“We think that less than 5% overall of breast cancers are the result of genetic factors. And more like 65% to 75% are the result of lifestyle factors, including obesity, diet, physical activity, and smoking.”
~ Dr. Ruth Patterson
In this video you’ll learn more about time restricted eating and how that affects your health. Dr. Ruth Patterson discusses how an eating during an 11-hour window can decrease breast cancer and recurrence by as much as 36%.
Dr. Ruth also discusses about a study that found that people who ate dinner before 9pm or waited at least 2 hrs before going to sleep had a 20% lower risk of heart diseases and prostate cancer.
Here’s a breakdown of what you’ll learn in this video:
- The importance of time-restricted eating as a practical public health intervention, mostly for it’s ease of implementation, that may have a widespread impact on disease risk.
- Why you should probably make sure your time-restricted eating window occurs earlier in the day, rather than later.
- How the first 5% drop in weight loss can have disproportionately large effects on the metabolic factors associated with breast cancer risk when compared with subsequent weight loss.
- The association of longer fasting durations beginning earlier in the evening and improved sleep in humans, as well as spontaneous physical activity in their day-to-day lives.
- The relationship between metabolism and breast cancer risk.
- The effect of lifestyle factors, such as obesity, physical activity, what and even when you eat, whether or not you smoke tobacco… and how even modest changes, such as consuming food earlier in the day and only during an 11-hour window, can decrease breast cancer risk and recurrence by as much as 36%.
- The importance of starting your fast earlier in the evening, and how an earlier eating window has been shown to correlate to reductions in inflammatory markers.
- The association of higher circulating insulin levels with breast cancer risk, and how insulin itself has an important relationship with estrogen by affecting the levels of sex-hormone binding globulin.
- The dangers of having a cellular environment that is inflamed, as the case is with the obese, and simultaneously having elevated cellular growth signals, which is also characteristic of the hormonal milieu of the obese.
- The surprisingly small role heredity plays in determining overall risk of breast cancer when compared to lifestyle factors.
- How healthful lifestyle habits, like choosing to eat during the right window, ultimately helps us trend our risk for many of the diseases of old age in the correct direction instead of influencing only one or another.