Do ultra-processed food (UPF) and environmental chemicals from fertilizers, insecticides, plastics and air pollutants raise the global burden of obesity?
Eating ultra-processed food (UPF) coupled with thousands of potential environmental toxins derived from fertilizers, insecticides, plastics and air pollutants can make obesity even more dangerous, finds a new study. Obesity has almost //tripled since 1975 worldwide, reports World Health Organization (WHO). Numerous causes of obesity have been hypothesized including increased dietary fat, carbohydrate or ultra-processed food (UPF) consumption, physical inactivity, hyperlipidemia and hyperinsulinemia.
‘Watch out: Obesogens can be the big villian to human health. #Obesity #ObesityandEnvironmentalChemicals #WeightGain #ultra-processedfoodandobesity’
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Based on these hypotheses, solutions have been sought that involved decreasing consumption of suspected agents. Well-controlled studies have shown that increased consumption of UPF is associated with increased food consumption and weight gain (1✔ ✔Trusted SourceRead More..
Consumption of ultra-processed foods associated with weight gain and obesity in adults: A multi-national cohort study
Go to source) while decreasing UPF consumption in the same subjects was associated with weight loss. However, these studies do not identify a specific cause of obesity since the diets include multiple variables.
In a new perspective, Barbara E. Corkey, PhD, professor emeritus of medicine and biochemistry at Boston University Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, presents an alternative testable and actionable hypothesis/model about the cause of obesity. If validated, it could indicate clear steps to reverse obesity.
Humans vary in the efficiency with which they burn and store nutrients in response to overeating. Some people waste more energy when they overeat and store less. Those individuals tend not to gain weight easily. Humans also vary in their reaction to food deprivation. Some conserve energy better than others and when they diet, they don’t lose weight easily. “These are normal variations and we are each a bit different, due to genetics, but we respond to the same signals,” said Corkey.
Obesogens Create a Tug of War Between Environment, Obesity and Human Health
Her hypothesis postulates that obesogens (certain chemical compounds that are hypothesized to disrupt normal development and the balance of lipid metabolism) which have entered the environment in the last 50 years, generate misinformation in our bodies, such as inappropriate insulin secretion or hunger, that lead to obesity. Obesogens, she believes, can generate changes in redox state (a normal signal of either excess or the need for energy) that are unrelated to energy needs but falsely stimulate hunger or fuel storage when not neededObesity and Ultra-processed Foods: A Dangerous Combination
“The increasing incidence of obesity correlates with heightened consumption of UPF along with thousands of potential environmental toxins including some derived from fertilizers, insecticides, plastics and air pollutants. Identifying these agents would allow us to remove them or inhibit their ability to generate misinformation,” said Corkey.Corkey’s model, if validated, could impact many if not all obesity-related diseases. Her paper examines readily available ways to test her model. She believes the best outcome from this work would be identification of obesogens and their removal. The second best outcome would be treatments that block their effect on the body’s normal regulatory mechanisms for insulin secretions.
These findings are published by the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B (2✔ ✔Trusted Source
Reactive Oxygen Species: Role in Obesity and Mitochondrial Energy Efficiency
Go to source).
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- Consumption of ultra-processed foods associated with weight gain and obesity in adults: A multi-national cohort study - (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34455267/)
- Reactive Oxygen Species: Role in Obesity and Mitochondrial Energy Efficiency - (https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rstb.2022.0210)
Source-Eurekalert