New study debunks notion that salt consumption contributes to weight regain
This is the question people have raised after a controversial study suggesting that drinking salt reduces appetite.
A study published in the International Journal of Obesity was widely believed to show that a pop-up protein bar called MuscleNot, manufactured by Velocity Nutrition, was not bad for you and you could eat it.
However, the study was a one-year study and therefore can’t prove this one way or the other.
The study also couldn’t clearly prove that it partially causes weight loss.
From this, it was concluded that the calories weren’t bad and the chocolate wasn’t dangerous; it was the caffeine, made by Velocity Nutrition that was in the test tube.
The people embarked on the exercise to lose weight as losing the weight was considered harmful for them and 100 pounds lost weight was considered to be a healthy weight.