There are several university departments around the world devoted to making advances within this novel field, such as the University of California, Berkeley, which defines it as such:
"Metabolic Biology integrates study of metabolism, functions and
interactions of nutrients, phytochemicals and dietary toxins at
molecular, cellular and model organism levels; fosters translation of
knowledge generated in model systems to humans; and incorporates complex
systems approaches to understand control dynamics of
nutritional-metabolic systems."
My fascination with Molecular Biology (MB) owes to the immense difficulties (no pun intended) I faced as an overweight child and adolescent, eventually hacking my own physiology around the age of 15 through dietary modification, increased activity, and uncompromising discipline to lose over 80 lbs.
Now, there's a gigantic (pun STILL not intended) industry focused on encouraging behavioral modification and the consumption of diet products - the so-called Diet Industry - to induce modest weight loss. And it works...sort of. According to a study from the Journal of the American Dietetic Association (Skender, M.L., Goodrick, G.K., & Del Junco, D.J.,
1996), a group of 127 adults engaged in diet; exercise; or both. Let's look at the results after two years:
+ : weight gained
- : weight lost
- Diet only - 2 lbs (+)
- Exercise only - 5 lbs (-)
- Both - 6 lbs (-)
The modern environment contains a cornucopia of factors - many of which are delicious, like good ol' high fructose corn syrup (HFCS) - that contribute to the disregulation of metabolic processes involved in weight maintenance. The imbalances brought on by sleep deprivation, a pro-inflammatory hypercaloric diet, and a sedentary lifestyle come together in a massive storm of metabolic disarray.
The worst part is that the steps we're taking to solve the "modern health crisis" rely upon the willpower and determination of the afflicted. Alas, we are dealing with metabolic disease, not metabolic gluttony or sloth. You don't tell a cancer patient to suck it up and stop metastasizing, just as you shouldn't tell a morbidly obese patient to simply eat less and exercise more.
Biology wins almost every time. Instead of combating biology, work with it; change the underlying factors behind the disorder and the symptoms (e.g., obesity, diabetes, fatigue, atherosclerosis, gut dysbiosis, etc.) dissipate or even disappear.
I will try to keep Green with MB (har har har) focused on metabolic biological studies in general, but my own bias toward addressing the modern health crisis far outweighs (LAST PUN I SWEAR) my desire to keep the blog general. I will focus a lot on metabolic disease and epidemiology, and I will cite my sources. Wikipedia will not be one of those sources, nor will Paleohacks, Low Carb Friends, or your Aunt Macy's dinner table discourse have any say in my reviews and analyses.
Do not diet.
Do not become a caveman.
Do not eat 30 bananas a day.
Review the metabolic biology literature, stay informed, eat a diet that promotes hormonal health and gastrointestinal well-being, and loosen your belt buckle (AHHH I DID IT AGAIN) and relax; your hypercortisolism is showing.
-Matthius
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