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  2. Many organ supplement products suggest a serving size of 3,000 mg a day, which they claim provides the same benefits as one serving of organ meat per week. This is likely a safe dose for most ...

  3. Expensive tissue hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expensive_Tissue_Hypothesis

    The expensive tissue hypothesis (ETH) relates brain and gut size in evolution (specifically in human evolution).It suggests that in order for an organism to evolve a large brain without a significant increase in basal metabolic rate (as seen in humans), the organism must use less energy on other expensive tissues; the paper introducing the ETH suggests that in humans, this was achieved by ...

  4. Energy expenditure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_expenditure

    Men also carry more skeletal muscle tissue on average than women, and other sex differences in organ size account for sex differences in metabolic rate. Obese individuals burn more energy than lean individuals due to increase in the amount of calories needed to maintain adipose tissue and other organs that grow in size in response to obesity. [ 2 ]

  5. Here are 5 things that will get likely more expensive in 2025 ...

    www.aol.com/finance/5-things-likely-more...

    Costs can vary depending on what part of the country you live in, however, the consumer price index pegged the value of a dozen large eggs at $4.15 nationwide as of December. That’s up from $2. ...

  6. Kleiber's law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kleiber's_law

    Kleiber's plot comparing body size to metabolic rate for a variety of species. [1]Kleiber's law, named after Max Kleiber for his biology work in the early 1930s, states, after many observations that, for a vast number of animals, an animal's Basal Metabolic Rate scales to the 3 ⁄ 4 power of the animal's mass.

  7. The Surprising Health Benefits of Eating Liver - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/surprising-health-benefits...

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  8. Starvation response - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starvation_response

    Starvation response in animals (including humans) is a set of adaptive biochemical and physiological changes, triggered by lack of food or extreme weight loss, in which the body seeks to conserve energy by reducing metabolic rate and/or non-resting energy expenditure to prolong survival and preserve body fat and lean mass.

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