Monday 26 February 2018

Lamb Burgers


Ingredients
1⁄3 cup pine nuts
1 pound ground lamb
1 egg
1⁄3 cup raisins
1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
4 ciabatta rolls
Fresh arugula
Feta yogurt sauce (optional)
Directions
  1. Combine all the ingredients except the rolls, arugula and yogurt sauce. Mix gently.
  2. Shape into 4 patties.
  3. Grill or cook in a skillet 4 minutes per side.
  4. Serve on rolls with fresh arugula and feta yogurt sauce.
Nutrition Information
Serves 4 (Serving size: 1 burger)
Calories 519; Total fat 26g; Sat. fat 8g; Chol . 124mg; Sodium 615mg; Carb . 46g; Fiber 2g; Sugars 10g; Protein 29g; Potassium N/A; Phosphorous N/A

Ginger-Teriyaki BBQ Chicken Meatballs


Ingredients
Meatballs
2 pounds 98-percent fat-free ground chicken
1 egg
1 tablespoon fresh ground ginger (or ginger paste)
1 teaspoon garlic powder
Ground pepper
Olive oil spray
Sauce
1 6-ounce can tomato paste
1/2 cup teriyaki sauce
1/2 cup apple cider vinegar
1⁄3 cup brown sugar
1 teaspoon ground ginger, dried
Directions
  1. Preheat the oven to 400°F.
  2. Spray 2 large 9×11-inch Pyrex pans with olive oil.
  3. To make the meatballs, combine the ground chicken, egg, ground ginger, garlic powder and ground pepper in a large mixing bowl. Evenly mix the ingredients together. Create 30 meatballs each the size of a table tennis ball.
  4. Place meatballs in the pans, spacing them evenly. Cover the pans with foil and bake for 15 minutes.
  5. Remove foil and bake for another 15 minutes until meatballs are slightly browned and have an internal temperature of 165°F.
  6. Meanwhile, combine all of the sauce ingredients in the slow cooker. Add the cooked meatballs and coat evenly with sauce. Cover and cook on high for 1 to 1½ hours until meatballs are fully glazed.
  7. Serve meatballs as an appetizer on their own, or serve on a whole wheat hoagie roll.
Nutrition Information
Serves 15 (Serving size: 2 meatballs)
Calories 110; Total fat 2g; Sat. fat 1g; Chol . 46mg; Sodium 493mg; Carb . 9g; Fiber 1g; Sugars 8g; Protein 14g; Potassium 263mg; Phosphorous 123mg

A Dietitian’s Dream: Healthy Fried Food



Fried foods traditionally have been limited in healthy dietary patterns. But when you use small amounts of healthy unsaturated oils and the technology of an air fryer, fried foods can be back on the menu.

I tested the Philips Viva Collection Airfryer, equipped with “TurboStar” rapid-air technology that functions similar to a convection oven. The fryer’s air speed is what allows foods to cook quickly and crisply with minimal fat.  The fryer is easy to use and comes with a basket and rack, which are both dishwasher safe for easy cleanup. However, the bottom of the fryer, where fat collects, requires cleaning by hand.

Additional accessories are available that can turn the fryer into an oven or a grill pan, and a free app provides a wealth of information including tips for use, shopping lists and recipes. I was struck by the large size of the product, weighing about 12.8 pounds and roughly the size of a coffee maker.

Testing the Fryer
I experimented with chicken wings, Southern-fried chicken tenders, bacon and vegetables, including fresh and frozen potatoes. No preheating was necessary — a simple spritz of oil on the rack and the food was all it took to get started with the fried foods. My best results were with the vegetables.

I quickly learned that the trick to achieving fried foods that are crunchy on the outside yet still tender on the inside is not overcrowding the basket. Philips claims the fryer can be used to prepare food for a family of four, but my best results came when I used amounts to feed one to two people. When the basket was overloaded, despite shaking and turning the food, it resulted in foods that either did not brown or were overcooked to achieved proper browning, and wet-battered foods tended to stick to the rack even when both the food and rack were sprayed with oil. An additional double-layer rack can be purchased to double the basket’s capacity.

Bottom Line
If counter or pantry storage space is not an issue, the Philips fryer is a fun investment. It’s a bonus that this product can multitask for those living without a full kitchen, such as college students. The sweet spot for me was enjoying guilt-free French fries. Although other vegetables were delicious, I’ve achieved similar results with minimal oil and oven-roasting at high temperatures.

Sunday 25 February 2018

Fine-Tuning the Front End




Grocery shopping. Love it or hate it, one aspect of shopping that few people relish is waiting in line to pay. But change could be coming to the checkout experience, making stores' "front end" more enjoyable for shoppers and profitable for retailers — and a prime opportunity to promote good nutrition.
According to industry experts, several factors converge at the front end that cause consumers distress: After browsing the aisles and selecting their items, shoppers head to the checkout area to unload groceries onto a conveyer belt and part with their money — stressful tasks for some shoppers. A long line can foster feelings of boredom and frustration.
"Checkout is the most dreaded part of the shopping trip, and waiting simply exacerbates the problem," says Steve Zoellner, director of Shopper Merchandising Solutions at Mondelēz International. When there's a wait, shoppers go into "coping mode," often choosing to distract themselves with their mobile phones, for example.
Adding to shoppers' already negative feelings are cluttered displays of product selections they don't need or that aren't complementary. (Have you ever wondered why the lint rollers are hanging between the pantyhose and flashlight keychains?)
The checkout area is the retailer's last chance to make one more sale, so it's to their advantage for the front end to be inviting and encourage "impulse purchases." But only 18 percent of shoppers purchase an item from the checkout area, according to the 2014 Front-End Focus research study. Rather, 84 percent of consumers say looking at products at the checkout counter just gives them something to do while waiting in line, and 66 percent believe items at checkout are unnecessary purchases.
With the right product selection, the checkout area could be a significant source of impulse purchases — perhaps as a little treat for completing a shopping trip. Beverages, confectionery (such as candy, gum and mints) and magazines are considered "power categories" because they generate more than 90 percent of impulse sales at checkout.
They may be small-ticket items, but increasing checkout purchases by just 1 percent could boost a store's average front-end sales by nearly $300 per week, or about $15,350 annually. This sales lift is no small increase in an industry with razor-thin profit margins: In 2013, the average net profit for supermarkets was just 1.3 percent, according to the Food Marketing Institute.
Understanding that power categories dominate at checkout, some supermarkets are devoting lanes to health-focused items. An example is Hy-Vee, which operates more than 230 retail stores in the Midwest. Most stores feature at least one "Healthy Bites" checkout lane with a wide selection of "better-for-you" impulse items.
The Sycamore, Ill., location has two Healthy Bites lanes, says Hy-Vee dietitian Lisa Brandt, RDN, LDN. The lanes are stocked with fresh apples and bananas, fruit-and-nut bars, small packages of nuts and trail mix, fruit leather and "all-natural" peanut butter, and single-serving bags of multigrain chips, popcorn and crackers. Healthy Bites coolers are stocked with plain, sparkling and coconut waters, unsweetened teas and 100-percent fruit juice boxes.
"Moms especially like giving their kids a treat they can feel good about," says Brandt, adding that Hy-Vee shoppers appreciate the convenience and wholesomeness of Healthy Bites offerings.
Earlier this year, Elisabeth D'Alto, RD, LDN, a dietitian with East Coast retailer ShopRite, began pilot-testing more nutritious offerings at two checkout lanes at her store in Lutherville-Timonium, Md. The lanes are stocked with fresh fruit, nuts, bars, baked chips and popcorn, plus an endcap cooler with plain bottled water. More offbeat offerings include dry-roasted edamame with goji berries, single-serving packages of water-packed tuna with crackers, and dark chocolate-covered berries. D'Alto makes sure the lanes feature gluten-free, dairy-free, reduced-sodium and reduced-sugar selections, as well.
The pilot test came about after talking with shoppers and store associates during tours and nutrition consultations. "I see a lot of seniors, millennials and moms with kids who need or want to get healthier," D'Alto says. "I wanted to see how we might generate buzz around checkout with these offerings." She is encouraged by positive feedback, and if the lanes become permanent, D'Alto hopes to add non-food items such as exercise bands, water bottles and containers for packing nutritious lunches.
Meanwhile, innovations and new offerings may make checking out the most fun part of a shopping trip. Research that observes shopper behavior suggests several tactics to enhance the experience:
  • Look for opportunities to go high-tech, such as engaging shoppers through touchscreens to interact with product-related content.
  • Remove extra displays that block shoppers' movements and clutter their views of prime impulse products.
  • Create a cohesive experience with harmonious signs and product assortments.
"We need to improve the traffic flow and make it easier for shoppers to navigate the checkout area," says Zoellner. "The front end can be a unique and inviting shopping destination."

How Ethiopia Safeguards Its Native Ancient Grain

Visit any Ethiopian restaurant, and you’re bound to receive a generous serving of injera, a spongy, fermented flatbread commonly found in Ethiopian cuisine.

Increasing in global popularity due to the expanding diaspora and interest in ethnic cuisines, injera is arguably one of the most recognizable African foods on the international scene. Each day, thousands of ready-made pieces are exported from Ethiopia to expats and restaurateurs in the United States, Europe and other African countries. However, it is teff — the grain from which injera is made — that is making ripples in the international health food arena and poised to rival quinoa as the top healthy ancient grain.

Grown by both smallholder and commercial farmers in Ethiopia and some parts of Eritrea, teff is a relatively low-risk, sustainable grain that thrives in both wet sands and dry desert conditions. A staple in many Africans' diets, wholegrain teff is an essential source of calcium, fiber, protein and iron.

While the international food market recognizes whole-grain teff as a nutrient powerhouse, its versatility as a gluten-free grain has piqued the interest of foodies and fostered its expansion beyond East Africa. Recipes using teff as a nontraditional substitute for wheat range from gluten-free pasta and bread to cookies and porridge, and to thicken soups or add texture to salads.



In 2006, years before the rise of quinoa, the Ethiopian government sought to improve domestic food security in a country that, years before, had been plagued by severe famine. It placed an embargo on the exportation of teff grain and teff flour, both which played an important role in overall diet quality. Only cooked teff products (such as injera) could be exported. Despite the ban, traditional practices of growing teff could not meet the demands of the growing population and prices continued to increase.

Although Ethiopia is the largest producer by volume, the embargo has prevented the country from benefitting from the international teff trend, and most of the teff found in U.S. stores is from non-indigenous sources, such as U.S., India, Canada and the Netherlands.

Recognizing the opportunities teff can bring and to obtain much needed foreign currency to improve the overall infrastructure of the country and advance traditional farming procedures, the Ethiopian government lifted the embargo and implemented a pilot program to export teff. The first shipments of Ethiopian teff are projected to begin in January 2016.

In order to safeguard the grain for locals, the pilot will start with 48 commercial farmers commissioned to grow the crop while adhering to strict international standards. Once harvested and milled, the entire product from these farms is projected to represent less than 1 percent of the country’s overall teff production.

The remaining teff will continue to be made available to Ethiopians. Outside of commissioned farms, the ban on teff exportation will continue. As the pilot proceeds and overall teff production improves, the country plans to gradually increase the allotment for exports.

Is Gluten-Sensitivity Real? New Research Causes New Thinking



Gluten-free diets have become one of the hottest approaches to a long list of health ailments and weight loss. An ongoing debate asks whether gluten sensitivity truly exists or if it is a media-driven fad, pandering to hypochondriacs and dieters, and boosting sales of gluten-free products.

The answers may not be so clear-cut. Historically, gluten was thought to pose problems only for the 1 percent to 2 percent of the population who suffer from autoimmune celiac disease, for which the cornerstone of treatment is a strict gluten-free diet. But emerging research suggests there is a spectrum of non-celiac gluten-related disorders that improve when gluten is removed from the diet.

"Celiac-Lite"
For years, gastroenterologists and researchers have been trying to understand the role of gluten in non-celiac conditions. In 2012, celiac researchers coined the term "non-celiac gluten sensitivity," or NCGS, for individuals who present with symptoms similar to celiac disease and say they feel better on a gluten-free diet. "Roughly 6 percent of the population suffers from NCGS, which pre NCGS, which presents as a trigger to gluten with a possible presence of gluten immune-reaction," says Alessio Fassano, MD, director of the Center for Celiac Research at MassGeneral Hospital for Children in Boston.

Sometimes referred to as "celiac-lite," NCGS is a form of gluten intolerance that does not meet diagnostic criteria for celiac disease or other related conditions, such as wheat allergy, and does not cause inflammation or damage to the small intestine. NCGS is a rapidly growing diagnosis, despite not having an established definition and being a controversial topic that is not well-understood.

"Gluten sensitivity is an understudied area that appears to be a gluten-induced activation of an innate, rather than adaptive, immune-mediated reaction to gluten that does not always occur in the same way when eating gluten," Fassano says.

Variability among patients, the lack of definitive biomarkers and inconclusive studies have hindered progress in identifying NCGS. However, a few studies have offered some insight into the condition. A small Australian study published in 2011 was among the first to show gluten could induce symptoms in non-celiac patients. A well-conducted study using a double-blind, placebo-controlled design found NCGS exists in specific clinical conditions, including 5 percent to 20 percent due to irritable bowel syndrome.

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health recently published a study corroborating these findings. The study population consisted of a group of 59 participants who believed they suffered from NCGS. They were given less than 5 grams of gluten or a placebo in pill form for one week. Participants taking the gluten pills reported a significant difference in symptoms compared to those taking placebo pills after just one week.

However, research published in 2013 suggests that gluten alone may not be responsible for the symptoms. The same Australian researchers conducted a follow-up study that challenged the findings of their earlier study. Only 8 percent of the participants improved on gluten-free diets, yet all of the participants had significant improvements on a low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols, or FODMAP, diet. These results indicate the possibility that the positive effect was due to removing FODMAPs — not gluten.

Detecting Gluten Sensitivity
Sensitivity to gluten appears to occur at any age and to people who have previously tolerated gluten. "Gluten triggers a biological response in everyone, yet not everyone gets sick when eating gluten," Fassano says. Without biomarkers to confirm NCGS, it is considered a diagnosis of exclusion. The only way to identify NCGS is to rule out other related conditions and demonstrate both improvement when gluten is removed and recurrence of symptoms when gluten is reintroduced.

Celiac disease is a serious condition that must be ruled out first, after which other potential causes within the spectrum of gluten-related disorders should be considered. A diagnosis of NCGS can only be made when celiac disease and other related conditions are adequately excluded. Testing for celiac disease requires a celiac blood test and biopsy samples from multiple areas of the intestine, including the duodenal bulb. Consumption of gluten is essential for accurate results. Going on a gluten-free diet beforehand can mask the results of the tests and result in an inaccurate diagnosis, which many experts suspect is why celiac disease is dramatically underdiagnosed.

NCGS is a condition typically characterized by gastrointestinal symptoms (diarrhea, abdominal discomfort, pain, bloating and flatulence) or extraintestinal symptoms (fatigue, headache, brain fog and lethargy) that occur after gluten ingestion and improve after gluten is removed from the diet. Undigested gluten can act like a foreign invader, irritating the gut and the microvilli within the intestine, leading to decreased absorption of nutrients.

“Celiac disease can be a challenge to diagnose, with up to 50 percent of people presenting without any gastroenterology symptoms,” says Shelley Case, RD, author of Gluten-Free Diet: A Comprehensive Resource Guide (9th edition due in fall 2015, self-published). Many patients present with anemia due to reduced iron absorption.”

Non-Celiac Gluten-Related Disorders
Only a fraction of the patients who report NCGS have a gluten-related condition. When it is not celiac disease or NCGS, experts consider FODMAP intolerance. Fermentable sugars may be poorly digested in some people, causing discomfort, gas and bloating — symptoms similar to those of NCGS and other gastrointestinal conditions. Food intolerance occurs either when the body lacks a particular enzyme needed to digest nutrients, nutrients are too abundant to be completely digested or a particular nutrient cannot be properly digested.

Following a low-FODMAP diet can be more challenging than a gluten-free diet and requires the guidance of a registered dietitian nutritionist. The elimination diet limits fructose (fruits and vegetables), lactose (dairy), fructans (wheat, rye barley, onions, garlic and leeks, for example), galactans (some legumes, broccoli and cabbage) and polyols (types of sugars). Most people with a FODMAP intolerance are able to identify which foods are problematic and gradually add back the ones that are well-tolerated.

Since fructans include the gluten-containing grains wheat, rye and barley, people intolerant to FODMAPs show some signs of improvement on a gluten-free diet, but it may only be temporary. A hydrogen breath test is an effective diagnostic tool used to help distinguish food intolerances from NCGS.

A wheat allergy, which affects less than 1 percent of adults in the U.S., is another cause of these problematic symptoms. Food allergies are very specific immune system responses involving either the immunoglobulin E, or IgE, antibody or T-cells reacting to a particular food protein. Wheat allergy differs from celiac disease and NCGS, and therefore the body reacts differently.

An allergic immune response to wheat can lead to a variety of symptoms, including swelling, itching, skin rash, nasal congestion and tingling or burning of the mouth. People with wheat allergies are allergic to a wheat protein, not necessarily gluten, and can tolerate gluten-containing barley and rye.

Many people feel better when they remove gluten, but it may not be due to a specific food allergy or intolerance. "The number of people going gluten-free vastly outnumbers the number of people who truly have a biological problem tolerating gluten,” says Mayo Clinic gastroenterologist Joseph Murray, MD. “Some people feel better when gluten is eliminated for many reasons — including the placebo effect, they eat less, their diet is healthier, they believe it is better for them — and when they return to their old diets, they start feeling bad.”

Potential Causes for Gluten Sensitivity
There is no evidence indicating an increase in gluten sensitivity over the last 35 years, but rather a lot of media attention, Murray says. The prevalence of NCGS in the general population is unknown, largely because many people are self-diagnosing and adopting a gluten-free diet without medical advice or consultation. NCGS does not appear to be genetically based, unlike celiac disease, which has a fairly well-established pathogenesis. The cause of NCGS is not well-understood and may be different for individual patients. It has been hypothesized that symptoms may be a result of impaired intestinal mucosa barrier function or related to an innate immune response to gluten. Whether it is actually the gluten or a component in the grain that is responsible for the symptoms remains under scrutiny.

“New varieties of wheat, wheat hybridization and quality of grains that have been introduced over the past 40 years have been ruled out as causing an increase in the condition,” Fassano says. “Individuals may be predisposed to NCGS. It does not appear to be related to the timing of introduction of grains, nor does breastfeeding appear to be protective.”

In an attempt to unscramble the gluten puzzle, emerging research takes a closer look at how the microbiome may be affected by genetics, the environment and the immune system. The microbiome, a community of microorganisms in the human digestive tract housing good and bad bacteria, has been of particular interest in recent research. (Even Hippocrates believed that all diseases begin in the gut.) The microbiome is inherited from the mother, is extremely dynamic, varies among individuals and changes in the same individual over time.

Beyond genetics, nutrition is one of the most influential factors in the microbiome that may offer protection. “Babies born vaginally, consuming balanced diets and with minimal infections and antibiotics in the first few years of life establish a healthy gut and microbiome that is protective and likely lowers risk for developing diseases,” Fassano says. “On the other hand, when the microbiome is trained inappropriately, the risk for disease is greater and may be a secondary factor explaining NCGS.”

Why RDNs Are Fundamental to Success
NCGS is a growing problem encountered in clinical practice, yet is difficult to diagnosis and a challenge to manage in the absence of diagnostic markers. Whether gluten removal, wheat exclusion or a low-FODMAP diet, a carefully executed process of trial and error is required with elimination diet plans. Food diaries, in which clients record everything they eat and drink and any symptoms that follow, are especially helpful.

However, relying on what people report or anecdotal observations are subjective and open to misinterpretation. “Double-blind food challenges are the most accurate way to determine NCGS,” Murray says. No evidence-based guidelines exist for reintroduction of gluten-containing foods; it is dependent upon the level of sensitivity. Reintroducing gluten is best done when the patient feels better and with simple foods, such as matzo or soda crackers, which are pure wheat.

Gluten reintroduction is a risk-versus-benefit decision and should be highly individualized to the patient. “Unlike celiac disease, there is no damage to the small intestine, so consuming small amounts of gluten goes without incident,” Murray says. When removing gluten is effective, there could be a threshold of tolerance that allows some gluten in the diet. When it is ineffective, Case recommends trying a low-FODMAP diet.

RDNs may have been skeptical about NCGS initially, but it has proven to be an excellent opportunity to assume a leadership role in the diagnosis and care of patients. “Asking the right questions, doing a detailed diet history and overseeing gluten elimination and challenges are where dietitians can play an essential role,” Case says. “Dietitians are having great success treating NCGS patients, and unless we embrace and treat these conditions, patients will seek alternative practitioners.”

What Exactly Is Yacón Syrup?


The South American yacón plant is often cultivated for its edible root, which can be juiced and evaporated to produce a syrup. The high fructooligosaccharide content of yacón root has drawn recent attention. A type of soluble fiber, fructooligosaccharide functions as a prebiotic, feeding beneficial bacteria in the gut.

Research has found that it may improve blood lipids, prevent constipation and improve absorption of minerals, such as calcium and magnesium. Fructooligosaccharide has potential to regulate blood glucose levels, especially for individuals with diabetes.

However, few studies have examined the effects of yacón syrup on humans. One study on obese women without diabetes found that when consuming yacón syrup before meals for 120 days, participants experienced a significant reduction in body weight, BMI, waist circumference, serum insulin and LDL cholesterol, and a significant increase in frequency of defecation. Glucose levels did not change significantly. More research is needed on yacón syrup as a supplement for individuals with diabetes, and currently, there is insufficient evidence to promote its use as a weight-loss aid.

A Global Mission for Nutrition Education




From emergency relief posts to missions organized by faith-based organizations, the dietetics community is no stranger to international volunteerism — and the expertise and skill sets of registered dietitian nutritionists often make them unique assets on these initiatives. Yet RDNs and other practitioners face a major challenge working in developing nations: a lack of appropriate nutrition education aids.

"In searching through catalogues of nutrition education materials, I found they depicted foods, people and settings that these [overseas communities] have never seen," says Dixie Havlak, RD, who has worked in rural Nicaragua and Honduras. "It takes months to put together information, and that makes people think twice about going overseas and doing work."

In countries where people may not have a very sophisticated understanding of science and most local community nutrition workers have little training or poor access to education materials, health practitioners must go back to basics. Visual aids that meet the needs of minimally literate people are especially important, Havlak stresses.

"In the U.S., most people know we get nutrients from food. But some cultures may not even have a word for that," she says. "We have to go back to the very fundamentals of nutrition, health care and how the body works."

Culturally appropriate and effective education aids not only support volunteers, but also the efforts of practitioners whose careers are with government agencies, NGOs or military services. "Before and after my journeys in Central America, I often met other people going down there — dietitians, nurses and medical teams who commonly teach about nutrition and health issues — who had to throw together health education materials at the last minute," Havlak says. "That seems really inefficient."

To help close the gap and support international nutrition education, the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics has launched a pilot project to develop a collection of free resources for health practitioners working in developing countries. Made possible through funding from the Academy Foundation through the Wimpfheimer-Guggenheim Fund for International Exchange in Nutrition, Dietetics and Management, the first phase of the collection will focus on Central America.

All RDNs, registered nurses, pediatricians, family practitioners, physician assistants and other public health workers with field experience in this region are invited to take an online survey to assess needs for materials and tools that could aid in international medical missions and humanitarian assistance efforts. Respondents also can submit examples of materials (handouts, posters, visual aids) they have developed or used in nutrition education efforts.

"When we can share materials, we improve our ability to serve the developing world and make it easier for more practitioners to volunteer," Havlak says. "Many people on the ground are desperate for material, and we can help them facilitate understanding of health issues and improve the ability to communicate that with the people they serve."

To share your ideas and experiences, visit sm.foodnutrimag.org/intsurvey or email IRproject@eatright.org. Resources will be available mid-2016 on eatrightPRO.org.

Saturday 24 February 2018

How the Latest Research May Shed Light on Serum Cholesterol


It was such a simple sound bite: Know your number and know your risk. When research emerged in the 1980s implicating dietary and serum cholesterol in the development of heart disease, cholesterol became the nutrient that everybody loved to hate.

Over time, science slowly moved the needle away from this mindset. “Good” and “bad” serum cholesterol were delineated, and more recently, studies determined that eating cholesterol-rich foods didn’t actually increase serum cholesterol like we once thought. And while some still maintain that lower total serum cholesterol is always best, more recent research challenges the validity of measuring cholesterol as a singular marker of cardiovascular health. So where does the medical community stand now on serum cholesterol?

What is Cholesterol?
First, a refresher. Manufactured by the liver, cholesterol’s functions extend well beyond the cardiovascular system. It’s the structural backbone to sex hormones, including testosterone, estrogen and progesterone (in addition to the adrenal hormone cortisol), and is crucial to brain function, both as part of myelin sheath structure and its role in nerve impulse conductivity. Because it is required to synthesize vitamin D from sun exposure, cholesterol is relevant to the immune and skeletal systems. And in cell membranes, cholesterol provides structural support and may also act as an antioxidant.

There’s even evidence that cholesterol may play a role in protecting against bacterial and parasitic infection.

Serum cholesterol travels through the blood stream within lipoproteins, of which the two most abundant are low-density lipoprotein and high-density lipoprotein. LDL carries cholesterol from the liver to peripheral tissues, while HDL carries cholesterol back to the liver for excretion or recycling. Routine cholesterol panels typically include total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and triglycerides. LDL and HDL cholesterol levels measure the amount of cholesterol carried in these lipoproteins, and many health professionals rely on these figures to gauge risk for cardiovascular and coronary artery disease.

What if "Normal" Does Not Equal "Healthy"?
This is where it gets interesting. Studies have found that up to 75 percent of patients hospitalized for heart attacks had normal to optimal serum LDL levels, and in 2013, revised guidelines from the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology removed LDL cholesterol target levels and recommended that doctors not prescribe cholesterol-lowering medication based on cholesterol levels alone — a significant departure from long-held advice.

The key to understanding LDL cholesterol’s risks and rewards may lie in the size and density of its particles, which range from large, buoyant, cholesterol-rich particles to small, dense particles low in lipids. Since everyone has a mix of different types of LDL particles at any given time, some practitioners are testing for serum cholesterol “phenotype” patterns to discern composition (see sidebar).

Pattern A describes having mostly large, more buoyant LDL particles and is linked with good cardiovascular health, while pattern B refers to having mostly smaller, more dense LDL particles that are more prone to oxidation — and therefore associated with greater risk of atherosclerosis and higher overall cardiovascular disease risk. So whereas a person with low triglycerides, high HDL cholesterol and slightly elevated total and LDL cholesterol with pattern A phenotype (big, buoyant particles) may not be at increased risk for atherosclerosis or cardiovascular disease, a person with low to normal HDL cholesterol and normal total and LDL cholesterol levels with pattern B phenotype (small, dense particles) may indeed be at increased risk.

LDL particle size and density are influenced by genetics, diet and body weight — and dietary interventions have demonstrated measurable effects. More long-term studies are needed to help shape recommendations, but some researchers are exploring the effect of diet and weight loss on LDL patterns.

While the mechanisms are not yet understood, they include:

Higher intakes of saturated fat may increase large, buoyant LDL particles.
Reducing carbohydrates may reduce small, dense LDL particles.
Reducing dietary fat may reduce total LDL cholesterol, but specifically lowers large, buoyant particles.
Weight loss has been shown to improve LDL patterns in overweight men.
A high-carbohydrate, low-fat diet has been shown to shift study participants from pattern A to pattern B.
Study participants who started out as pattern B on a high-fat diet remained pattern B on a low-fat diet.
Although the clinical value of measuring LDL patterns remains hotly debated, many agree that more research is warranted since findings potentially could change the landscape surrounding serum cholesterol. In the meantime, staying up to date on emerging research and new practices is advice that any practitioner can get behind.

Why the Low-FODMAP Diet Is a Growing Dietitian-Led Treatment for People with IBS


Irritable bowel syndrome is a complex digestive condition that interferes with the daily lives of millions of people worldwide. Typically occurring in episodes, the condition is characterized by symptoms such as moderate to intense abdominal pain, bloating and gas. This set of digestive symptoms is not unique to IBS; therefore, to accurately diagnose the condition, health care professionals must rule out other issues such as celiac disease, small intestinal bacterial overgrowth and food allergies.

While diet does not cause IBS, individualized nutrition therapy can significantly lessen symptoms Tweet this through identification and restriction of trigger foods. Fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols, or FODMAPs, have been identified as a group of short-chain carbohydrates that are rapidly digested and poorly absorbed in the gut, thus provoking excess fluid and gas in the bowels of many people with IBS. FODMAPs are naturally occurring carbohydrates found in foods such as apples, watermelon, asparagus, broccoli, milk and beans and are sometimes added to food as sweeteners.

Although some carbohydrates under the FODMAP umbrella, such as lactose and fructose, have been targeted in IBS therapy in the past, research on diet therapy addressing all FODMAPs as a group only began within the last decade. Research started in Australia in 2006, and subsequent studies have occurred elsewhere, including the United Kingdom, New Zealand, Scandinavia and the U.S. The results have been clear: When people with IBS consumed high amounts of FODMAPs, their symptoms got worse; when they restricted FODMAPS, their symptoms improved.

Now with enough evidence to support its use, a low-FODMAP diet is recommended as a nutrition prescription for patients with IBS in the Academy of Nutrition and Dietitics' Nutrition Care Manual. Client education materials for a low-FODMAP diet will be available in the NCM later this year.

Nonetheless, doctors caution that low-FODMAP diet therapy is not a cure for patients with IBS. Individual response to the diet varies, and some people with IBS experience little relief from following a low-FODMAP diet. And while a low-

FODMAP diet produces significant results in most IBS patients, it doesn't always eliminate all symptoms. For instance, some patients may experience relief from gas and bloating, but their irregular bowel patterns remain.

FODMAP expert Patsy Catsos, MS, RDN, LD, began using low-FODMAP diet therapy in her private practice almost a decade ago. To date, she has helped thousands of patients through the diet and says that "the FODMAP elimination diet is more than just a list of foods — it's a process. To get the best outcomes, patients need a strategic plan, and that's where the dietitian comes in."

One concern about following a low-FODMAP diet is the effect it may have on a patient's gut microbiota. Evidence shows IBS patients have different gut microbiomes compared to the healthy population. Preliminary research suggests taking a probiotic supplement during low-FODMAP diet therapy can prevent the washout of beneficial gut bacteria, leading some FODMAP experts to recommend this type of supplement to people with IBS on the diet.

In addition to IBS, limited evidence shows promise of a low-FODMAP diet for people with inflammatory bowel disease, which is a separate medical condition (an autoimmune disease characterized by chronic inflammation; includes Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis). Some researchers suspect a low-FODMAP diet may help alleviate digestive symptoms in people with non-celiac wheat sensitivity, but the diet has not been validated in this population.

Not all FODMAP-containing foods worsen IBS symptoms for all patients, which is why the diet therapy is conducted in two phases. To identify specific foods that trigger symptoms in a patient, phase 1 restricts all high-FODMAP foods and phase 2 gradually reintroduces them.

Phase 1 typically lasts up to eight weeks and is when patients feel most challenged by the restrictiveness of the diet. Elimination and reintroduction of FODMAP-containing foods is the only effective strategy to identify trigger foods in patients with IBS. Reliable assessment methods such as hydrogen breath tests are available to detect some, but not all, FODMAP malabsorption, but these tests are capable of false positives and are not perfect. Because long-term evidence is not available and there is a risk of nutritional inadequacy if the diet is poorly planned, restricting high-FODMAP foods should be temporary and reintroduction should be as quick as possible in accordance with the patient's symptoms.

Patients and physicians should work with an RDN who is trained in administering a low-FODMAP diet to ensure the success of the nutritional therapy. According to low-FODMAP diet educator Kate Scarlata, RDN, LDN, "The low-FODMAP diet has many nuances, and online resources are often outdated, making the IBS patient confused and frustrated. The role of the dietitian is to be well-prepared with the latest and most accurate low-FODMAP diet research to successfully guide the patient with this effective nutrition intervention." While research shows good patient compliance of about 75 percent following the diet, it is restrictive by nature.

Barriers include expense of low-FODMAP specialty foods, dislike for the taste, unwillingness to follow the diet and the challenge of identifying and selecting low-FODMAP foods when eating away from home. Additional challenges are the lack of defined cutoff values for high- and low-FODMAP foods and shortage of FODMAP content on food packaging.

Two voluntary certifications for low-FODMAP food products are available, one from Monash University and the other from FODMAP Friendly, both of which have access to FODMAP laboratories to conduct food testing. These seals are on few products in grocery stores today, but likely will increase as the diet gains popularity. Dietitians interested in learning more about FODMAP diet therapy are encouraged to read books by reputable FODMAP experts, seek continuing education opportunities such as workshops and trainings led by FODMAP experts and use the Monash University low-FODMAP diet app.

The Power of Virtual Reality Comes to FNCE


 if you've been on social media, watched the news or been anywhere near a videogamer in the last year, you've heard about virtual reality. But what is it? Tweet this

In simplest terms, it's a video — only instead of the camera recording that which is in its field of view (i.e. what the camera is pointed at), virtual reality cameras record in all directions simultaneously. The result is a 360-degree immersive experience that allows viewers to see everything around them, as if they were right there themselves.

While everyone from business and media to educators and tech leaders are calling virtual reality a game changer, two industries in particular have been driving its development: videogames and pornography.

But the applications of virtual reality extend far beyond entertainment. In 2014, Volvo® used virtual reality to let users "test drive" one of its new car models. In February 2015, Merrell® took users on a dangerous mountain hike to support the launch of a new boot.

Last November, The New York Times invited its subscribers to experience "The Displaced," an 11-minute VR video from the perspectives of four children in war-torn countries. That same month, YouTube® announced that it would start supporting virtual reality on its platform. And earlier this year, Excedrin® launched a VR migraine simulator to help medical and caregiver communities understand the experience of migraine sufferers.

We here at Food & Nutrition think the applications for the dietetics community are endless: from global education and training simulations to culinary demos and virtual reality tours of farms and food processors. There are several ways to view virtual reality videos: on a desktop, on certain mobile devices or through VR viewers, which can range from a $600 gaming headset to a $25 cardboard viewer, each offering slightly different features and experiences.

Last fall, California-based VR technology company Oculus®, in collaboration with Samsung®, released the Gear VR. This high-end headset at a consumer-friendly price point (or in some cases, completely free with the purchase of a Samsung smartphone) is helping to usher VR to mainstream audiences.

For organizations interested in producing virtual reality experiences, the expense associated with creating content has been prohibitive for smaller budgets. After all, the highest-end cameras cost about $60,000, the postproduction requires hundreds of hours of stitching multi-angle footage, and the delivery to viewers often requires specialty apps.

But newer technology (driven by amateur video enthusiasts as well as communities in the adventure sports and media industries) is focused on bringing VR cameras and editing software to businesses and consumers alike. The technology behind virtual reality is unfolding — and we want our readers at the forefront! We'll be at the Food & Nutrition Conference & Expo™ with headsets and videos for attendees to try, including featured videos from the Almond Board of California®. We also supplied two Stone Soup bloggers with VR cameras so they could film their own adventures — and share their tips with attendees interested in creating virtual reality content.

Visit us at the Food & Nutrition VR Video Booth on the 2016 FNCE Expo Floor (Booth #2565, right next to the Culinary Demo Theater) for your own mind-blowing VR experience!

Growth of Discount Grocers



Successful global giants in the grocery market, including the European companies ALDI and Lidl, continue to emerge in America, bringing with them lower prices, more jobs and stiff competition. While it may seem like a new trend, discount retailing has been in practice for centuries. Dating back to the early 1900s, “undersellers” sold merchandise such as apparel at a lower cost than mainstream stores. After the Great Depression, discount operations opened more frequently, selling a wider variety of goods.
But it wasn’t until the end of World War II when discount merchandising truly took off, fueled largely by consumers seeking bargains in the face of rising prices and demand for goods after wartime shortages. In the 1960s, four major players entered the space and would continue to dominate for decades: Kmart, Woolco, Target and Walmart.
While these discount retailers are viewed more as department stores, food-specific discount operations have emerged and generally fall into two categories: box stores, which sell few perishables and a limited amount of brands and product lines; and warehouse, which sell the manufacturer’s brands at discount wholesale, a moderate amount of product lines but few assortments of goods. Both of these models offer very low prices,few services and a bare-bones atmosphere.
Today, many communities have a mix of grocery store models, from upscale establishments with onsite bars, cafes and restaurants to deeply discounted retailers from all over the world. With all these retailers selling similar foods, more or less, competition is fierce.
According to a 2015 Retail Industry Report by Mazzone & Associates, supercenters, dollar stores and warehouse clubs gained a greater share of the food retailing market as consumers sought out convenience, lower cost and the ability to buy in bulk. In addition, lower-income consumers are forgoing premium goods and stock up on discounted foods instead.
Another way discount retailers win over shoppers is by offering store brands, aka private labels, which help keep cost down. German retailer Lidl found a way to also satisfy consumer demand for healthful, fresh foods, organic produce and all-natural products; its private-label items are free from MSG, trans fat and synthetic colors, and it includes a variety of organic and gluten-free options, such as produce, meat, dairy and packaged goods.

How Supermarkets are Competing

In an attempt to attract new customers, retain existing customers and foster loyalty, many supermarket chains offer discounts and promotions, such as coupons and weekly sales. Some also offer on-site amenities, such as cash machines, movie rentals and coffee shops. However, these tactics may ultimately cause profits to idle or fall.
Generic or off-brand products that were once seen as subpar by some now present an opportunity for retailers to provide value and quality at a lower cost. In 2016, the retailers Costco, Kroger and Trader Joe’s were among the top five vendors of private-label food and beverages in the United States. Customers view these “store brands” as valuable and trusted alternatives to more expensive national brands.
Another attempt to compete is through mergers and acquisitions. Top retail operators buy smaller competitors or merge with larger supermarket chains, which allows the companies to maintain profitability while lowering per-unit costs. On June 16, 2017, Amazon made headlines around the world for its $13.7 billion purchase of Whole Foods Market, an acquisition that caused other grocery chains’ stocks to plunge as much as 17 percent that day.
In the increasingly cutthroat grocery industry, some retailers have saved money and cut costs by keeping employee wages low through salary freezing. Other vendors have implemented self-checkout aisles to reduce their number of employees altogether.

The Future Landscape of Grocery Shopping

Discount retail locations may be smaller than traditional grocery stores, with fewer aisles and a more minimal design, but their competitive edge and consumer appeal are undeniable. Mainstream supermarkets may need to close stores, restructure, cut costs and reallocate dollars to remain viable.
In addition, the world continues to shift to a more technological society, with robust e-commerce and digital grocery stores like AmazonFresh. Online grocery sales are estimated to reach $100 billion by 2025, so innovation is necessary. Supermarkets may introduce mobile apps and advanced point of sale systems, such as self-checkout kiosks, to replace workers and cut wage costs.
Despite the fact that only 40 percent of households shopped at deep-discount retailers in 2016, which is much lower than supermarkets and mass merchandisers, the amount of trips to these retailers rose by 2.8 percent. This indicates there are significant opportunities for discount retailing to continue growing in years to come.

Non-Alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease


Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, or NAFLD, is the buildup of excess fat in the liver that is unrelated to alcohol consumption. It begins with simple fatty liver and can progress to life-threatening liver cirrhosis, in which the liver is loaded with scar tissue and can no longer function properly. NAFLD is the most common form of liver disease in the developed world.
In the United States, at least 30 percent of adults and as much as 10 percent of children older than 2 have NAFLD. With obesity as a common comorbidity, the prevalence of NAFLD has doubled in the last two decades and may soon surpass hepatitis C infection as the leading cause for liver transplantation in the U.S.

The Disease Spectrum

NAFLD is a non-specific title describing several variations of the disease with differing levels of severity. In simple NAFLD, there are no symptoms, only steatosis, which is an excess of triglycerides in the liver. As many as 30 percent of people with NAFLD will progress to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, or NASH, a severe form of fatty liver characterized by inflammation. There often are no symptoms related to NASH, though some sufferers complain of fatigue or discomfort in the upper right abdomen. Many people with NASH go on to develop fibrosis or scarring of the liver. As fibrosis progresses, cirrhosis develops, which can lead to progressive chronic liver failure, liver cancer and death.

Risk Factors and Causes

NAFLD is more common in people who have obesity or Type 2 diabetes. At least half of people with Type 2 diabetes and approximately 90 percent of people with body mass indices of 35 or higher have some form of NAFLD. Insulin resistance is common among these conditions and often is expressed as metabolic syndrome.
NAFLD is widely considered the liver manifestation of metabolic syndrome. Insulin resistance leads to excess free fatty acids in the blood stream and increased fat deposition in the liver. Furthermore, metabolic abnormalities spur the liver to produce and store high amounts of fatty acids. Most people with NAFLD have at least one feature of metabolic syndrome, and about one-third have all five features: elevated blood sugar levels, high blood pressure, low HDL cholesterol levels, elevated triglyceride levels and increased waist circumference.
Additional risk factors for NAFLD include high cholesterol levels, polycystic ovary syndrome, sleep apnea and underactive thyroid. These conditions share risk factors and complications such as weight gain, inactivity, diabetes and poor diet.
Less common causes of NAFLD include medications, infections, genetic disorders affecting metabolism, malnutrition and rapid weight loss.

NAFLD Progression and Cardiovascular Complications

Progression of patients throughout the spectrum of NAFLD is not well-defined. Continued or worsening insulin resistance likely plays a role in the advancement of liver abnormalities, as do oxidative stress and inflammation. Zachary Henry, MD, assistant professor of gastroenterology and hepatology at the University of Virginia, notes that for most of his patients, as metabolic syndrome worsens, so does NAFLD. To make matters worse, the progression to NASH may cause a vicious cycle of increased insulin resistance and faster progression through the NAFLD spectrum.
Not all patients progress in a typical fashion. “There are subsets of patients that likely have a genetic predisposition to progress regardless of metabolic syndrome,” Henry says.
Heart disease is the top killer among people with NAFLD, especially for those who have progressed to NASH. It is unclear if this is an association related to metabolic disturbances or if liver abnormalities cause heart complications. Research suggests NAFLD may lead to heart disease by contributing to blood vessel dysfunction, systemic inflammation, oxidative stress, and worsening cholesterol and triglyceride levels.

Screening for and Diagnosing NAFLD

Screening starts with a blood test to measure liver enzymes, but diagnosis requires imaging of the liver, typically by ultrasound. Health care providers frequently order imaging tests for patients with elevated liver enzymes in the presence of high-risk conditions such as Type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, obstructive sleep apnea and a BMI of 35 or higher. However, the disorder likely is under-diagnosed because many patients with NAFLD have normal liver enzyme levels. Henry favors imaging everyone at high risk, but because this puts a heavy burden on the health care system, many providers order diagnostic procedures only when liver enzymes are elevated.
A liver biopsy is necessary to learn if a patient has simple steatosis or if the disease has progressed to NASH, fibrosis or cirrhosis. Under a microscope, the sampled liver tissue looks identical whether the patient has fatty liver from alcohol consumption, insulin resistance or some other reason. The diagnosis of NAFLD is made by ruling out excessive alcohol intake.

Treatment of NAFLD

There currently are no FDA-approved medications for treating NAFLD. The treatment trifecta is weight loss, healthful eating and physical activity — the same lifestyle interventions that treat other conditions associated with insulin resistance.
Inspiring difficult lifestyle changes for a condition without symptoms is challenging, but early intervention can prevent progression and even reverse NAFLD, says Kristin Kirkpatrick, MS, RD, LD, manager of Wellness Nutrition Services at Cleveland Clinic and author of Skinny Liver (Da Capo Press 2017). The key, she says, is to learn what motivates each individual and to focus on comorbid conditions such as elevated blood sugar levels.
WEIGHT LOSS. As with other conditions related to insulin resistance, even moderate weight loss improves NAFLD. At the University of Virginia Health System, Mary Lou Perry, MS, RDN, CDE, works with a multidisciplinary team to encourage healthful lifestyle habits and weight loss of 7 percent to 10 percent of starting weight. Perry notes that the degree of improvement is proportional to the amount of weight lost. However, rapid weight loss of more than 3.5 pounds weekly, with its greater flux of fatty acids to the liver, may worsen inflammation in NASH and accelerate disease progression.
HEALTHFUL EATING. Research has not identified an ideal diet or macronutrient distribution for the treatment of NAFLD. Thus, following recommendations of the 2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans is reasonable. One option gaining traction among health professionals is a Mediterranean-style diet. In a small crossover study, a Mediterranean-style diet produced greater reversal of both insulin resistance and liver fat content compared to a low-fat, high-carbohydrate diet even without a change in weight.
The following food items deserve special attention because they affect the progression of the disease or because patients frequently ask about them:
Alcohol: Moderate alcohol intake is associated with less heart disease and greater insulin sensitivity. However, it is unknown if these benefits extend to patients with NAFLD or if small amounts of alcohol are harmful. The American Liver Foundation and some physicians advise people with NAFLD to completely avoid alcohol. In the absence of clear guidelines, patients with NAFLD should adhere to the American Heart Association’s defined daily limits of one drink for women and two drinks for men.
Coffee: Limited data suggests coffee consumption may reduce the severity of NAFLD through anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties.
Green tea: With its rich polyphenol content, researchers propose that drinking green tea may improve NAFLD. However, there have been no randomized controlled studies in humans.
Sugar-sweetened beverages: Research suggests drinking sugary beverages is associated with greater risk of NAFLD.
Dietary supplements: There is little evidence for the use of dietary supplements in treating NAFLD. Vitamin E shows some promise, but other studies link vitamin E supplements to increased mortality. Although some people may try unproven therapies such as milk thistle and green tea extract, unsupervised dietary and herbal supplements cause 20 percent of liver toxicity cases.