Hot topics close

Love chips and burgers? It may make you age faster

Love chips and burgers It may make you age faster
Excess consumption of junk food may lead to risk of several diseases but a new study finds that may make you age faster too.
  • Home
  • Health
  • Love chips and burgers? It may make you age faster

Excess consumption of junk food may lead to risk of several diseases but a new study finds that may make you age faster too.

Excessive of junk food can risk diseases (Freepik)

Chips, burgers, frozen food have become more and more accessible and affordable leading to increase in consumption. In this contemporary world, opting for frozen food is a go-to for quick satiety. Too much of junk does cause health complications.  A new study found that it may lead faster ageing process also.

A person’s biological age is a relatively new way of measuring a person’s health. It refers to how old a person seems based on various molecular biomarkers. A person with a healthy lifestyle may have a biological age younger than their chronological age, while poor lifestyle choices, such as a diet high in Ultra Processed Foods (UPFs), can accelerate biological ageing, said researchers from Monash University in Australia

The study, published in the journal Age and Aging, involved 16,055 participants from the US aged 20-79 and showed that for every 10 per cent increase in UPF consumption, the gap between biological and chronological age widened by approximately 2.4 months, reported IANS.

Participants in the highest UPF consumption quintile (68-100 per cent of energy intake in their diet) were biologically 0.86 years older than those in the lowest quintile (39 per cent or less of energy intake in their diet).

Nutritional biochemist Dr. Barbara Cardoso, a senior lecturer in the University’s Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, and Food said the findings underlined the importance of eating as many unprocessed and minimally processed foods as possible.

“The significance of our findings is tremendous, as our predictions show that for every 10 per cent increase in total energy intake from ultra-processed food consumption there is a nearly 2 percent increased risk of mortality and 0.5 per cent risk of chronic disease over two years,” she added.

UPFs are industrial formulations typically containing ingredients not commonly used in home cooking, such as hydrogenated oils, high-fructose corn syrup, flavour enhancers, and emulsifiers. These foods are high in salt, sugar, fats, and other unhealthy elements and are designed for convenience and long shelf life.

One must be mindful of what they consume and how much. It may impact their lifestyle as well. A well-rounded routine of habits and exercise can help go a long way.

(With IANS Inputs)

Also Read:

Similar news
News Archive
  • Womens World Cup
    Women's World Cup
    1 in 5 Women's World Cup players faced online abuse, FIFA report finds
    18 Dec 2023
    12
  • Ash Barty coach
    Ash Barty coach
    Ash Barty celebrates historic Australian Open victory as coach issues US Open dampener
    29 Jan 2022
    1
  • Shoaib Bashir
    Shoaib Bashir
    Shoaib Bashir's rock-solid marathon stint shows he's here to stay
    24 Feb 2024
    3
  • Daniel Rioli
    Daniel Rioli
    'The fear of not knowing if you'll regret it': Brendan Fevola's stepdaughter Mia, 19, discusses split from Richmond Tigers ...
    1 Jun 2020
    3
  • Sydney weather
    Sydney weather
    Sydney facing a storm battering for second day in a row
    12 days ago
    7