Low Cholesterol Leads to an Early Death: Evidence From 101 Scientific Papers
This book is a sequel to Cholesterol and Saturated Fat Prevent Heart Disease: Evidence from 101 Scientific Papers by the same author (and given a Thumbs Up review in Wise Traditions, Summer 2013). Evans provides studies in chronological order showing that the lower your cholesterol, the earlier you die; that high levels of both “good” and “bad” cholesterol help you to live longer; that high cholesterol does not cause cardiovascular disease; that low cholesterol leads to an early death in many diseases; and that low cholesterol leads to an increased prevalence of many diseases.
Some gems from Evans’ book: A 1992 study of over three hundred fifty thousand men, aged thirty-five to fifty-seven, followed for twelve years, found that higher cholesterol levels were associated with lower death rates; a five-year study published in 1989 found that low cholesterol increases the risk of death by at least 340 percent in elderly women; a twenty-year study published in 2001 found that those with the lowest cholesterol levels have a 35 percent increase in death rates compared to those with the highest cholesterol levels; and a 1998 study found that low cholesterol levels are associated with higher rates of many infectious diseases including hepatitis, appendicitis, digestive and liver infections, kidney and urinary tract infections, venereal disease and musculo-skeletal infections. None of these important studies got front-page billing in the media; meanwhile the anti-cholesterol juggernaut rolls on.
This book represents a great compilation of studies we never hear about and is enhanced by an amusing foreword by Tom Naughton, producer of the movie Fat Head. Thumbs up!
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Read the complete article here.
This book is available here.
The title 'Credible Evidence' is a key statement to what this blog is all about primarily in the arena of Heart Disease, Cholesterol and Statins.
Showing posts with label Weston A. Price Foundation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Weston A. Price Foundation. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Cholesterol, Nutrition and Violence. - Morell
Sally Fallon Morell discusses nutrition and violence.
Sally is the president of the Weston A. Price Foundation
Please watch this short video!... http://t.co/sIJc0U2h8t
An excellent discussion by Sally Fallon Morell on the brains need for cholesterol and vitamins from animal fats in out diet. She draws the connection between low cholesterol and depression and violence.
Sally is the president of the Weston A. Price Foundation
Please watch this short video!... http://t.co/sIJc0U2h8t
An excellent discussion by Sally Fallon Morell on the brains need for cholesterol and vitamins from animal fats in out diet. She draws the connection between low cholesterol and depression and violence.
Saturday, June 1, 2013
The American Heart Association misrepresented data on saturated v. polyunsaturated fats
The American Heart Association misrepresented data on saturated v. polyunsaturated fats: According to the paper... http://fb.me/CDBem1kd
Thank You Weston A Price for this information!
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Some Quotes:
"Peer review is critical for ensuring that evidence assembled in a meta-analysis is complete and impartial. Regrettably, the recent AHA Advisory [1] relied heavily upon a one-line meta-analysis cited in a non peer-reviewed book chapter [2] to support its position that high intakes of omega-6 fatty acids reduce CHD. Unfortunately, the credibility of this advisory is undermined by four additional critical errors."
1) The AHA Advisory mistakenly cited the Sydney Diet-Heart Study...
The advisory fails to inform the
public that an important tissue indicator of CVD risk the ‘Omega-3 Index’5, reflects the proportion of EPA
and DHA in erythrocytes, a representative phospholipid eicosanoid precursor pool. The Omega-3 Index is
regarded5 as superior to LDL as a biomarker predicting cardiovascular mortality. Paradoxically, the advisory
reports that increasing LA intakes decreases EPA accretion, (i.e. lowers the Omega-3 Index and increases
CVD risk), but implies without comparative quantitation that lowering LA intakes would elevate LDL levels
and increase net CVD risk. However, lowering LA by LNA substitution could maintain PUFA intakes and
result in a more favorable Omega-3 Index.
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Please read the complete paper here.
Thank You Weston A Price for this information!
========================================================
Some Quotes:
"Peer review is critical for ensuring that evidence assembled in a meta-analysis is complete and impartial. Regrettably, the recent AHA Advisory [1] relied heavily upon a one-line meta-analysis cited in a non peer-reviewed book chapter [2] to support its position that high intakes of omega-6 fatty acids reduce CHD. Unfortunately, the credibility of this advisory is undermined by four additional critical errors."
1) The AHA Advisory mistakenly cited the Sydney Diet-Heart Study...
2) Although the AHA Advisory [1] criticizes other studies for failing to distinguish between “distinct effects” of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, it commits this error throughout.
3) The AHA Advisory imprecisely contends that its analysis pertains to trials that “evaluated the effects of replacing saturated fatty acids with PUFAs” [1] despite its citation of trials where experimental diets displaced large quantities of trans fatty acid-rich partially hydrogenated oils.
4) The AHA Advisory failed to indicate that the Rose Corn Oil Trial [5] gives a rare opportunity to evaluate the specific effects of increased LA, because corn oil has little omega-3 ALA.
The advisory unfortunately moves from suggestive and highly conditional interpretations to the
unsupported clinical admonition that “To reduce omega-6 PUFA intakes from their current levels would be more likely to increase than to decrease risk for CHD.”==================================================================
Please read the complete paper here.
Wednesday, April 10, 2013
Does Carnitine From Red Meat Contribute to Heart Disease - Masterjohn
Mother Nature Obeyed
A Weston A. Price Blog
In April of 2011, I posted a rebuttal of a Nature paper from Stanley Hazen’s group at the Cleveland Clinic arguing that choline from animal foods causes heart disease:
The press reported on the paper widely, and this New York Times article by Gina Kolata gave it a big boost in popularity:
The single “representative female omnivore” from the Nature Medicine paper excreted similar amounts of TMAO in her urine as the six subjects from the 1999 study after consuming red meat,*** suggesting that, had they measured the response to seafood, the authors of the Nature Medicine paper would also have found much greater excretion of TMAO after consumption of seafood than after consumption of red meat.
In Supplementary Figure 5, we find this schematic and data of one person’s three steak + carnitine challenges:
The legend says this is data for “a representative omnivorous subject” (they do not specify the person’s gender). Prior to antibiotic treatment, shown on the left, the TMAO remained flat over 24 hours after consuming a steak and carnitine supplement. We only see an increase after this omnivore was given antibiotics and his or her intestinal flora grew back over a week, shown on the right, and in that case it didn’t even double after the steak, let alone triple as in Figure 2a. Did this subject develop dysbiosis from the course of antibiotics, and is that why TMAO increased after antibiotics but not before antibiotics?
If, prior to antibiotics, this person’s TMAO remained flat after consuming steak + carnitine, while the TMAO of the omnivore shown in Figure 2a nearly tripled, how can they both be “representative”? Is the data in Supplementary Figure 5 from a male, and does this represent a fundamental difference between males and females? Is the data shown in Figure 2a “representative” of a female omnivore before or after she was given antibiotics? If the latter, does the increase simply represent the effects of antibiotic-induced dysbiosis?
If the labeled TMAO increased after the steak + carnitine challenge but the total pool of TMAO did not, this indicates that carnitine was converted into TMAO, but that the TMAO generated from the carnitine was so small compared to the amount of TMAO already present in the body as to be largely irrelevant.
Finally, we should note that the steak + carnitine challenge provided 180 milligrams of carnitine from meat and 250 milligrams of isotopically labeled carnitine from a supplement. There is no data in this paper showing that TMAO increases in response to steak alone in anyone.

The most impressive thing about this graph that should jump out at us is that the standard error bars for the omnivores cover almost the entire vertical axis of the graph. If you are unfamiliar with statistics and wish to get a sense of how dramatic this degree of variation is, one way would be to scroll up to the data I showed for the 1999 study measuring TMAO generation from 46 different foods, where the bars represent the same measure of variation. The variation in that study was quite large for many foods, but not like this. For all we know, the variation could be driven by a single outlier, meaning perhaps only one omnivore’s labeled TMAO increased and that of the others remained flat. Or, perhaps it represents a large difference between the male and female subjects. With this level of variation, it seems unlikely that there was a statistically significant increase in TMAO among the omnivores at any specific time point, and the authors give no indication that this was so. When they compared the area under each curve, however, the difference was statistically significant.
While this may indicate that meat-eaters as a group generate more TMAO from supplemental carnitine than vegetarians, it is somewhat unclear whether this experiment was confounded by antibiotic treatment, and the authors do not explain whether the result is driven by a single outlier or a fundamental gender difference, neither do they show any results indicating that the total amount of TMAO in the blood (instead of just isotopically labeled TMAO) increased.
Although the largest difference was seen between those with enterotypes 1 and 2, TMAO levels were nevertheless 45 higher among the meat-eaters than among the vegans and vegetarians. There were also significant differences in specific strains of intestinal bacteria between the dietary groups that could hypothetically account for this difference.
While it is possible that intestinal flora accounts for the difference, it is disappointing that the authors did not consider other possibilities, such as differences in the activity of the enzyme that converts trimethylamine to TMAO. For example, vitamin B2 is the main cofactor for the enzyme, and vegans are three times as likely to be deficient in vitamin B2 as vegetarians and omnivores.
To support their hypothesis that the difference in intestinal bacterial metabolism of carnitine can be induced by meat consumption, the investigators fed mice 1.3 percent carnitine in drinking water and showed that this altered intestinal flora and led to a ten-fold increase in the TMAO yield in response to a force-fed carnitine challenge. Before we take this as supporting evidence that people who eat meat have higher TMAO than vegans and vegetarians because of meat-induced changes in intestinal flora, we should consider a couple of caveats.
Suppose each mouse drinks about 5 milliliters of water per day. This would provide 65 milligrams of carnitine per day, more than a third of what could be obtained from eating an eight-ounce steak. Adjusting for body weight, this is like a human eating a thousand steaks per day. This is beyond the capacity of even the most die-hard meat-lovers.
Moreover, the bacterial species that showed up in greater concentrations in carnitine-fed mice and correlated with TMAO levels had no correspondence to those found in meat-eating humans. The authors put it this way:
While antibiotics wipe out TMAO levels in humans and mice, showing that intestinal bacteria are necessary for its formation, the authors provide no clear evidence that the specific differences in intestinal bacteria between vegetarians and vegans on the one hand and meat-eaters on the other cause the observed difference in TMAO levels.
It is unclear whether the 45 percent higher TMAO levels in meat-eaters represents something that we should regard as “unhealthy.” As I pointed out above, for all we know it could be due to riboflavin (vitamin B2) deficiency among the vegans. If we suppose for the sake of argument, however, that it does represent something unhealthy, there is no reason to connect it to the consumption of meat. As Chris Kresser pointed out in his critique of the Nature Medicine paper, most comparisons between vegetarians and omnivores are confounded by substantial lifestyle differences between these two groups. They are also confounded by dietary differences that have nothing to do with meat, such as the consumption of fruits and vegetables. While the possibility that long-term meat-eating itself increases TMAO levels remains a legitimate hypothesis to be investigated, equal investigation should be given to alternative hypotheses focusing on other dietary and lifestyle factors that differ between vegetarians and omnivores.
Their argument was that our intestinal bacterial convert choline to trimethylamine, which our livers then convert to trimethylamine oxide (TMAO), which causes atherosclerosis in mice, and thus, by extension, probably in humans. I pointed out that previous studies have shown that supplements with salts of free choline do in fact generate TMAO, but uncontaminated phosphatidylcholine, the main form of choline found in food, does not. Moreover, choline-rich foods like liver and eggs did not produce more TMAO than a control breakfast, but seafood, which is generally contaminated with some trimethylamine, did.
In a new paper in Nature Medicine, these authors have expanded their argument to claim that the carnitine in red meat contributes to heart disease through the same pathway. Put on your seat belts, folks, and let’s take a look!
The new paper can be found here:
In brief, here is the “clean version” of the story. The authors showed that eating a steak increased blood and urine levels of TMAO in five omnivores, whereas the same meal did not have this effect in a vegan. Furthermore, carnitine supplements increased blood TMAO in five omnivores, but not in five vegetarians and vegans. Baseline blood levels of TMAO were also higher in 30 omnivores than in 23 vegetarians and vegans, as were the levels of certain strains of intestinal bacteria. Antibiotics suppressed TMAO levels in five omnivores, showing the role of intestinal flora in its generation. Plasma concentrations of carnitine and TMAO correlated with atherosclerosis in just under 2,600 humans, and, like they had previously shown for choline, carnitine produced atherosclerosis in female mice genetically engineered to be vulnerable to that disease, but not when the mice were kept germ-free with antibiotics.
Overall, parts of this study are very well conducted, providing insights into metabolism that should fascinate anyone who loves biochemistry for its own sake and doesn’t mind meandering down rabbit holes that have no clear relevance to the health of humans or natural strains of animals. The problems with this study and its portrayal in the media are the often-times incomplete reporting of data in the paper and the wild runaway inferences published all over the press, particularly the conclusion that red meat contributes to heart disease by generating TMAO, and the even stranger notion that we should eat less red meat for this reason. Let’s take a look at the less “clean” version of the story.
Why Single Out Red Meat?
First of all, why pick on red meat? As I pointed out in my last post on this topic, lots of foods increase TMAO in humans and red meat does not stand out among them. A 1999 study in six human volunteers evaluated excretion of trimethylamine and TMAO after consumption of a handful of supplements and 46 different foods. For comparison, the new paper in Nature Medicine reported data for one food (red meat) fed to two (urine data) or six volunteers (plasma data). Consistent with a 1983 finding from the group of famed choline researcher Steven Zeisel that salts of free choline but not uncontaminated phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) generated trimethylamine, this group found that choline and carnitine, but not lecithin, generated TMAO. Carnitine-rich foods, however, like red meat, produced no more TMAO than common fruits and vegetables. Seafoods, by contrast, led to large increases in TMAO. Let’s take a look at some of this data.
The authors compared eight ounces of 46 foods to a “light breakfast” with no seafood, which acted as a control. It would appear from the data that the “light breakfast,” which the authors did not describe any further, generated some TMAO. In each graph below, an asterisk indicates a statistically significant difference between the food in question and the control breakfast. Statistical significance relative to the control should not be taken as a criterion for assuming the food generated TMAO, but should rather be taken to mean that the food actually stands out relative to other foods as a source of TMAO.*
Here’s a comparison between the control, beef, and a variety of fruits and vegetables:
We can see that none of these foods statistically stands out from the control. Looking at the numbers alone, this “light breakfast,” along with carrots, cauliflower, peanuts, peas, potatoes, soybeans, and tomatoes generated more trimethylamine and TMAO than beef. In general, we could say that there is no clear evidence that beef produces more or less TMAO than any of the fruits and vegetables tested.
Here we see that none of the meats tested were statistically different from the “light breakfast” control (numerically, all of them except lamb liver were lower), and that there is no relation to the “redness” of the meat, with chicken having an almost identical value to beef:
Here we see that mushrooms and an assortment of grain and dairy products are statistically no different from the “light breakfast” control, and that bread, mushrooms, cheese and eggs all produced numerically (but not statistically) higher values than beef:
Now here’s the real kicker. What foods do stand out as supreme sources of TMAO? Seafoods! Let’s take a look at these invertebrates first:
Here we see that, unlike beef, all the invetebrate seafoods tested except cockles produced statistically significantly more TMAO than the “light breakfast” control. Based on my own statistical test,** all of the seafoods shown in the graph except clams and cockles produced significantly more TMAO than beef.
Now let’s take a look at fin fish:
All the fish except trout produced statistically more TMAO than the “light breakfast” control. My own statistical analysis** indicates that all the fish except tuna, trout, plaice, and the two samples of roe produced significantly more TMAO than beef.
The difference between seafoods and red meat in the 1999 paper is like the difference between night and day. To take the most extreme example, halibut generated over 107 times as much TMAO as red meat. It seems obvious from this study that if any foods should be singled out for the production of TMAO, it should be seafoods. Yet the Nature Medicine paper makes no mention of fish and the New York Times article only mentions fish to point out that it has less carnitine than red meat (and thus, by inference, will generate less TMAO, though that is clearly not the case, presumably because seafood tends to be contaminated with trimethylamine itself).
If we are to single out red meat as a source of TMAO, we should be able to identify other foods with which it should be replaced that generate less TMAO. Yet this 1999 study, which had a small sample size but tested an expansive number of foods, found that there basically are no other foods that generate meaningfully less TMAO than red meat.
Do Meat-Eaters Generate More TMAO From Steak Than Vegans?
Do meat-eaters produce more TMAO from steak than vegans? The “clean” version of the story is, as described in the New York Times, “the answers were: yes, there was a TMAO burst in the five meat eaters; and no, the vegan did not have it.” The data presented in the Nature Medicine paper are less clear.
First, as I’ll explain in more detail below, no one ate steak alone. They ate steak with 250 milligrams of supplemental carnitine.
It certainly seems from Figure 2a, shown above, that the single “representative female omnivore” whose data is shown had a greater TMAO increase after consuming steak + carnitine than the one male vegan they were able to convince to eat the same meal. The vegan had no increase and the omnivore’s levels roughly tripled. Since the sample size is one per group, the authors did not report a statistical analysis, so we cannot make any comparison between “omnivores” as a group and “vegans” as a group.
Besides this, this same group has previously shown that the enzyme responsible for converting trimethylamine to TMAO is suppressed by androgens, and its activity is low in males compared to females. Thus, comparing a female omnivore to a male vegan is misleading.
In any case, it’s not so clear once we look at the supplementary figures, or once we read the main text, how “representative” this female omnivore actually was.
If, prior to antibiotics, this person’s TMAO remained flat after consuming steak + carnitine, while the TMAO of the omnivore shown in Figure 2a nearly tripled, how can they both be “representative”? Is the data in Supplementary Figure 5 from a male, and does this represent a fundamental difference between males and females? Is the data shown in Figure 2a “representative” of a female omnivore before or after she was given antibiotics? If the latter, does the increase simply represent the effects of antibiotic-induced dysbiosis?
As mentioned above and as can be seen in the top of Supplementary Figure 5, moreover, the subjects did not simply consume steak. Along with the steak, the authors fed carnitine labeled with a heavy isotope (d3), which is like a chemical tag that allowed the investigators to trace its metabolism. If they observed labeled TMAO in the blood, this would show that the carnitine was converted to TMAO. Indeed, they showed this in a single “representative female omnivorous subject” in Figure 1e. But the amount of labeled TMAO in the blood would be tiny compared to the total amount of TMAO. If we are evaluating the plausibility of the hypothesis that TMAO in the blood contributes to heart disease, we care about the total amount of TMAO. The question, then, is whether eating steak leads to a meaningful increase in total TMAO. Here is what the authors had to say:
In most subjects examined, despite clear increases in plasma d3-carnitine and d3-TMAO concentrations over time (Fig. 1e), post-prandial changes in endogenous (unlabeled) carnitine and TMAO concentrations were modest (Supplementary Fig. 5), consistent with total body pools of carnitine and TMAO that are relatively very large in relation to the amounts of carnitine ingested and TMAO produced from the carnitine challenge.It is unclear what “modest” means in this context. Nowhere appear any data for the entire group of omnivores. We just have a “represenatative” graph in Supplementary Figure 5 where the TMAO increase is non-existent, not “modest,” prior to antibiotics, and another “representative” graph in Figure 2a where the result is very different. Since both relevant graphs have a sample size of one, there is no statistical analysis. The authors seem to be saying in the above paragraph, however, that, on the whole, the non-existent increase in total TMAO shown in Supplementary Figure 5 is more representative than the large increase shown in Figure 2a.
If the labeled TMAO increased after the steak + carnitine challenge but the total pool of TMAO did not, this indicates that carnitine was converted into TMAO, but that the TMAO generated from the carnitine was so small compared to the amount of TMAO already present in the body as to be largely irrelevant.
Finally, we should note that the steak + carnitine challenge provided 180 milligrams of carnitine from meat and 250 milligrams of isotopically labeled carnitine from a supplement. There is no data in this paper showing that TMAO increases in response to steak alone in anyone.
Does Carnitine Increase TMAO More in Meat-Eaters Than in Vegans and Vegetarians?
After these investigators gave five meat-eaters antibiotics to show that suppressing intestinal flora would suppress TMAO, they gave five vegetarians and vegans and five omnivores a labeled carnitine supplement without any steak. It is unclear whether these omnivores are the same omnivores who previously underwent three steak + carnitine challenges, involving the use of antibiotics. In one section of the methods, the omnivores who received antibiotics are described as “additional omnivores,” but in another section they seem to be described as a “subset of subjects” who participated in the carnitine alone challenge. If they are the same omnivores, then this experiment is seriously confounded since the investigators never gave any vegetarians antibiotics. In any case, here we encounter a graph that actually includes all ten subjects instead of a “representative” subject from each group:
The most impressive thing about this graph that should jump out at us is that the standard error bars for the omnivores cover almost the entire vertical axis of the graph. If you are unfamiliar with statistics and wish to get a sense of how dramatic this degree of variation is, one way would be to scroll up to the data I showed for the 1999 study measuring TMAO generation from 46 different foods, where the bars represent the same measure of variation. The variation in that study was quite large for many foods, but not like this. For all we know, the variation could be driven by a single outlier, meaning perhaps only one omnivore’s labeled TMAO increased and that of the others remained flat. Or, perhaps it represents a large difference between the male and female subjects. With this level of variation, it seems unlikely that there was a statistically significant increase in TMAO among the omnivores at any specific time point, and the authors give no indication that this was so. When they compared the area under each curve, however, the difference was statistically significant.
While this may indicate that meat-eaters as a group generate more TMAO from supplemental carnitine than vegetarians, it is somewhat unclear whether this experiment was confounded by antibiotic treatment, and the authors do not explain whether the result is driven by a single outlier or a fundamental gender difference, neither do they show any results indicating that the total amount of TMAO in the blood (instead of just isotopically labeled TMAO) increased.
Do Omnivores Have Higher TMAO Than Vegetarians and Vegans Because of Meat-Induced Changes in Intestinal Bacteria?
Among 23 vegans and vegetarians and 30 omnivores, the authors reported differences in intestinal bacteria that they tied to blood levels of TMAO in the absence of a steak or carnitine challenge. The most dramatic difference seen was a roughly three-fold greater level of TMAO in the blood of four subjects with “enterotype 2,” with bacterial DNA from Prevotella species dominating their feces, when compared to 49 subjects with “enterotype 1,” with bacterial DNA from Bacteroides species dominating their feces. As the authors note in the discussion, enterotype 2 had previously been associated with “low animal-fat and protein consumption,” but three out of four subjects with this enterotype in the current study were omnivores.Although the largest difference was seen between those with enterotypes 1 and 2, TMAO levels were nevertheless 45 higher among the meat-eaters than among the vegans and vegetarians. There were also significant differences in specific strains of intestinal bacteria between the dietary groups that could hypothetically account for this difference.
While it is possible that intestinal flora accounts for the difference, it is disappointing that the authors did not consider other possibilities, such as differences in the activity of the enzyme that converts trimethylamine to TMAO. For example, vitamin B2 is the main cofactor for the enzyme, and vegans are three times as likely to be deficient in vitamin B2 as vegetarians and omnivores.
To support their hypothesis that the difference in intestinal bacterial metabolism of carnitine can be induced by meat consumption, the investigators fed mice 1.3 percent carnitine in drinking water and showed that this altered intestinal flora and led to a ten-fold increase in the TMAO yield in response to a force-fed carnitine challenge. Before we take this as supporting evidence that people who eat meat have higher TMAO than vegans and vegetarians because of meat-induced changes in intestinal flora, we should consider a couple of caveats.
Suppose each mouse drinks about 5 milliliters of water per day. This would provide 65 milligrams of carnitine per day, more than a third of what could be obtained from eating an eight-ounce steak. Adjusting for body weight, this is like a human eating a thousand steaks per day. This is beyond the capacity of even the most die-hard meat-lovers.
Moreover, the bacterial species that showed up in greater concentrations in carnitine-fed mice and correlated with TMAO levels had no correspondence to those found in meat-eating humans. The authors put it this way:
Notably, a direct comparison of taxa associated with plasma TMAO concentrations in humans versus in mice failed to identify common taxa. These results are consistent with prior reports that microbes identified from the distal gut of the mouse represent genera that are typically not detected in humans.For both of these reasons, the carnitine-fed mice provide little in the way of justification for viewing the differences in intestinal flora between vegetarians and omnivores as a result of consumption or abstention from meat.
While antibiotics wipe out TMAO levels in humans and mice, showing that intestinal bacteria are necessary for its formation, the authors provide no clear evidence that the specific differences in intestinal bacteria between vegetarians and vegans on the one hand and meat-eaters on the other cause the observed difference in TMAO levels.
It is unclear whether the 45 percent higher TMAO levels in meat-eaters represents something that we should regard as “unhealthy.” As I pointed out above, for all we know it could be due to riboflavin (vitamin B2) deficiency among the vegans. If we suppose for the sake of argument, however, that it does represent something unhealthy, there is no reason to connect it to the consumption of meat. As Chris Kresser pointed out in his critique of the Nature Medicine paper, most comparisons between vegetarians and omnivores are confounded by substantial lifestyle differences between these two groups. They are also confounded by dietary differences that have nothing to do with meat, such as the consumption of fruits and vegetables. While the possibility that long-term meat-eating itself increases TMAO levels remains a legitimate hypothesis to be investigated, equal investigation should be given to alternative hypotheses focusing on other dietary and lifestyle factors that differ between vegetarians and omnivores.
Does TMAO Cause Heart Disease?
Female C56BL/6J mice genetically engineered to be missing ApoE, an important protein involved in lipoprotein metabolism, developed twice as much atherosclerosis when fed a thousand steaks a day worth of carnitine. This and supplementary studies feeding mice TMAO suggested that TMAO derived from dietary carnitine may suppress the removal of cholesterol from the immune cells that populate atherosclerotic plaques. As proof of principle, these studies may have some value, but their relevance is questionable. Such an exorbitant amount of carnitine is surely irrelevant to human meat intake. The mice, moreover, are among the most vulnerable. They presumably used females because males convert trimethylamine to TMAO at a lower rate. ApoE knockout mice not only lack a critical protein that humans have, but the C56BL/6J background strain of mice, as I’ve written about before, has a deletion in a gene related to B vitamin and glutathione metabolism that prevents the mice from recycling glutathione in the presence of oxidative stress.
Can such a result be observed in male mice, in mice without these genetic defects, and in mice fed attainable quantities of carnitine? Without knowing the answers even to these preliminary questions, it seems unreasonable to consider these experiments relevant to human health at this stage of the game.
The authors also investigated the relationship between plasma carnitine levels and heart disease in just under 2600 humans undergoing elective cardiac evaluation. Males had higher carnitine levels than females. In the lowest quartile of carnitine status, only 54 percent of subjects were male. In the highest quartile, 80 percent were male. Those who had the highest carnitine levels were more likely to smoke (77 percent) than those who had the lowest (61 percent). The majority of the subjects were on ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, statins, and aspirin. Those with higher carnitine levels had higher cardiovascular disease, peripheral artery disease, and cardiovascular disease. Statistical adjustment for traditional cardiovascular risk factors attenuated the associations. We can imagine that if it were possible to identify all of the confounding factors, further statistical adjustment would further reduce and perhaps eliminate the association.
The authors provide no evidence that the variation of plasma carnitine in these subjects primarily reflects variations in dietary carnitine intake, and there is no particular reason to assume this. To offer one counter-example, in guinea pigs, one of the few experimental animals that have a dietary vitamin C requirement like humans do, vitamin C deficiency leads to a loss of carnitine from muscle and an increase in plasma carnitine. Vitamin C probably protects against heart disease by preventing lipoprotein oxidation in the blood and by promoting collagen synthesis in arterial plaques, which protects them from rupture. Perhaps plasma carnitine is an inverse marker of vitamin C status.
In a separate analysis, blood levels of carnitine appeared to associate with cardiovascular events only in the presence of high blood levels of TMAO. This is consistent with the authors’ hypothesis that carnitine contributes to cardiovascular disease through its conversion to TMAO, but it could be consistent with a number of other hypotheses as well. Perhaps blood levels of TMAO reflect intestinal dysbiosis, variations in the activity of the enzyme that converts trimethylamine to TMAO (as I wrote in my last post on this topic, activity of the enzyme could reflect drug exposure, genetically determined drug efficacy, iron overload, ethnicity, or other factors), or perhaps TMAO increases in heart disease to play important physiological roles such as protein stabilization.
This study provides a foundation for future studies to investigate whether TMAO can be used as an independent predictor of heart disease risk and whether TMAO and carnitine status can be used as markers of clinically relevant metabolic changes, but it hardly provides us with a basis for believing that carnitine from fewer than a thousand steaks per day causes heart disease through its conversion to TMAO.
The Bottom Line
The bottom line here is that the popular interpretation of this study as an indictment of red meat makes no sense. Even if physiological levels of TMAO contribute to heart disease in humans (which is a big “if” at this point) and even if red meat were to raise TMAO substantially more than most other foods (which appears to be false), it wouldn’t in any way whatsoever follow that eating red meat causes heart disease. The biological effects of a food cannot possibly be reduced to one of the biological effects of one of the food’s components. Believing such a thing would require believing not only that the particular component has no other relevant biological effects, but that there are no relevant biological effects of any of the other tens of thousands of components of that food.
As Chris Kresser pointed out today, the balance of epidemiological evidence fails to show an association between fresh, unprocessed red meat and heart disease. Numerous studies, including randomized trials, have suggested that carnitine supplementation improves outcomes in patients with cardiovascular disease. Carnitine thus may be a generally heart-protective nutrient. The authors acknowledge these studies in their discussion but suggest that carnitine may have conflicting effects, especially when used orally rather than intravenously as in some studies, since the oral route allows exposure to intestinal bacteria.
If the carnitine in red meat were promoting atherosclerosis through its conversion to TMAO, however, then red meat should be no more dangerous than potatoes and carrots and the real killer should be seafood. How likely is this to be true? Prospective studies correlate fish consumption with a reduced risk of heart disease mortality. Some Pacific Island groups that subsist largely on seafood, such as the Kitavans, appear to be free of heart disease. Randomized trials have tended to focus on fish oils rather than whole fish. Those testing advice to eat more fish are ambivalent, but they don’t seem to suggest that eating whole fish increases the risk of heart disease.
The elucidation of nutritional pathways and biochemistry in this paper is interesting, but it shouldn’t serve as a reason to avoid red meat.
Acknowledgments
Thanks to Chris Kresser, Stephan Guyenet, Ned Kock, and Peter Attia for discussing some of the points made in this post.Notes
* Of course it would be better if we could see these foods and the control breakfast compared to a control of pure water or something that should be similarly ineffective at generating TMAO. A certain proportion of the TMAO excreted in the urine could perhaps be due to endogenous trimethylamine precursors circulated through the gastrointestinal tract. Nevertheless, this should be similar across foods.
** One-way ANOVA using Dunnet’s post-test to compare all values to beef and adjust for multiple comparisons, using Graphpad Prism 5.
*** Did these subjects generate substantially less TMAO from red meat than the subjects in the new Nature Medicine paper? It would seem not. The Nature Medicine paper reports urinary TMAO excretion in different units, and it reports TMAO alone rather than the sum of it and its precursor, trimethylamine. Nevertheless, according to my calculations, the “representative female omnivore” excreted a little under 212 micromoles/8 hours, whereas the average excretion after eight ounces of beef in the 1999 study was 76.5 micromoles/8 hours, indicating perhaps slightly higher but more or less similar generation of TMAO after red meat between the studies, especially considering the variation in responses in the 1999 study (SD 48.5) and compared to seafood.
Assuming the average person clears about 1 mg creatinine into their urine per minute (480 mg/min) and 113.12 g/mol creatinine (thus 480 mg/1000 mg/g and divided by the molar mass, multipled by 1000 to convert mol to mmol, yielding an average excretion of 4.24 mmol creatinine in 8 hours), I calculate that just under 50 mmol TMAO/mol creatinine, as shown in Fig 2b of the Nature Medicine paper converts to 212 umol/8 h (50 mmol TMAO/mol creatinine * 1 mol creatinine/1000 mmol creatinine *4.24 mmol creatinine/8 hours * 1000 umol/TMAO/mol TMAO).
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Thursday, January 3, 2013
Cholesterol is Not the Cause of Heart Disease - Raine Saunders
Dr. Sinatra & Others Speaking Out – Cholesterol is Not the Cause of Heart Disease
Why? These doctors want their patients to get out of the perpetual cycle of sickness and into prevention and wellness. And, they want the public to know the truth about what really causes heart disease…and it’s definitely not what you would think.
How did this myth begin?
Since the earlier part of the 20th century, doctors have been rallying around the idea that cholesterol causes heart disease.In 1913, Russian researcher Nikolaj Nikolajewitsch fed cholesterol to rabbits and made the conclusion that their cholesterol levels went up (with no acknowledgement whatsoever that cholesterol is not a normal part of a rabbit’s diet).
And the idea that plaque deposits collecting in the blood vessels due to diet was born.
At the same time, companies like Proctor & Gamble were busy creating products that would replace animal fats as a way to increase profits. Read the full story of how this famous company single-handedly turned an engineered substance into a food that was introduced to kitchens in the early 1900s through clever campaigns and to this day is still found in a large percentage of processed foods on the market, and which has been heralded as a “heart-healthy” alternative to real, wholesome animal fats.
The Framington Heart Study which began in 1948 and is ongoing looked at a link between the consumption of saturated fat and cholesterol levels. A survey was taken in Framingham, MA where 6,000 people answered questions about diet and lifestyle. Researchers observed that individuals with weight problems and had abnormally high blood cholesterol levels were slightly more at risk to develop heart disease.
But actually, not all individuals in this study had high cholesterol levels. And yet, just those few who did were the ones which caused the skewed results of the study to be widely publicized. What was not revealed about those who were at higher risk was that many of these people also had sedentary lifestyles, consumed a high carbohydrate diet, smoked, and also had high cholesterol. What is not commonly told is that the more cholesterol and saturated fat people consume, this actually lowers their cholesterol levels.
The work of Dr. Ancel Keys is often cited as proof that cholesterol is harmful to heart health. In 1953, he published a well-known study which became the basis of support for the Cholesterol Theory. His Seven Countries Study made a connection between heart disease and dietary fat. What is not acknowledged is that any study he looked at which didn’t go along with his hypothesis – especially those consuming low-fat diets and which also had a strong connection to mortality from cardiovascular disease – was excluded from the final results! It’s also important to know that his full study included data from 22 countries – also excluded because it didn’t fit with what he wanted.
The result was that the health communities rallied around this false study and started campaigning to remove all animal fats from the population’s diet: red meat, eggs, butter and other dairy, and anything that was perceived as “artery clogging”. It is this and the Framington Heart studies which have been largely responsible for starting and perpetuating the lie that cholesterol causes heart disease.
Dr. Stephen Sinatra
In the book, The Great Cholesterol Myth, cowritten with Johnny Bowden, Ph.D, the failed theory that cholesterol is the cause of heart disease is debunked. They explain why saturated fat is good for your health and why it “helps to raise beneficial HDL cholesterol, improving your triglyceride/HDL ratio—a key marker of cardiovascular health.”He says to eat beef – and to make sure it’s grassfed beef, butter, nuts, and eggs. These foods are not only okay for us to eat, but vital to health! He also whole-heartedly agrees that vegetable oil is to be avoided – which is damaged during high heat processes in both manufacturing and in cooking. These oils are almost always from GMO sources, and are too high in Omega 6s – which cause excess inflammation in the body and is found in too high amounts in the Standard American diet. He also agrees that we should definitely be using extra virgin olive oil and coconut oil in our diets.
Although I am not a fan of Dr. Oz, he did a recent interview with Dr. Sinatra and Johnny Bowden that you should watch:
Part I and
Part II
Dr. Dwight Lundell
A heart surgeon with 25 years experience, Dr. Dwight Lundell, M.D. has brought the truth to light by admitting that for years he towed the party line in treating heart disease as a condition that was caused by elevated blood cholesterol due to dietary intake of saturated fat. He also reveals that anyone who went against using prescription medication for treating this issue was considered insubordinate and to do so could “possibly result in malpractice.”Dr. Lundell also founded the Healthy Humans Foundation to help people break out of the cycle of reactive medicine which treats disease with drugs and surgery, to forward the principles of truly healthy diets and real prevention of chronic disease.
Listen to Dr. Lundell’s interview on Jimmy Moore’s site Livin La Vida Low-Carb. Also read The Cure for Heart Disease by Dr. Lundell.
Still not convinced that saturated fats are good for our health?
Answer this important question:Why are disease rates so high – obesity, heart disease, stroke, diabetes, high blood pressure, and related conditions of Metabolic Disorder? If saturated fat is the enemy and we are told to avoid it, wouldn’t that correspond to a decrease – rather than an increase in these health conditions? This is because the Standard American Diet is replete in processed foods including a lot of sugar and refined carbs, very few real, whole foods that are from healthy, organic, and sustainable sources which have good bacteria, enzymes, minerals, and vitamins.
Sugar is one of the biggest enemies of heart disease, found in various studies and health professionals which reveal the connection between regular consumption of refined sugar and health problems:
The profound research of Dr. Weston A. Price – a dentist and nutritionist who traveled all over the world to 14 different countries for a decade of time during the 1930s, discovered something similar: that all healthy populations were eating diets of indigenous, local foods – including almost TEN times the amount of fat-soluble vitamins from animal and bird foods. These foods were not treated with chemicals, pesticides, antibiotics, hormones, or GMOs. These groups of people were healthy, robust, and free of physical and mental disease.
In contrast, those civilizations that did experience chronic disease were those who had introduced the following substances into their diets: vegetable oils, white flour, and white sugar.
Read Dr. Price’s groundbreaking book (available in its entirety online), Nutrition and Physical Degeneration for more information.
More information:
What’s the real scoop on red meat and mortality rates?
The importance of dietary fats
The grassfed meat challenge: busting myths about meat
Posted on December 28, 2012 by Raine Saunders. This entry was posted in Healthy Living, Healthy Meat, Real Food and tagged Ancel Keys, butter, cardiovascular disease, cholesterol, dairy, Dr. Dwight Lundell, Dr. Stephen Sinatra, eggs, Framingham Heart Study, grassfed meat, Johnny Bowden, Ph.D, saturated fat. Bookmark the permalink.
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Read the complete article here.
Friday, October 19, 2012
LDL is not “bad cholesterol” & it cannot build up in artery walls. Read the truth.
Cholesterol: Friend Or Foe? |
Written by Natasha Campbell-McBride, MD |
Sunday, 04 May 2008 19:17 |
The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while nature cures the disease. --VoltaireIn our modern world, cholesterol has become almost a swear word. Thanks to the promoters of the diet-heart hypothesis, everybody "knows" that cholesterol is "evil" and has to be fought at every turn. If you believe the popular media, you would think that there is simply no level of cholesterol low enough. If you are over a certain age, you are likely to be tested for how much cholesterol you have in your blood. If it is higher than about 200 mg/100ml (5.1 mol/l), you may be prescribed a "cholesterol pill." Millions of people around the world take these pills, thinking that this way they are taking good care of their health. What these people don’t realize is just how far from the truth they are. The truth is that we humans cannot live without cholesterol. Let us see why. Our bodies are made out of billions of cells. Almost every cell produces cholesterol all the time during all of our lives. Why? Because every cell of every organ has cholesterol as a part of its structure. Cholesterol is an integral and very important part of our cell membranes, the membranes that enclose each of our cells, and also of the membranes surrounding all the organelles inside the cell. What is cholesterol doing there? A number of things. Structural IntegrityFirst of all, saturated fats and cholesterol make the membranes of the cells firm—without them the cells would become flabby and fluid. If we humans didn’t have cholesterol and saturated fats in the membranes of our cells, we would look like giant worms or slugs. And we are not talking about a few molecules of cholesterol here and there. In many cells, almost half of the cell membrane is made from cholesterol. Different kinds of cells in the body need different amounts of cholesterol, depending on their function and purpose. If the cell is part of a protective barrier, it will have a lot of cholesterol in it to make it strong, sturdy and resistant to any invasion. If a cell or an organelle inside the cell needs to be soft and fluid, it will have less cholesterol in its structure.This ability of cholesterol and saturated fats to firm up and reinforce the tissues in the body is used by our blood vessels, particularly those that have to withstand the high pressure and turbulence of the blood flow. These are usually large or medium arteries in places where they divide or bend. The flow of blood pounding through these arteries forces them to incorporate a layer of cholesterol and saturated fat in the membranes, which makes it stronger, tougher and more rigid. These layers of cholesterol and fat are called fatty streaks. They are completely normal and form in all of us, starting from birth and sometimes even before we are born. Various indigenous populations around the world, who never suffer from heart disease, have plenty of fatty streaks in their blood vessels in old and young, including children. Fatty streaks are not indicative of the disease called atherosclerosis. Lipid LifesaversAll the cells in our bodies have to communicate with each other. How do they do that? They use proteins embedded into the membrane of the cell. How are these proteins fixed to the membrane? With the help of cholesterol and saturated fats! Cholesterol and stiff saturated fatty acids form so-called lipid rafts, which make little homes for every protein in the membrane and allow it to perform its functions. Without cholesterol and saturated fats, our cells would not be able to communicate with each other or to transport various molecules into and out of the cell. As a result, our bodies would not be able to function the way they do. The human brain is particularly rich in cholesterol: around 25 percent of all body cholesterol is accounted for by the brain. Every cell and every structure in the brain and the rest of our nervous system needs cholesterol, not only to build itself but also to accomplish its many functions. The developing brain and eyes of the fetus and a newborn infant require large amounts of cholesterol. If the fetus doesn’t get enough cholesterol during development, the child may be born with a congenital abnormality called cyclopean eye.1Human breast milk provides a lot of cholesterol. Not only that, mother’s milk provides a specific enzyme to allow the baby’s digestive tract to absorb almost 100 percent of that cholesterol, because the developing brain and eyes of an infant require large amounts of it. Children deprived of cholesterol in infancy may end up with poor eyesight and brain function. Manufacturers of infant formulas are aware of this fact, but following the anti-cholesterol dogma, they produce formulas with virtually no cholesterol in them. Vital Brain MatterOne of the most abundant materials in the brain and the rest of our nervous system is a fatty substance called myelin. Myelin coats every nerve cell and every nerve fiber like the insulating cover around electric wires. Apart from insulation, it provides nourishment and protection for every tiny structure in our brain and the rest of the nervous system. People who start losing their myelin develop a condition called multiple sclerosis. Well, 20 percent of myelin is cholesterol. If you start interfering with the body’s ability to produce cholesterol, you put the very structure of the brain and the rest of the nervous system under threat.The synthesis of myelin in the brain is tightly connected with the synthesis of cholesterol. In my clinical experience, foods with high cholesterol and high animal fat content are an essential medicine for a person with multiple sclerosis. One of the most wonderful abilities we humans are blessed with is the ability to remember things—our human memory. How do we form memories? By our brain cells establishing connections with each other, called synapses. The more healthy synapses a person’s brain can make, the more mentally able and intelligent that person is. Scientists have discovered that synapse formation is almost entirely dependent on cholesterol, which is produced by the brain cells in a form called apolipoprotein E. Without the presence of this factor we cannot form synapses, and hence we would not be able to learn or remember anything. Memory loss is one of the side effects of cholesterol-lowering drugs. In my clinic, I see growing numbers of people with memory loss who have been taking cholesterol- lowering pills. Dr Duane Graveline, MD, former NASA scientist and astronaut, suffered such memory loss while taking his cholesterol pill. He managed to save his memory by stopping the pill and eating lots of cholesterol-rich foods. Since then he has described his experience in his book, Lipitor: Thief of Memory, Statin Drugs and the Misguided War on Cholesterol. Dietary cholesterol in fresh eggs and other cholesterol-rich foods has been shown in scientific trials to improve memory in the elderly. In my clinical experience, any person with memory loss or learning problems needs to have plenty of these foods every single day in order to recover. Necessary Product Of The BodyThese foods give the body a hand in supplying cholesterol so it does not have to work as hard to produce its own. What a lot of people don’t realize is that most cholesterol in the body does not come from food! The body produces cholesterol as it is needed. Scientific studies have conclusively demonstrated that cholesterol from food has no effect whatsoever on the level of our blood cholesterol. Why? Because cholesterol is such an essential part of our human physiology that the body has very efficient mechanisms to keep blood cholesterol at a certain level.When we eat more cholesterol, the body produces less; when we eat less cholesterol, the body produces more. As a raw material for making cholesterol the body can use carbohydrates, proteins and fats, which means that your pasta and bread can be used for making cholesterol in the body. It has been estimated that, in an average person, about 85 percent of blood cholesterol is produced by the body, while only 15 percent comes from food. So, even if you religiously follow a completely cholesterol-free diet, you will still have a lot of cholesterol in your body. However, cholesterol-lowering drugs are a completely different matter! They interfere with the body’s ability to produce cholesterol, and hence they do reduce the amount of cholesterol available for the body to use. Dangers Of Low CholesterolIf we do not take cholesterol-lowering drugs, most of us don’t have to worry about cholesterol. However, there are people whose bodies, for whatever reason, are unable to produce enough cholesterol. These people are prone to emotional instability and behavioral problems. Low blood cholesterol has been routinely recorded in criminals who have committed murder and other violent crimes, people with aggressive and violent personalities, people prone to suicide and people with aggressive social behavior and low self-control.I would like to repeat what the late Oxford professor David Horrobin warned us about: "Reducing cholesterol in the population on a large scale could lead to a general shift to more violent patterns of behavior. Most of this increased violence would not result in death but in more aggression at work and in the family, more child abuse, more wife-beating and generally more unhappiness." People whose bodies are unable to produce enough cholesterol do need to have plenty of foods rich in cholesterol in order to provide their organs with this essential-to-life substance. What else does our body need all that cholesterol for? Endocrine SystemAfter the brain, the organs hungriest for cholesterol are our endocrine glands: adrenals and sex glands. They produce steroid hormones. Steroid hormones in the body are made from cholesterol: testosterone, progesterone, pregnenolone, androsterone, estrone, estradiol, corticosterone, aldosterone and others. These hormones accomplish a myriad of functions in the body, from regulation of our metabolism, energy production, mineral assimilation, brain, muscle and bone formation to behavior, emotions and reproduction. In our stressful modern lives we consume a lot of these hormones, leading to a condition called "adrenal exhaustion." This condition is diagnosed very often by naturopaths and other health practitioners. There are many herbal preparations on the market for adrenal exhaustion. However, the most important therapeutic measure is to provide your adrenal glands with plenty of dietary cholesterol.Without cholesterol we would not be able to have children because every sex hormone in our bodies is made from cholesterol. A fair percentage of our infertility epidemic can be laid at the doorstep of the diet-heart hypothesis. The more eager we became to fight animal fats and cholesterol, the more problems with normal sexual development, fertility and reproduction we started to face. About a third of western men and women are infertile, and increasing numbers of our youngsters are growing up with abnormalities in their sex hormones. These abnormalities lead to many physical problems. Recent research has "discovered" that eating full-cream dairy products cures infertility in women.2 Researchers found that women who drink whole milk and eat high-fat dairy products are more fertile than those who stick to low-fat products. Study leader Dr Jorge Chavarro, of the Harvard School of Public Health, emphasized: "Women wanting to conceive should examine their diet. They should consider changing low-fat dairy foods for high-fat dairy foods, for instance by swapping skimmed milk for whole milk and eating cream, not low-fat yoghurt." The Liver And Vitamin RegulationOne of the busiest organs in terms of cholesterol production in our bodies is the liver, which regulates the level of our blood cholesterol. The liver also puts a lot of cholesterol into bile production. Yes, bile is made out of cholesterol. Without bile we would not be able to digest and absorb fats and fat-soluble vitamins. Bile emulsifies fats; in other words, it mixes them with water, so that digestive enzymes can get to them. After it completes its mission, most of the bile gets reabsorbed in the digestive system and brought back to the liver for recycling. In fact, 95 percent of our bile is recycled because the building blocks of bile, one of which is cholesterol, are too precious for the body to waste. Nature doesn’t do anything without good reason. This example of the careful recycling of cholesterol alone should have given us a good idea about its importance for the body!Bile is essential for absorbing fat-soluble vitamins: vitamin A, vitamin D, vitamin K and vitamin E. We cannot live without these vitamins. Apart from ensuring that fat-soluble vitamins get digested and absorbed properly, cholesterol is the major building block of one of these vitamins: vitamin D. Vitamin D is made from the cholesterol in our skin when it is exposed to sunlight. In those times of the year when there isn’t much sunlight, we can get this vitamin from cholesterol-rich foods: cod liver oil, fish, shellfish, butter, lard and egg yolks. Our recent misguided fears of the sun and avoidance of cholesterol-rich foods have created an epidemic of vitamin D deficiency in the Western world. Unfortunately, apart from sunlight and cholesterol-rich foods there is no other appropriate way to get vitamin D. Of course, there are supplements, but most of them contain vitamin D2, which is made by irradiating mushrooms and other plants. This vitamin is not the same as the natural vitamin D. It does not work as effectively and it is easy to get a toxic level of it. In fact, almost all cases of vitamin D toxicity ever recorded were cases where this synthetic vitamin D2 had been used. Toxicity is almost impossible with natural vitamin D obtained from sunlight or cholesterol-rich foods because the body knows how to deal with an excess of natural substances. What the body does not know how to deal with is an excess of synthetic vitamin D2. Vitamin D has been designed to work as a team with another fat-soluble vitamin: vitamin A. That is why foods rich in one tend to be rich in the other. So, by taking cod liver oil, for example, we can obtain both vitamins at the same time. As we grow older, our ability to produce vitamin D in the skin under sunlight is considerably diminished. Taking foods rich in vitamin D is therefore particularly important for older people. For the rest of us, sensible sunbathing is a wonderful, healthy and enjoyable way of getting a good supply of vitamin D. Skin cancer, blamed on sunshine, is not caused by the sun. It is caused by trans fats from vegetable oils and margarine and other toxins stored in the skin. In addition, some of the sunscreens that people use contain chemicals that have been proven to cause skin cancer3. Immune System HealthCholesterol is essential for our immune system to function properly. Animal experiments and human studies have demonstrated that immune cells rely on cholesterol in fighting infections and repairing themselves after the fight. In addition, LDL-cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein cholesterol), the so-called "bad" cholesterol, directly binds and inactivates dangerous bacterial toxins, preventing them from doing any damage in the body. One of the most lethal toxins is produced by a widely spread bacterium, Staphylococcus aureus, which is the cause of MRSA (Methicillin- resistant Staphylococcus aureus), a common hospital infection. This toxin can literally dissolve red blood cells. However, it does not work in the presence of LDL-cholesterol. People who fall prey to this toxin have low blood cholesterol. It has been recorded that people with high levels of cholesterol are protected from infections; they are four times less likely to contract AIDS, they rarely get common colds and they recover from infections more quickly than people with "normal" or low blood cholesterol.People with low blood cholesterol are prone to various infections, suffer from them longer and are more likely to die from an infection. A diet rich in cholesterol has been demonstrated to improve these people’s ability to recover from infections. So, any person suffering from an acute or chronic infection needs to eat high-cholesterol foods to recover. Cod liver oil, the richest source of cholesterol (after caviar), has long been prized as the best remedy for the immune system. Those familiar with old medical literature will tell you that until the discovery of antibiotics, a common cure for tuberculosis was a daily mixture of raw egg yolks and fresh cream. Varying Blood Cholesterol LevelsThe question is, why do some people have more cholesterol in their blood than others, and why can the same person have different levels of cholesterol at different times of the day? Why is our level of cholesterol different in different seasons of the year? In winter it goes up and in the summer it goes down. Why is it that blood cholesterol goes through the roof in people after any surgery? Why does blood cholesterol go up when we have an infection? Why does it go up after dental treatment? Why does it go up when we are under stress? And why does it become normal when we are relaxed and feel well? The answer to all these questions is this: cholesterol is a healing agent in the body. When the body has some healing jobs to do, it produces cholesterol and sends it to the site of the damage. Depending on the time of day, the weather, the season and our exposure to various environmental agents, the damage to various tissues in the body varies. As a result, the production of cholesterol in the body also varies.Since cholesterol is usually discussed in the context of disease and atherosclerosis, let us look at the blood vessels. Their inside walls are covered by a layer of cells called the endothelium. Any damaging agent we are exposed to will finish up in our bloodstream, whether it is a toxic chemical, an infectious organism, a free radical or anything else. Once such an agent is in the blood, what is it going to attack first? The endothelium, of course. The endothelium immediately sends a message to the liver. Whenever our liver receives a signal that a wound has been inflicted upon the endothelium somewhere in our vascular system, it gets into gear and sends cholesterol to the site of the damage in a shuttle, called LDL-cholesterol. Because this cholesterol travels from the liver to the wound in the form of LDL, our "science," in its wisdom calls LDL "bad" cholesterol. When the wound heals and the cholesterol is removed, it travels back to the liver in the form of HDLcholesterol (high-density lipoprotein cholesterol). Because this cholesterol travels away from the artery back to the liver, our misguided "science" calls it "good" cholesterol. This is like calling an ambulance travelling from the hospital to the patient a "bad ambulance," and the one travelling from the patient back to the hospital a "good ambulance." But the situation has gotten even more ridiculous. The latest thing that our science has "discovered" is that not all LDL-cholesterol is so bad. Most of it is actually good. So, now we are told to call that part of LDL the "good bad cholesterol" and the rest of it the "bad bad cholesterol." Marvelous Healing AgentWhy does the liver send cholesterol to the site of the injury? Because the body cannot clear the infection, remove toxic elements or heal the wound without cholesterol and fats. Any healing involves the birth, growth and functioning of thousands of cells: immune cells, endothelial cells and many others. As these cells, to a considerable degree, are made out of cholesterol and fats, they cannot form and grow without a good supply of these substances. When the cells are damaged, they require cholesterol and fats to repair themselves. It is a scientific fact that any scar tissue in the body contains good amounts of cholesterol.4Another scientific fact is that cholesterol acts as an antioxidant in the body, dealing with free radical damage.5 Any wound in the body contains plenty of free radicals because the immune cells use these highly reactive molecules for destroying microbes and toxins. Excess free radicals have to be neutralized, and cholesterol is one of the natural substances that accomplishes this function. When we have surgery, our tissues are cut and many small arteries, veins and capillaries get damaged. The liver receives a very strong signal from this damage, so it floods the body with LDL-cholesterol to clean and heal every little wound in our blood vessels. That is why blood cholesterol goes high after any surgical procedure. After dental treatment, in addition to the damage to the tissues, a lot of bacteria from the tooth and the gums finish up in the blood, attacking the inside walls of our blood vessels. Once again, the liver gets a strong signal from that damage and produces lots of healing cholesterol to deal with it, so the blood cholesterol goes up. The same thing happens when we have an infection: LDL-cholesterol goes up to deal with the bacterial or viral attack. Apart from the endothelium, our immune cells need cholesterol to function and to heal themselves after the fight with the infection. Our stress hormones are made out of cholesterol in the body. Stressful situations increase our blood cholesterol levels because cholesterol is being sent to the adrenal glands for stress hormone production. Apart from that, when we are under stress, a storm of free radicals and other damaging biochemical reactions occur in the blood. So the liver works hard to produce and send out as much cholesterol as possible to deal with the free radical attack. In situations like this, your blood cholesterol will test high. In short, when we have a high blood cholesterol level, it means that the body is dealing with some kind of damage. The last thing we should do is interfere with this process! When the damage has been dealt with, the blood cholesterol will naturally go down. If we have an ongoing disease in the body that constantly inflicts damage, then the blood cholesterol will be permanently high. So, when a doctor finds high cholesterol in a patient, what this doctor should do is to look for the reason. The doctor should ask, "What is damaging the body so that the liver has to produce all that cholesterol to deal with the damage?" Unfortunately, instead of this sensible procedure, our doctors are trained to attack the cholesterol. Many natural herbs, antioxidants and vitamins have an ability to reduce our blood cholesterol. How do they do that? By helping the body remove the damaging agents, be they free radicals, bacteria, viruses or toxins. As a result, the liver does not have to produce so much cholesterol to deal with the damage. At the same time, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, herbs and other natural remedies help to heal the wound. When the wound heals there is no need for high levels of cholesterol anymore, so the body removes it in the form of HDL-cholesterol or so-called "good" cholesterol. That is why herbs, vitamins, antioxidants and other natural remedies increase the level of HDL-cholesterol in the blood. In conclusion, cholesterol is one of the most important substances in the body. We cannot live without it, let alone function well. The pernicious diet-heart hypothesis has vilified this essential substance. Unfortunately, this hypothesis has served many commercial and political interests far too well, so they ensure its long survival. However, the life of the diet-heart hypothesis is coming to an end as we become aware that cholesterol has been mistakenly blamed for the crime just because it was found at the scene. Dietary Sources Of Cholesterol
Vitamin D DeficiencyWhat does it mean for our bodies to be deficient in vitamin D? A long list of suffering:
References
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