Key protein that piles pounds back in yo-yo dieting found

By Rajan | Friday, February 25th, 2011
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Several studies on weight loss have focused on tuning appetite bylaw, but some have delved into the fierce cycle of yo-yo dieting when people shed off weight only to regain it once they dump the austere schedule they were following. Obesity experts believe they can mark which women will be more susceptible to weigh gain after shedding a diet.

The researchers revealed that the protein angiotensin-converting enzyme that controls the blood pressure was markedly related to weight gain post-diet in women. This invention may pave the way for a test that will discover dieters who are susceptible and incapable to sustain their willowy physiques after weight loss.

In order to analyze why some women gain weight post diet, team of experts from eight European countries, examined the blood of nearly one hundred female participants aged twenty to fifty years. Half of the study participants were capable to effectively fend off their weight or lost even more, while remaining regained the weight.

The results of the analysis found that eighty percent of the dieters who piled on pounds after dieting had increased levels of angiotensin-converting enzyme. Though the mechanism behind the protein affecting the dieters is unclear, but experts hypothesize it may be interfering with the hormone that regulate how full you feel and by making the body store extra fat and water.

It was an astounding detection, as up till now there has been no clear association between this protein and obesity. But it seems that it should be possible within a few years to use this finding to develop a test to show who are at high risk of gaining weight back after a diet, explained Lead researchers, Edwin Mariman.

The experts warn that yo-yo dieting brings physiological and psychosomatic health dangers. Recurring speedy weight gain and loss linked to dieting can elevate the risk of death from heart disease, including heart attacks and raises the risk of premature death in general.

Moreover, a history of rapid up and down in weight can weaken the immune system and makes the body more vulnerable to infection. The yo-yo dieting pattern has also been associated with diabetes and strokes. Various dieters identify each ineffective effort to keep weight off as individual collapse. This escorts to erosion of self-worth, misery and even remorse.


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