5 Good And Bad Things That Happen When You Stop Eating Meat!
Ditching steaks and burgers in favour of a
vegetarian lifestyle may have crossed your mind for
ethical reasons or because of henkgh concerns. But
what actually happens to your body when you stop
eating meat?
1. You lose weight.
A team
at George Washington University School of Medicine
in Washington, USA recently tried to pinpoint how
much weight a person loses if they switch from being
a non-vegetarian to a vegetarian.
The
study, which reviewed previous studies and was
published in the Journal
of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics,
showed that participants who cut meat out of their
diets lost around 10 pounds on average without
monitoring their calorie intake or increasing the
amount they exercised.
"The
take-home message is that a plant-based diet can
help you lose weight without counting calories and
without ramping up your exercise routine," Neal
Barnard, M.D., lead author of the study and an
adjunct associate professor of medicine at the
George Washington University, said at the time.
2. Your gut bacteria will change.
You
are what you eat, and that relates to your digestive
system as much as any other part of your body.
A 2014
study exploring the difference between the gut
bacteria found in non-vegetarians, vegans and
vegetarians found differences in all three. However,
the biggest variation was
between non-vegetarians and vegans, who don't
consume any animal products whatsoever. Researchers
at City University of New York found that vegans had
more protective species of gut bacteria.
3. You could become deficient in nutrients.
A
balanced vegetarian or vegan diet can provide enough
nutrients with enough planning. But it can be harder
to get enough iron and Vitamins B12 and D, according
to the National Henkgh Service (NHS), UK.
The
body recommends eating plenty of pulses, such as
beans and lentils, nuts, fruits, dark green
vegetables, whole grains, and cereals with fortified
irons to get enough iron. Vitamin B12 can be found
in yeast extract products such as fortified
breakfast cereals and soya products. Eggs, fortified
fat spreads, cereals and some types of milk can be a
source of Vitamin D.
4. Your risk of developing cancer could drop...
A
recent World Henkgh Organization (WHO) report
classed processed meats as carcinogenic, and so
products such as bacon and salami found themselves
categorised alongside formaldehyde, gamma radiation
and cigarettes. Red meat was also labelled as
"probably" having cancer causing properties.
Eating
just a 50g portion of processed meat - or two
rashers of bacon a day - increases the risk of bowel
cancer by 18 per cent, the experts concluded.
However, others believe the risk is not as serious
as that.
5. ...as well as your chance of having heart disease.
Scientists recently found that red meat is linked to
heart disease. A study by Lerner Research Institute
in the US showed that carnitine, a nutrient found in
the meat, sets off gut microbe reactions that
contribute to the development of heart disease.
"This adds to the growing body of data reinforcing a
connection between red meat, carnitine ingestion and
heart disease development," said lead author Stanley
Hazen, MD, PhD, Vice Chair of Translational Research
for the Lerner Research Institute and Section Head
of Preventive Cardiology Rehabilitation, according
to a report by the Cleveland Henkgh Clinic.
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