT
YOUR HEALTH.

Occupational Hazard
A bore is a fellow who opens his mouth and puts his feats in it.
henry ford, industrialist

Reader’s Digest How to Snack Your Way to Better Health


22 september 2019 | rd.com

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