Saturday 5 December 2015

Radio Show: What Do Carbohydrates Have to Do With Your Blood Sugar?

Host
Dr. Ritamarie Loscalzo

In this show you’ll learn:


***What happens when you eat a food that contains carbohydrates.

***What carbohydrate metabolism has to do with the development of type 2 diabetes.

***The difference between a food’s glycemic index and the glycemic load.


Check Out Health Podcasts at Blog Talk Radio with Dr Ritamarie on BlogTalkRadio

Background:

Carbohydrates, proteins, and fats are the main nutrients in food that give your body energy. Sugars and starchy foods are examples of carbohydrates. Carbohydrates can raise blood sugar levels more than other nutrients. That’s why it’s important to be aware of the amount of carbohydrates you eat.

Join Dr. Ritamarie as she discusses how understanding different types of carbohydrates affect your blood sugar is essential to helping you maintain optimal blood sugar levels.

Additional Resources:

Dr. Ritamarie’s IRSPT blood sugar balancing practitioner course will teach you how to unravel the mystery of your client’s complex health puzzle, starting with blood sugar imbalance. Not only will you deepen your understanding of how to help others, you’ll also enjoy direct experience with being on the receiving end of effective blood sugar balancing protocols. IRSPT includes learning intensive modules that teach you how to assess and manage insulin resistant (and on the verge of becoming insulin resistant) clients. Become a trained Insulin Resistance Solutions coach in as little as 6 weeks!

Check out Dr. Ritamarie’s VITAL Health Community for additional resources on the role that food plays in your health, and strategies for planning your meals so that you can live your life full of energy and vitality.


Monday 26 October 2015

Cold Season, Flu Season – Sugar Season?

 As Halloween approaches so does the cold and flu season.  Coincidence?  Not likely!  Is what we think of as the cold and flu season really a sequela of overindulgences from sugar that occur more than usual from the end of October through the end of the year?   Probably! Enjoy today’s article from one of my nutritional endocrinology students, health coach and certified gluten practitioner, Diane Letchworth.




Cold Season, Flu Season – Sugar Season?


Guest blog by Diane Letchworth, CGP

Ah…autumn. That lovely time of year when the leaves show off their extravagant, brilliantly colored wardrobe before they “undress” for the winter….

Fall is also the time when the sounds of summer – lawn mowers, weed whackers, splashing of swimming pools – undergo their annual transformation too.

*cough, cough*

“Achoo!” “Gesundheit.”

(Blowing of nose….)

I’ve been thinking about those classic Warner Bros. cartoons where Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck argue about whether it’s “rabbit season” or “duck season.”

While Elmer Fudd stands by, waiting with his shotgun in hand, ready to shoot….

In reality, the arrival of autumn is more likely to be met by poor Elmer Fudd tucked in bed with a box of tissues and some hot tea with lemon, nursing a case of the sniffles or this year’s variation of the flu….
So why is it that the change of seasons brings with it this annual rite of passage known as “Cold and Flu Season”?

That’s easy, you say:

It’s the roller coaster of the thermostat – early overnight frosts followed by Indian summer.

People go from wearing their sweaters, smelling of cedar or mothballs from a summer in storage, to t-shirts and shorts, soaking up some late season sun.

Of course everybody gets sick: they don’t know how to dress from one day to the next….

Oh, and the kids are going back to school – and “everybody knows” that all those kids crammed into classrooms together are sharing their germs freely and widely….

Well, okay. But….

Why are all those germs out there in the first place? Why now?

It hardly matters how dense the population is if they aren’t susceptible to those pathogens in the first place….

If our immune systems are strong enough to do their jobs properly, it’s not really going to matter if we’re a bit under-dressed one morning, or sitting next to a child with a runny nose.

But there’s another annual ritual that rolls around this time of year, one Elmer Fudd might have wanted to keep in mind:

It’s also the start of “sugar season.”

Yep, no sooner are the kiddies back in school than Halloween’s right around the corner.

As Dr. Ritamarie Loscalzo pointed out recently, we spend 2 billion dollars on Halloween candy, candy loaded with toxic ingredients. 

One of those toxic ingredients is…sugar.

(Yes, I know a lot of people think “toxic” is too strong a word, but the list of other reputable anti-sugar advocates seems to increase by the day: JJ Virgin, Jamie Oliver, Dr. Mark Hyman, Alex Jamieson, Dr. Robert Lustig; just to name a few.)

After the sugar/chocolate/candy binge of Halloween, we head full-swing into the holiday season….

Thanksgiving, with its traditional favorites of candied yams and pumpkin pie.

Office parties, school parties….

Cookies, cupcakes, chocolate…oh my!!

Sugar, sugar, everywhere.

Most people know that sugar can cause a host of problems, most notably dental caries, and that too many sweets aren’t going to be good for the waistline.

But you may not know that sugar has been linked to a host of other health problems as well, including decreased immunity.

Hmm, “decreased immunity.”…

Right around the time of year when the common cold and influenza rear their ugly heads in earnest.

Are there more germs around this time of year?

Maybe.

Or maybe our sugar-depressed immune systems are simply unable to fend off what’s around us all the time.
You might want to keep that in mind before you root through Junior’s “trick or treat” booty, trying to find that last chocolate bar….

Or before that second helping of pumpkin pie or pumpkin cheesecake….

And certainly before over-indulging in the eggnog – alcoholic or otherwise – at the company Christmas party….

Unless you want to replace that lampshade on your head with a hot-water bottle the next morning.

‘Cause the “sugar hangover” – and its subsequent cold or flu infection – might just be worse than the other kind….

Diane Letchworth is a Certified Transformational Nutrition Coach, Certified Gluten Practitioner and Reiki Master/Teacher. She is currently studying Nutritional Endocrinology with Dr. Ritamarie, as well as Aromatherapy. She resides in the mountains of North Carolina, where she works to help people take charge of their health and improve their lives.
For more information, please visit www.dsquaredwellness.com or contact Diane at diane@dsquaredwellness.com. 



For more info:
http://drritamarie.com/blog/cold-season-flu-season-sugar-season/

Thursday 27 August 2015

GRAND Webinar

3 Ways Your Digestive Health Affects

Your Energy, Your Mood, and Your Sex Drive

... and how to restore balance using my proven system for gut healing.

with Nutritional Endocrinology Specialist,
Dr. Ritamarie Loscalzo

Register Now!

Reserve Your Spot and Learn...

** How to know if your gut is contributing to symptoms in other parts of your body and zapping your energy (even if you don't have overt gut symptoms).

** How your gut is connected to your brain via the vagus nerve and what impact that has on your mood, focus, and ability to digest your food.

** Which hormones control digestion (and how to keep everything in balance so you can look and feel great).

** How leaky gut and digestive impairment affect your thyroid, adrenals, sex hormones, and blood sugar regulating hormones and results in fatigue, weight gain, and loss of libido.

** My proven system for restoring digestive health so you can regain energy, balance, and joy (and fit in your clothes with comfort and confidence)!

This unique training could save you from YEARS of pain and suffering.

Register Now!

Tuesday 28 July 2015

Wake Up! Come Meet Your Adrenal Glands

We are excited to share this guest blog post by Cammi Balleck, CTN, ANCB Board Certified Traditional Naturopath, who was recently featured on our BlogTalkRadio Show.

Do you know what your adrenal glands do for you? Every day your adrenal glands make several hormones that encompass many functions. To emphasize how important this gland is, consider that many of your organs can be removed and, without any further medication, you would live. However, you would die shortly after the removal of your adrenal glands. The adrenal glands, in a “perfect world,” make the necessary amount of hormones in a balance, without producing too many or too little. Each adrenal gland is small, and you have one on top of each kidney. Just like other endocrine glands such as the ovaries, testicles, and thyroid, they are hormone-producing. One of the major hormones made by the adrenal gland is a glucocorticoid, commonly known as cortisol. You may think of this as a “bad hormone,” because it has gotten a bad reputation as being the weight gain hormone; however, it does much more.

Cortisol is needed every day to:
  • Regulate how the body converts fats, proteins, and carbohydrates to energy.
  • Help regulate blood pressure and cardiovascular function.
  • Make hormones that regulate your immune response
  • Suppress inflammatory reactions
  • Help maintain the right balance of salt and water
  • Help control your blood pressure.
The other hormones released by the adrenal cortex are known as sex hormones.

One reason your adrenal glands are important for you to be knowledgeable about is because they are also your “stress glands.” Do you have stress? One of the biggest causes of an overactive adrenal gland is stress; this can be physical, mental, or emotional stress. The adrenal glands are needed to respond to stress. The adrenals are in us to give us energy and help us to deal with stress in small spurts; however, nowadays we deal with stress on a constant basis. The daily demands we now face are causing large amounts of stress, and this causes a downward spiral of overworked, tired adrenal glands. This downward spiral is the cause of fatigue, and if we keep stressing the body, it eventually becomes too fatigued to meet the needs of the day and the needs of the physical body. Cortisol production is usually highest in the morning before we eat, with levels gradually tapering throughout the day. Some people will be just the opposite – low in the morning when they have terrible fatigue, and high at night, not allowing them to get their much needed rest.
Any major stressors will affect the adrenal gland. A few thousand years ago, our stress responses were not asked to last days and months. If someone was to encounter a scare, they would need to fight it or run from it. This type of stress would be decided and done in a matter minutes. Today, our stress is much different because we have stress from the daily attacks of traffic, phone calls, emails, deadlines, impatient people, strife in relationships, illness, and so on. While our mind knows that being late because of traffic isn’t a life or death situation, from the brain down the adrenal glands and the other organs respond by hearing the same instinctive alarms going off saying “get the body ready to fight or run.” The body can run from danger for a short distance, but it was not made to outrun danger all day, every day of our lives.

We are fighting this stress every day, no matter if it’s from physically over working, overtraining, healing from an injury; or an emotional crisis such as grief, as well as the day-to-day stress that can happen when taking care of kids and aging parents, or you fill in the blank. It doesn’t matter; your adrenal glands can’t tell the difference. What matters is it’s the adrenal glands that are taking the brunt of all that stress.
During adrenal fatigue your adrenal glands function, but not well enough to maintain optimal homeostasis, because their output of regulatory hormones has been diminished – usually by over-stimulation or repeated daily stress.

Are your adrenals tired?

You may be experiencing adrenal fatigue if you regularly notice one or more of the following:
  • You are fatigued every day.
  • You feel tired for no reason.
  • You have trouble getting up in the morning, even when you go to bed at a reasonable hour.
  • You are feeling rundown or overwhelmed.
  • You have difficulty bouncing back from stress or illness.
  • You crave salty and sweet snacks.
  • You feel more awake, alert, and energetic after 6PM than you do all day (you are wired and tired).
Concerned about your productivity? Has it been ages since you felt well?

If your health is diminishing, most likely so is your productivity and your efficiency. Instead of spending your money to prop yourself up and self-medicate over and over again, I recommend you get to the root of the problem! Treat the cause and you’ll feel better, then save the money you were spending on all of those extra expenses for medications and supplements! Did you know Americans spend an average of $750 million a year on energy drinks?
Saliva testing and hormone balancing are key to saving your health and your money! Can you afford to stay sick?

Which do you want?
  • Insomnia – or peaceful sleep all night long?
  • Lack of motivation – or full of energy?
  • Foggy thinking – or sharp mental clarity?
  • Weight gain – or a flat belly?
  • Fatigue – or vitality?
  • Depression and anxiety – or motivation and enthusiasm
Nutrition you need

The first nutrients you need are the ones that help your body with stress. If you are tired, these are good supplements to try, also. I would recommend you add some of the following whole food supplements to your daily vitamin box.

B6, folate, B12, pantethine (an active derivative of pantothenic acid), and biotin, or a B complex. B vitamins are crucial for helping the body cope with stress. B vitamins are also essential for numerous other functions, including food metabolism and energy production, blood sugar regulation, supporting adrenal glands in the production of hormones, regulating electrolyte balance, and maintaining the health of the nervous system.
Also make sure you are getting vitamin C, vitamin D, and amino acids.

To learn more about how the signs you are receiving from your body might be related to your adrenal glands, go to Cammi’s website and take her Health Check Quiz.  You will also find out if your thyroid or other hormones might be involved.

Cammi Balleck, CTN, ANCB Board Certified Traditional Naturopath, is the author of Making Happy Happen, and is a leading Happy Hormone Doctor. She specializes in teaching how to unleash your happy hormones naturally. She has 10 years experience in health care, and specializes in hormone balancing. Cammi’s passions are helping everyone improve their health and live happy, whole lives. Cammi lives in Colorado, and loves the outdoors and climbing 14,000 foot mountains. 

More information can be found at www.makinghappyhappen.com.

Have you or someone you loved experienced symptoms of overworked adrenal glands before? We would love to hear your story. Please feel free to comment below and share your thoughts on how recognizing the effects of your adrenal glands has affected your life.  There is power in having balanced hormones. As always, thank you for sharing our message of root cause healthcare with your loved ones on social media. You are making a huge different in the world. Thank you!