The science of living seems to be up front and alive according to the June/26 issue of Scientific American. Reading about a new but troubling course in our lives left me wondering where this might go accidentally: drugs that help us lose fat might be destroying muscle along the way, the very substance upon which health is built.
We begin to lose muscle mass after the age of 30. Drugs are now being tested that will help us build the muscle weight we are losing while taking other drugs to lose fat. What a conundrum? Where does this end, I wondered?
The current issue of S. A. of no interest to me, as the title cover article is about The Quantum Revolution. Most times, though, I revel in this magazine's coverage of science related topics about children, learning, and the brain. I'm hooked on the research resulting from yeasted dough and the brain. It's the high in my life along with other emotionally driven 'creature' comforts of the 4 legged kind.
I feel like a scientist though I am just a layman, of course. The June /July issue was quite revealing till I reached the last page. How could it not? It was a closing statement like no other. Using drugs to lose fat but also losing muscle mass was a deleterious idea. Restructuring the body through our relationship with food and exercise is the best way to a better body anytime, i firmly believe..
Drugs can be a lifeline. If our muscle stores begin to disappear because of a drug that helps us lose fat, then what are we doing? The Quantum Revolution cover title did little to keep me hooked until that last page. By the time I had scanned the whole magazine the idea of losing muscle through the use of certain weight loss drugs took center stage. Here I go again.