Il cibo per la vita

Our physical and mental well-being are directly linked to what we eat and drink. The nutritional content of what we eat determines the composition of our cell membranes, bone marrow, blood, hormones, tissues, organs, skin, and hair. Lifestyle and nutrition of the humankind has undergone substantial...

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Main Authors: David Mariani, Alessandro Capitanini
Format: Article
Language:Italian
Published: AboutScience Srl 2019-07-01
Series:Giornale di Clinica Nefrologia e Dialisi
Online Access:https://journals.aboutscience.eu/index.php/gcnd/article/view/526
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spelling doaj-d4a55479bb8f436a8471e0e15375b2f82021-02-03T08:09:30ZitaAboutScience SrlGiornale di Clinica Nefrologia e Dialisi2705-00762019-07-0131310.33393/gcnd.2019.526Il cibo per la vitaDavid MarianiAlessandro Capitanini Our physical and mental well-being are directly linked to what we eat and drink. The nutritional content of what we eat determines the composition of our cell membranes, bone marrow, blood, hormones, tissues, organs, skin, and hair. Lifestyle and nutrition of the humankind has undergone substantial changes during the last century. Additives and processed food have become the basis of our nutrition. Ingredients such as salt, sugar and fat are sometimes added to processed foods to make their flavour more appealing and to extend their shelf life. When the processed food industry discovered that these ingredients could be formulated to produce a state of satiety, pleasure, and sensory hedonia in those who consumed them, it extended their use to the “bliss point”, the point where the levels of saltiness, sweetness, and richness were perceived by the consumer as just right. Such modified foods can dysregulate the brain’s food reward system by increasing dopamine production, thus making the foods addictive. It is not easy to avoid these foods: the only way is to eat mainly fresh or only lightly processed foods (such as canned tomatoes and frozen vegetables). It is helpful to know which foods are healthy and what you can do to ensure you eat the healthiest diet you can. Combining a variety of foods, eating regular meals, including wholegrains, fibres, fruit, vegetables and “healthy fats”, and limiting the amount of sugar, salt and fat you eat are all recommended for good nutrition. (Healthy_habits) https://journals.aboutscience.eu/index.php/gcnd/article/view/526
collection DOAJ
language Italian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Mariani
Alessandro Capitanini
spellingShingle David Mariani
Alessandro Capitanini
Il cibo per la vita
Giornale di Clinica Nefrologia e Dialisi
author_facet David Mariani
Alessandro Capitanini
author_sort David Mariani
title Il cibo per la vita
title_short Il cibo per la vita
title_full Il cibo per la vita
title_fullStr Il cibo per la vita
title_full_unstemmed Il cibo per la vita
title_sort il cibo per la vita
publisher AboutScience Srl
series Giornale di Clinica Nefrologia e Dialisi
issn 2705-0076
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Our physical and mental well-being are directly linked to what we eat and drink. The nutritional content of what we eat determines the composition of our cell membranes, bone marrow, blood, hormones, tissues, organs, skin, and hair. Lifestyle and nutrition of the humankind has undergone substantial changes during the last century. Additives and processed food have become the basis of our nutrition. Ingredients such as salt, sugar and fat are sometimes added to processed foods to make their flavour more appealing and to extend their shelf life. When the processed food industry discovered that these ingredients could be formulated to produce a state of satiety, pleasure, and sensory hedonia in those who consumed them, it extended their use to the “bliss point”, the point where the levels of saltiness, sweetness, and richness were perceived by the consumer as just right. Such modified foods can dysregulate the brain’s food reward system by increasing dopamine production, thus making the foods addictive. It is not easy to avoid these foods: the only way is to eat mainly fresh or only lightly processed foods (such as canned tomatoes and frozen vegetables). It is helpful to know which foods are healthy and what you can do to ensure you eat the healthiest diet you can. Combining a variety of foods, eating regular meals, including wholegrains, fibres, fruit, vegetables and “healthy fats”, and limiting the amount of sugar, salt and fat you eat are all recommended for good nutrition. (Healthy_habits)
url https://journals.aboutscience.eu/index.php/gcnd/article/view/526
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