π Macronutrient distribution (PFC ratio) and calorie quality
Even the same calories can produce very different weight and health outcomes depending on macronutrient composition. PFC stands for Protein, Fat, and Carbohydrate β the ratio of these three macronutrients. The standard PFC ratio for a balanced diet is 45-55% carbohydrate, 20-30% protein, and 25-30% fat. Protein (1g = 4 kcal) is essential for muscle building and repair, enzyme and hormone production, and immune function, and it raises metabolism by burning 20-30% of its calories as heat during digestion (thermic effect). During weight loss, raising protein to 30-35% prevents muscle loss, and 1.6-2.2g per kg of body weight is recommended. Carbohydrate (1g = 4 kcal) is the main energy source preferred by the brain and muscles; complex carbs (brown rice, whole wheat, oats) raise blood sugar slowly for lasting fullness, while simple carbs (sugar, white bread) spike blood sugar, promote insulin secretion, and encourage fat storage. Fat (1g = 9 kcal) has the highest calorie density but is important for hormone production, vitamin absorption (A, D, E, K), organ protection, and satiety; unsaturated fats (olive oil, nuts, fish) are good for cardiovascular health, while saturated fats (butter, animal fat) and trans fats (margarine, processed foods) should be limited. The reason the same 2,000 kcal from junk food and healthy food have different effects is that nutrient density, satiety, blood-sugar response, and metabolic effect all differ β quality matters as much as quantity.