Why don't we even eat hard for New Year's Eve?

Usually, we eat a lot and long at the time of the holidays, the New Year's and the both of the dung. Think of how you might feel after the New Year's evening meal, no doubt you will feel filled and full. Strange is that after a large meal that [...]
Think of how you might feel after the New Year's evening meal, no doubt you will feel filled and full. Strangely enough, after a large meal we feel bad and still don't learn not to eat the next day.
What we can't be aware of is releasing our appetites: NPY and AgRP from the hippotalamus, and the throat from the stomach. Grrelin is released when the stomach is empty and stimulates the production of NPY and AgRP in our brain. These two hormones are responsible for creating a sense of hunger and overcoming hormones that give us a sense of contentment, continues Periscope.
While only three hormones are primarily responsible for generating feelings of hunger, tens or more are necessary to make us feel satisfied. Two of them, GIP and GLP-1, are responsible for stimulating insulin production to regulate the metabolic of carbs. Other hormones are involved in slowing down the food movement through our stomach to give our body time to digest food. For people with obesity with low levels of rhelin, it may be that high levels of insulin, necessary for metabolizing a high - carbs diet, are hindering the production of the grarelin.
Two essential hormones for reducing hunger are: CKK and ASK both contribute to loss of appetite
And according to Van Den Aaker, we eat more when we are with friends, according to her, any mood, even positive, can become a desirable incentive as long as food is constantly conveyed. And it has repeatedly shown that we eat more when we're in the company of friends, so that we can do the length of the time you spend at the table and many other factors, we eat more when we're sociable. Perhaps because the pleasure of society around us makes it harder to focus on control.
And perhaps it is not surprising how hungry we feel after a large meal with family and friends. We're still hungry the next day or later on the same day, not because our stomach is empty, but because we're used to eating too much on special occasions. If our brain sees all signs of wind, images, sounds associated with a large meal a day after a Christmas party, then it will start preparing us for the second round. /Periscope












