Chewing gum. Whether you munch on it because you're bored or
restless, because you simply enjoy the taste, or as a quick fix after a very
umami meal, you've probably had a fair share of it in your life. But does
chewing gum bring surprising benefits that we hadn't considered.
According to recent data, in 2017 alone, 174.74 million people in the United
States declared that they habitually use bubblegum or chewing gum.
But
whether, and to what extent, chewing gum may aid or endanger health has been a
matter of dispute.
Research
demonstrates that sugar-free gum, specifically, is actually good for your
teeth, because it can prevent decay and plaque formation.
One
paper also found that munching on gum can help to alleviate stress, which,
the study authors hypothesized, may be due to increased blood flow to the
brain.
But
other studies, including one published in the journal Eating Behaviors, concluded that a
gum-chewing habit reduced individuals' appetite for healthful snacks, such as
fruit, but did nothing to curb their preference for junk foods, such as chips.
Now,
however, scientists at the Waseda University Graduate School of Sport Sciences
in Tokyo, Japan, have turned their attention in a different direction, asking
whether chewing gum while walking could in any way influence a person's
physiological functions.
The
study, which was conducted by Yuka Hamada and colleagues from Waseda
University, has yielded interesting results for those looking to understand how
even one of their smallest daily habits could impact their body and its use of
energy.
Hamada
and team reported their results last week at the European
Congress on Obesity, held in Vienna, Austria.
Chewing gum increases heart rate
In their study, the researchers worked with 46 participants —
both male and female — aged 21–69. The recruitees agreed to take part in two
different trials.
In the
first one, they received two pellets of chewing gum of 1.5 grams and 3 kilocalories
each, and they were asked to chew on them while walking for 15 minutes (after 1
hour of rest) at a normal pace.
The
second trial created a "control" situation, by asking participants to
engage in the same actions — walking at a natural pace for 15 minutes after 1
hour of rest — except that this time, they only swallowed a powder containing
the same ingredients as the chewing gum pellets. Each time, the researchers
measured or calculated the participants' resting heart rate and mean heart rate
while walking, as well as what distance they had covered and their walking
cadence.
They
also calculated how much energy each participant had likely spent by taking
into account their mean walking speed and body mass.
Interestingly,
for all the participants, the mean heart rate while walking increased when they
chewed gum as they walked.
The
same was true for the difference between their heart rate at rest versus their
heart rate in movement.
Older males reap the most benefit
To
understand whether there were any significant differences in physiological
effects according to biological sex or age group, Hamada and team conducted a
set of analyses that took these factors into account.
Thus,
they split the participants into groups of male and female, and young (aged
18–39) or middle-aged and older (aged 40–69).
They
noticed that both men and women had a higher mean heart rate while walking, and
a higher change in heart rate from resting to moving state, if they chewed gum
at the same time.
But in
the case of the male participants, the distance covered in their 15-minute
walks, and their mean walking speed, increased more significantly in the
gum-chewing trial. This was not seen in the case of female participants.
Also,
those in the 40–69 age range showed a greater change in heart rate during the
gum-chewing trial than their younger counterparts.
"Chewing
gum while walking affects a number of physical and physiological functions in
men and women of all ages," the researchers conclude, emphasizing that the
most benefits seemed to be felt by the older male participants.
Source
- Medical News
Today
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