Category Archives: Healthy Eating

10-Day McDonald’s Diet Leads To ‘Devastation’ Of Man’s Gut Bacteria

 

McDonalds Food Test

A college student tried eating McDonald’s for 10 days straight and paid for it with devastated gut bacteria. 

McDonald’s is a worldwide billion-dollar restaurant with 62 million customers on a daily basis and 75 hamburgers sold every second. Tim Spector, a genetics professor at King’s College London, wanted to see how much a person could handle, so he volunteered his son Tom as a test subject in his newest experiment: to eat at the Golden Arches for 10 days straight.

“I felt good for three days, then slowly went downhill. I became more lethargic, and by a week my friends thought I had gone a strange gray color,” Tom said, according to Spector’s Quartz recount. “The last few days were a real struggle. I felt really unwell, but definitely had no addictive withdrawal symptoms and when I finally finished, I rushed (uncharacteristically) to the shops to get some salad and fruit.

Tom, a 23-year-old college student studying genetics at the University of Aberystwyth, sacrificed his body for medicine to better understand how gut microbes and metabolisms work, at least that’s what he and his dad had hoped. His father doesn’t follow the average American diet, so he thought his son would serve as a better representative of modern eating habits. Tom was allowed all of the Big Macs, fries, chicken nuggets, and Coca-Colas he wanted, and also collected feces samples before, during, and after his diet.

After sending in the samples to three different labs in order to ensure consistency, Cornell University’s microbiome test results said his gut microbes had been “devastated.” His father said they saw “massive shifts in his common microbe groups.” The gut microbes are a complex community of at least 1,000 different species of microorganisms that live in your digestive tract and are responsible for maintaining a healthy immune system, regulating digestion, and maintaining weight.

Tom lost half of his bifidobacteria (healthy bacteria designed to suppress inflammation in the digestive tract) after eating McDonald’s. His firmicutes, whose job is to extract energy from food, also became replaced with obesity-linked bacteroidetes. He lost nearly 40 percent of his total bacteria variety, and even after two weeks of recovering from the diet and returning to a healthy balanced regimen, his microbes still were unable to recover.

The fast food binge has been done before on a larger scale — its most infamous debut being in the “Super Size Me” documentary released over a decade ago. The social experiment in fast food gastronomy was performed by Morgan Spurlock for a month. However, no one had monitored the activity in their gut microbe until the Spector father-son duo gave it a try.

Now knowing a steady diet of fast food has the ability to kill healthy gut microbes in the body, researchers can focus on the importance of diversifying the gut. Over the last century, gut bacteria in the human body have decreased by nearly a third. McDonald’s rakes in $24 billion in revenue every year — that’s a lot of bad guts. Today around the world, more people can recognize the Golden Arches (88 percent) than the cross (54 percent), according to “Fast Food Nation. “It’s no surprise 69 percent of the United States is either overweight and obese, which means in all likelihood their gut microbes are unhealthily imbalanced.

“We rely on our bacteria to produce much of our essential nutrients and vitamins while they rely on us eating plants and fruits to provide them with energy and to produce healthy chemicals which keep our immune system working normally,” Spector wrote. “We are unlikely to stop people eating fast food, but the devastating effects on our microbes and our long-term health could possibly be mitigated if we also eat foods which our microbes love like probiotics (yogurts), root vegetables, nuts, olives and high-fiber foods.”

Healthy gut microbes are crucial to our health. And we need to safeguard them zealously.

Junk the junk food. And Be Healthy!

Waist circumference Better Than BMI In Determining Health Risk

String
More research is beginning to show BMI isn’t as accurate at determining health as we once thought. String may work better. 

For over a century, doctors have been improving on the body mass index (BMI), their go-to method for determining whether a person has an unhealthy amount of body fat. Now, scientists are beginning to realize body mass index may not be the best indicator of a person’s fat level or the best predictor of their risk for health problems like heart disease. Instead of using BMI, a group of researchers from the UK say string will do just fine.

In their new study, researchers from Oxford Brookes University suggested a new method that’s been gaining acceptance of late: waist-to-height ratio (WHtR). They found that measuring a person’s height with string, then folding the string in half and seeing if it’ll fit around a person’s waist comfortably could be a better indicator of whether a person is overweight. Having too much fat around the abdomen has been linked to heart disease, diabetes, and other metabolic disorders.

One study from 2013, for example, found that larger waistlines correlated with lower life expectancy. In the press release, the researchers said, “We would like to show that Waist circumference is not only superior to BMI in first stage screening for the health risks of obesity, but it is also more efficient in practice and can be done by personnel with minimal training and resources.”

Waist circumference greater than 31″ in women or 35″ in men is linked to Insulin Resistance, which can lead to Diabetes.
Stay Informed. Stay Healthy.

To Enhance Resistance to Deadly Melanoma Skin Cancers

To Enhance Resistance to Deadly Melanoma Skin Cancers:

1.  Optimize Your Vitamin D Levels.  Ask your health care provider to check your Vitamin D levels.  Optimal blood levels of 25 OH Vitamin D are between 70-100 ng/dl.  You may want to adjust your diet and/or supplement if your levels are low.

2.  Optimize Omega 3 Oils in Your Diet. There are a variety of delicious foods high in Omega 3 oils, such as cold water fish and chia seeds; however, you may also want to use an Omega 3 supplement.

3.  Eat a diet rich in protective high antioxidant foods.  Eat lots of colorful plant foods or supplement with concentrated plant phytofactors. You can incorporate protective foods more easily than you might think!

Be Healthy!

Top Six Myths About Osteoporosis

Susan E. Brown, PhD.
Image result for images osteoporosis
Worried by what you hear about bone loss and osteoporosis? You don’t need to be; much of what we’re told about bone health is actually a myth. In reality, there’s a lot you can do at any point to build bone strength, prevent osteoporosis, and reduce fracture risk. Let’s set the record straight:

Myth 1: Lack of calcium causes osteoporosis.
Yes, calcium is important, but it’s a myth that simply taking a high amount of calcium will guarantee bone health. To protect your bones, you need enough of 19 additional essential bone nutrients, not just calcium. For example, without enough vitamin D, your body only absorbs about 10- 15% of the calcium from your diet, but when you take enough, the absorption rate jumps to 30-40%. Other critical nutrients for bone health are vitamin K, magnesium. manganese, zinc, copper, strontium, boron, vitamin C, vitamin B12, and folic acid.

Myth 2: Osteoporosis is normal; as your bones age they should get weak.
One of the most dangerous bone health myths is that osteoporosis is inevitable as we age. While there are some fixed risk factors — such as our age and gender — you can control most of the risk factors that lead to excessive bone loss, osteoporosis, and fracture. The truth is, you can maintain and rebuild strong bones at any age.

Myth 3: A diagnosis of osteoporosis means you’ll suffer a fracture.
Research shows that the vast majority of those who fracture do not have an “osteoporotic” bone density; they have either osteopenia or normal bone density. Real facture risk depends not on bone density, but on one’s “total load” of bone-weakening risk factors.

Myth 4: You don’t need to worry about osteoporosis until menopause.
Bone loss — even osteoporosis — can be secretly affecting you in your 20s, 30s, and 40s. We normally achieve peak bone mass in our 20s and then begin to lose it, some of us more quickly than others.

Myth 5: There’s nothing you can do once you have osteoporosis other than take a drug.
The U.S. Surgeon General recommends much more than drugs!  The first steps are the natural approach to bone health combining nutrition, physical activity, and fall prevention. Next comes assessing and treating the underlying causes of compromised bone health. Finally, bone drugs are listed as a last recourse.

Myth 6: There aren’t any signs or symptoms of bone loss.
While many women don’t realize they have a bone issue until they fracture, there are early signs and symptoms of bone loss. These include receding gums; decreased grip strength; weak and brittle fingernails; cramps, muscle aches and bone pain; height loss and low overall fitness. Another good way to know if you are losing bone is to test your first morning urine pH level to see if your body is too acidic. Metabolic acidosis can deplete your bone mass systematically. Alkalizing through diet and supplements preserves bone.

Image result for images osteoporosis treatment

Why should you avoid osteoporosis drugs such as Alendronate and the like?
1 You’ll put your bones at long-term risk.
Bone drugs have troubling side effects that can significantly affect your bone health, especially when used over time. One troubling side effect is seen with bisphosphonate drugs. While they may halt bone breakdown in the short term, after about a year, these bone drugs also halt bone building — leading to brittle bones that may be more susceptible to fracture, not less. How’s that for irony?

2 There are risks to your whole body.
Serious consequences like stomach irritation, heightened risk of esophageal cancer, blood clots, leg cramps, vision changes, nausea, vomiting, or constipation. These side effects are critically important to consider, especially if you’re being asked by your doctor to take bone drugs for what may be normal bone loss or even as prevention.

3 Bone drugs produce few lasting results.
Popular bisphosphonate bone drugs “work” by temporarily creating bone mass from drug molecules, but they don’t offer lasting results. Based on my experience, I’ve learned that just because bones may look denser on a bone scan, it doesn’t necessarily mean they are measurably stronger. What’s more, the recommended limit for taking bone drugs safely is just five years, at which time any “benefits” of bisphosphonates disappear.

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Why is it important to identify and treat osteoporosis?

It can lead to fracture of the long bone, femur.

Speaking at the centennial annual meeting of the Clinical Orthopaedic Society, Erika J. Mitchell, MD,  said “Hip fractures kill. The 30-day mortality rate after hip fracture is about 9 percent. It rises to 17 percent if the patient , already has an acute medical problem. If a patient has heart failure while being treated for a hip fracture, the 30-day mortality increases to 65 percent. And if a patient has pneumonia after a hip fracture, the 30-day mortality increases to 43 percent.”

And in the year following hip fracture, mortality is 20%. Hip fracture reduced life expectancy by 1.8 years or 25% compared with an age- and sex-matched general population. About 17% of remaining life was spent in a nursing facility. One year after a hip fracture, only approximately 40% of surviving patients regain their previous level of mobility and only approximately 25% regain their former functional status.

Image result for images osteoporosis

The takeaway?

Consume calcium from food sources. Supplement with a calcium containing magnesium and Vit D too.

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Exercise, especially weight bearing exercise strengthens bones and muscles, preventing falls and improving balance.

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Eat sensibly, supplement where necessary.

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Stay Healthy!

5 Heart Health Facts Your Cardiologist Won’t Tell You

Dr. Stephen Sinatra

Over the years, I’ve found that while there are some great cardiologists who are on the cutting-edge of the latest research, there are far more cardiologists who are practicing old medicine, quite literally. Part of the problem is that medical schools spend far more time teaching about pharmaceutical drugs than they do nutritional supplements. Plus, they never even get to new cutting-edge research that doesn’t involve a scalpel or prescription pad. Here are the five biggest heart facts that unfortunately many cardiologists don’t know about, yet.

Here Are The 5 Heart-Health Facts You Should Know

1. Your Heart Can Regenerate Itself: In eye-opening research, Swedish cellular biologists found that cardiomyocytes (heart muscle cells) actually renew themselves. In fact, over a lifetime you will have turned over a full 40 percent of your cardiomyocytes. You can help that heart renewal process by taking targeted nutraceuticals that help stimulate healthy enzymatic and bioenergetic reactions in cells. The nutrients you want to take are ones I’ve dubbed the “Awesome Foursome,” which includes carnitine, magnesium, D-ribose, and CoQ10. These nutrients literally work in the “engine room” of each cell, increasing ATP (adenosine triphosphate) throughout your body and revitalizing the heart.

2. Cholesterol is Not the Villain: While cholesterol is at the scene of the crime when it comes to heart disease, it’s not the real perpetrator. The real “bad guy” is inflammation. Studies show that having elevated C-reactive protein (CRP), which is a measure of inflammation, puts you at twice the risk of dying from cardiovascular-related problems as those with high cholesterol. You generally want a CRP reading below one.

3. Driving Your LDL Cholesterol Too Low Can Be Harmful: Many people, including cardiologists, still believe that the lower your LDL cholesterol is the better. This is one of the reasons that cholesterol lowering statin drugs are prescribed in record numbers. But the truth is, your body needs LDL cholesterol and if you drive that number too low (meaning below 60) it can affect your memory and immune system.

4. Statin Drugs Really Work by Thinning the Blood: Many people think that the healing power of statin drugs is that they lower your cholesterol. But the real reason these drugs can be helpful for some people is that they thin the blood and improve inflammation—which as I mentioned earlier is the real culprit in heart disease. That’s why with men who have a history of a heart attack, a bypass or stent, an angioplasty, or low HDL cholesterol, a statin can be lifesaving. But for many others, the harmful statin side effects far outweigh the benefits.

5. Saturated Fats Are Heart-Healthy: For years, cardiologists told people to avoid fats and especially “artery clogging” saturated fats. But the fact is saturated fats are not just safe, they can actually improve your heart health. That’s because they help to raise “good” HDL cholesterol and help to improve your HDL-triglyceride ratio. Plus, saturated fats actually help to improve your LDL cholesterol pattern, changing them from small artery clogging dense particles into larger “fluffy” and less invasive LDL particles. In fact, a Harvard University study found that a higher intake of saturated fats is associated with less progression of atherosclerosis—hardening of the arteries.

Be Informed. And Stay Healthy.