Carrying a spare tire around your belly? You're not alone: Fifty-four
percent of U.S. adults now have abdominal obesity, up from 46 percent
in 2000, according to a recent report in the Journal of the American
Medical Association. If you fall into that category (male abs are
considered fat if the waistline measures more than 40 inches), it's time
to consider cutting down your consumption of these five foods:
1. Refined grains
Not sure what a refined grain is? It's an ingredient
found in foods like white rice, white bread, and regular white pasta.
The unrefined stuff (whole wheat, brown rice and quinoa) is always
healthier. Pennsylvania State University researchers found that people
who ate whole grains in addition to keeping a healthy diet—of fruits,
vegetables, low-fat dairy and protein—lost more weight from the
abdominal area the group of people who kept the same healthy diet but
ate all refined grains.
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2. Potato products
A study published in the New England Journal of
Medicine followed the weight changes of more than 120,000 men and women
for up to 20 years. The participants were checked every four years and,
on average, they gained 3.35 pounds each time—so almost 17 pounds by the
time the study was finished. The foods associated with the greatest
weight gain? You guessed it—potato chips and potatoes.
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3. Red and processed meat
The same 20-year study found that people who ate more
red and processed meat gained weight, too—about one extra pound every
four years. In another study, published in the American Journal of
Clinical Nutrition, researchers worked with more than 370,000 people and
found that folks who ate the equivalent of a small steak a day gained
about five pounds in five years.
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4. Frosting
Those cupcakes your coworker makes for special
occasions? Yeah, don't eat them. While the FDA has basically declared
war on trans fats, store-bought frosting still contains a not-so-healthy
dose of the stuff. How bad can trans fats be? Researchers at Wake
Forest University gave groups of monkeys two different diets; one group
ate trans fats and the other ate unsaturated fats.
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The results: The group eating trans fats upped their
body weight by 7.2 percent in six years and the other only gained 1.8
percent. Not only did the trans fats add new fat, it was also
responsible for moving fat from other areas to the belly. Check for
trans fat in other foods like pre-made baked goods, snack foods, and
frozen pizzas.
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5. Diet soda
It's easy to get fooled by the zero-calorie label,
yet sodas made with sugar substitutes are believed by many to play a
role in weight gain. A new study published this month found that people
who drank diet soda gained almost three times the amount of abdominal
fat over nine years as those who didn't drink the no-cal stuff.
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Sure, that study only looked at adults ages 65 and
older, but consider this: Recent research from the Weizmann Institute of
Science found that mice drinking water with artificial sweeteners
(saccharin, aspartame and sucralose) became vulnerable to insulin
resistance and glucose intolerance—two things known to lead to weight
gain.
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