Trans fat needs a warning label Posted by Mike Furci (06/23/2010 @ 9:41 am)
Trans fat roles in the body include:
? Lowers high density lipoproteins (HDL), otherwise known as the ?good
cholesterol?.2
? Raises low density lipoproteins (LDL), otherwise known as the ?bad cholesterol?.2
? Raises C-reactive protein, a substance in the blood that indicates arterial inflammation and is said to indicate proneness to heart disease.3
? Raises Lipoprotein (a) (Lp(a)), a substance in the blood that indicates arterial inflammation and is said to indicate proneness to heart disease.4
? Raises C-reactive protein, a substance in the blood that indicates arterial inflammation and is said to indicate proneness to heart disease.5
? Promotes improper management of blood sugar thus having detrimental effects in diabetics.6
? Interferes with the function of the immune system.7
? Decreases the bodies ability to utilize and decreases the amount of the healthy omega-3 fatty acids in our tissues.7
What are trans fats? They are poison in our food supply. ?The latest government study confirms that trans fat is directly related with heart disease and increases LDL cholesterol. Because of that, the Institute of Medicine, a branch of the National Academy of Sciences, declared there is no safe amount of trans fat in the diet.?8 ?There should be a warning on food made with this stuff like there is on nicotine products. It?s that bad for you, says Dr. Jeffery Aron, a University of California at San Francisco professor of medicine and one of the nation?s leading experts on fatty acids and their effect on the body.9
(Fats, cholesterol, and the lipid hypothesis)
Posted in:
Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Diabetes, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Obesity, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: coronary heart disease, facts about heart disease, foods that fight heart disease, HDL, HDL cholesterol, HDL levels, Headlines, Heart disease, heart disease information, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, LDL, LDL cholesterol, LDL levels, maruchan ramen soup trans fat, prevent heart disease, symtoms of heart disease, tgi friday''s and trans fats, trans fat, trans fat chocolate, trans fats, types of heart disease, what are trans fats, what causes heart disease, what is trans fat, why are trans fats bad
Sturated fat doesn’t lead to heart disease Posted by Mike Furci (06/10/2010 @ 9:49 pm)
A recently published meta-analysis looked at 347,747 subjects in twenty-one studies to summarize the evidence related to the association of dietary saturated fat with risk of coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, and cardiovascular disease. During the 5 – 23 year follow-up 11,006 of the almost 350,000 subjects developed CHD or stroke.
Conclusion: Saturated fat consumption was not associated with an increased risk of heart disease or stroke
(American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Jan 13, 2010)
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Cholesterol levels, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition Tags: American heart association, American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease risks, causes of heart attack, coronary heart disease, facts about heart disease, foods that fight heart disease, heart attack, heart attack symptoms, Heart disease, heart disease information, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, independent risk factors for heart disease, Obesity and cardiovascular disease, polyunsaturated fat side effects, prevent heart disease, Saturated fat, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat consumption, symtoms of heart disease, types of heart disease, what causes heart disease
Cholesterol no longer a risk factor for heart disease. Look to CRP? Posted by Mike Furci (04/29/2010 @ 12:35 pm)
Dr. James Stein, MD from the University of Wisconsin Medical School in Madison, praised the JUPITER study for exposing the fact that current therapeutic LDL-cholesterol levels are not only arbitrary, but are in fact a poor indicator of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. ?Most patients with heart attacks have normal cholesterol values,? he stated. With the cholesterol theory crumbling the industry is under intense pressure to come up with a new risk factor, and one that can be treated with the same statin drugs they have invested so much money in. Enter Dr. Ridker and C-reactive protein (CRP). Ridker has been pushing treating CRP with statins for years. But is CRP a risk factor? A National Panel on CRP found no evidence treating CRP levels will improve survival rates (www.urmc.rochester.edu/pr/News/story.cfm?id=182). Elevated CRP levels are associated with many things including; anger, stress, arthritis, cancer, lupus, pneumonia, TB, oral contraceptive use, pregnancy, heart attacks, surgery, trauma, intense exercise, etc. It?s a marker for disease, not the cause. But since statins lower CRP levels slightly, you can count on CRP becoming the new cholesterol. The public will be made to fear CRP, be tested for it, and be put on dangerous statins to lower it. What a racket.
Posted in:
Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: adverse effects of statins, American heart association, animal fat and cholesterol, Bad Cholesterol, Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease types, causes of cardiovascular disease, Cholesterol, cholesterol drugs, Cholesterol Levels, coronary heart disease, CRP levels, decreasing your cholesterol, definition of cardiovascular disease, elevated crp blood levels, foods that fight heart disease, Good Cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, Headlines, heart, heart attack, Heart disease, heart disease information, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, increased risks with statins, independent risk factors for heart disease, LDL cholesterol, lupus, prevent heart disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, statin benefits, Statin side effects, Statins, statins benefits versus risks, symtoms of heart disease, treating high cholesterol, types of heart disease, what causes heart disease
Butter is better Posted by Mike Furci (04/08/2010 @ 3:16 am)

A recent meta-analysis with almost 347,747 subjects assessed the correlation between saturated fat consumption and cardiovascular disease (CVD). Conclusion: A meta-analysis of prospective epidemiologic studies showed that there is no significant evidence for concluding that dietary saturated fat is associated with an increased risk of CVD. More data are needed to elucidate whether CVD risks are likely to be influenced by the specific nutrients used to replace saturated fat. Gee, wonder what those nutrients could be…vegetable oil anyone. (Wise Traditions Spring 2010;11(1):15) (Amer J Clin Nutr)
Take note of the lack of fan fare for studies going against established dogma like the lipid hypothesis. Did you see this study’s results in magazines or TV? The mainstream media deems studies like this to be politically incorrect. None-the-less,the lipid hypothesis is simply archaic and untenable.
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: American heart association, cleveland clinic heart center, coronary heart disease, CVD, facts about heart disease, foods that fight heart disease, Headlines, Heart disease, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, incidnce of CVD, Lipid hypothesis, prevent heart disease, symtoms of heart disease, Vegetable oil, what causes heart disease, Wise Traditions, www.westonaprice.com
Saturated fat is no villian. Posted by Mike Furci (03/13/2010 @ 11:03 pm)
Saturated fat found mainly in animal products has been vilified by physicians, the media, and the edible oil industry for over 60 years, despite mounds of evidence to the contrary. A meta-analysis of 21 prospective epidemiologic studies that had a total of 347,747 participants, showed that there is no significant evidence for concluding that dietary saturated fat is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease or stroke.
Saturated fats have been nourishing societies around the world for thousands of years. If animal fats (saturated fats) are so dangerous, and vegetable oils (polyunsaturated fat) are so healthy, why are we so unhealthy as a nation? The scientific data of the past and present does not support the assertion that saturated fats cause heart disease. As a matter of fact, people who have had a heart attack haven?t eaten any more saturated fat than other people, and the degree of atherosclerosis at autopsy is unrelated to diet.Ravnskov, Uffe. ?The cholesterol Myths: Myth number 4?
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Diets, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: animal fat and cholesterol, Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease types, causes of cardiovascular disease, Cholesterol, Cholesterol Levels, coronary heart disease, facts about heart disease, foods that fight heart disease, Headlines, Heart disease, heart disease risk factor, LDL cholesterol, Lipid hypothesis, Lowering Cholesterol, polyunsaturated fat side effects, polyunsaturated fats, Polyunsturated fats, saturated, Saturated fat, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat consumption, symtoms of heart disease, the lipid hypothesis, treating high cholesterol, what is cardiovascular disease, what is polyunsaturated fats
Thumbs up review of Nutrition and Physical Degeneration by Weston A Price, DDS Posted by Mike Furci (03/08/2010 @ 2:27 am)
Nutritional and Physical Degeneration is one of the most ground-breaking books ever written on the link between nutrition and health. Dr. Weston A. Price, a dentist from Cleveland, became very disturbed by what he saw in his patients. He started to see a link between the decay he found in the mouths of his patients and pathologies found elsewhere in the body like diabetes, arthritis, osteoporosis, gastrointestinal complaints, and more. Dr. Price also found that crowded, crooked teeth were becoming more and more common, along with facial deformities like overbites, narrow faces, lack of well defined cheek bones, and underdevelopment of the nose. Dr. Price did not believe these problems to be in any way normal; He believed they were the result of poor nutrition. The worse a person?s diet was the more decay he found in their mouth. The more decay a person had in their mouth, the higher the rate of pathologies in other areas of the body.
More than 70 years ago Dr. Price decided to search the world for primitive people who lived entirely on indigenous foods. His travels took him from islands in the South Seas to Alaska to Africa and many places in between. He visited Australian Aborigines, Swiss villages, Eskimos, traditional American Indians, Amoazonian Indians, African tribes, and more. Dr. Price and his wife Florence traveled for ten years during the 1920′s and 30′s when groups of people completely isolated from civilization could be found.
Throughout his travels, Dr. Price kept a record of his findings with pictures and detailed assessments. What he found, to be called astounding, is an understatement. Dr, Price discovered that primitive people untouched by civilization, who subsided on a diet of indigenous food, had outstanding physical development with little to no dental problems, heart disease, diabetes, or any other diseases we know believe to be a normal consequence of life.
Dr. Price?s findings were not surprising to other investigators and explorers. However, the excepted explanation at the time was that primitive people were ?racially pure? and that the maladies we see in civilization were due to ?race mixing?. This theory was untenable to Dr. Price who found that the individuals in groups he studied who abandoned their traditional diets for foods provided by traders or missionaries, or who moved to a more civilized area were found to develop tooth decay and degenerative conditions.
The diets of these primitive groups of people were vastly different. Some were mostly cooked food while in others most of the food was consumed raw including animal sources. Some diets were based on sea food, others on domestic animals and others on wild game. Some diets were based on dairy while others consumed a variety of fruits and vegetables and grains.
The common thread between all the groups Dr. Price investigated was none of them contained any refined devitalized foods like white sugar, flour, pasteurized or skim milk, and refined or hydrogenated vegetable oils. All the diets contained animal foods of some type and some salt. Dr. Price analyzed the primitive diets and found they all contained four times the amount of water soluble vitamins and minerals, and ten times the amount of fat soluble vitamins compared to the modern American diet.
Unfortunately, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, the permanent record of his travels, is nonexistent to today?s modern medical community. This book is more important to our health and welfare today than it was 60 years ago. Our food supply, if it could be classified as food, is devoid of almost all nutritive value. We need to incorporate the fundamentals of primitive nutrition and return to nutrient dense whole food. We need to get back to local farming and turn away from manmade supermarket garbage that is destroying our health.
Anyone interested in becoming truly healthy needs to read Nutrition and physical degeneration
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Book Reviews, Cancer, Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Dementia/Alzheimer's Disease, Diabetes, Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Obesity, Vitamin D, Vitamins/Minerals, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: Adkin's diet, animal fat and cholesterol, Best food for men, book review, Book Reviews, boys food, Calories in food, Cholesterol, Cholesterol Levels, diet, Diet advice, Diet and building muscle, Diet and exercise advice, Diet tips, Diets, Dr. Weston A. Price, fast food, fast food nutrition facts, fast food statistics, Food ingredients, food network, food pyramid, food recipes, food supply, Foods that build muscle, Good Cholesterol, Headlines, Healthy food oils, healthy foods, high fat diets, High fiber diet, high protein diets, how to write a book review, link between sturated fat and cholesterol, list of foods that help to lower cholesterol, list of high protein foods, low cab diets, Low Carb diet, low carb diets, low fat high protein diet, Lowering Cholesterol, man-made foods, online book reviews, raw food, raw food diet, read book reviews, saturated fat and cholesterol, stone age diet, The Eat Clean Diet for Men, the western diet, Vegan diet, vegetarian diet, weight loss foods, Weston A. Price, Weston A. Price Foundation, westonaprice.com, whole foods, whole foods market
The cholesterol/heart disease myth Posted by Mike Furci (02/10/2010 @ 9:49 am)
Today in the United States one person will die from CVD every 37 seconds. This year in the U.S. over 1.2 million people will have a heart attack and just short of half will die. Approximately 80,000,000 people or roughly 25% of The U.S. has cardiovascular disease(CVD). It became our number one killer in the 1950′s and has not slowed down.(1)
Do you believe consuming saturated fat and cholesterol cause CVD? Do you believe eating polyunsaturated oils like canola and corn oil are not only good for you but lower your risk of CVD. If you answered yes to both of these questions, you are among the 10′s of millions who need to be enlightened by reading my article “Fats, Cholesterol and the Lipd Hypothesis”.
The truth is, saturated fat and cholesterol have nothing to do with your risk of cardiovascular disease. As a matter of fact there are many studies that show that people who have heart attacks do not eat anymore saturated fat than people who don’t have heart attacks. More-over the degree of atherosclerosis at autopsy, in heart attack victims, is unrelated to diet. It is also interesting to note that half of all heart attack victims do not have “clogged” arteries.
I have personally witnessed and cared for many patients who were experiencing (the big one) massive heart attacks in the emergency room. The degree of blockage had a wide range with the most common seemingly being between 80, 90 percent. But the interesting thing was, some people literally had no plaque what-so-ever according to cath lab reports. It was during my time working in emergency department, because of so many discrepancies, that I became very curious about what actually caused CVD.
Posted in:
Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: canola oil, Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease risks, causes of cardiovascular disease, Cholesterol, Cholesterol Levels, corn oil, facts about heart disease, Fat, Fatty acids, Headlines, Heart disease, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, high cholesterol, independent risk factors for heart disease, Obesity and cardiovascular disease, polyunsaturated fat side effects, Polyunsturated fats, Saturated fat, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat consumption
Lowering your cholesterol can be hazardous Posted by Mike Furci (01/15/2010 @ 9:18 am)
Too little of one type of cholesterol has been linked to memory loss and Alzheimer’s disease.
Scientists studied more than 3,500 civil servants to investigate how levels of HDL or “good” cholesterol were associated with memory. HDL cholesterol can influence the formation of the beta-amyloid “plaques” that are a distinctive feature in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients.
Higher levels of HDL are also believed to protect against damage to blood supply caused by the narrowing of the arteries.
After the five-year study period, the researchers found that people with low levels of HDL were 53 percent more likely to suffer memory loss than people with the highest levels of HDL.
Those with impaired memory are at an increased risk of developing dementia later in life.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and?Vascular Biol. 2008 Aug;28(8)
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Cholesterol levels, Dementia/Alzheimer's Disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: age dementia symptoms, alzheimer disease early symptoms, Alzheimer's disease, Alzheimer's patients, alzheimers association, alzheimers signs and symptoms, alzheimers symptoms, Arteriosclerosis, Bad Cholesterol, Cholesterol, Cholesterol Levels, Dementia, dementia and alzheimers, dementia symptoms, dementia vs alzheimers, Good Cholesterol, HDL, HDL levels, Headlines, LDL, LDL levels, Lowering Cholesterol, Memory Loss, national alzheimer s association, Plaque, stages of alzheimer s disease, stages of alzheimers, symptoms of dementia, treatment dementia, vascular dementia
B vitamin possible cure for Alzheimer’s Posted by Mike Furci (01/05/2010 @ 9:11 am)
One out of every eight Americans gets it, and 47% of those who reach 85 years of age have it. Up to now Alzheimer’s was a disease without a remedy. Sure, there are nutritional or drug based substances that slow the symptoms, but If nothing else killed you Alzheimer’s would over a period of time.
Up until recently Alzheimer’s patients took medications just to be able to dress, bathe, use a phone, and other basic necessary functions by themselves a while longer. A team of researchers from the University of California, Irvine, has announced the discovery of a true cure for Alzheimer?s. The best part of this cure is it’s cheap and widely accessible. The cure is vitamin B3, nicotinamide, or more commonly referred to as niacinamide.
Kim Green, Ph.D., director of the team at the University of California, Irvine, bought a year?s supply of niacinamide for $30 and stirred it into the drinking water of forty lab mice, half of which were
specially bred to get Alzheimer’s disease.
After treating the mice for only four months, he discovered what should have been front-page news in every city in the world. ?Cognitively, they were cured,? said Dr. Green. ?They performed as if they?d never developed the disease.?
All the researchers in the study were both astonished and excited. Rarely do you hear researchers using the word ?cured,? but that?s exactly what happened.
At the end of the study, the diseased mice that were treated with niacinamide performed just as well in memory tests as healthy mice! The niacinamide not only protected their brains from further memory loss, but incredibly, it also restored lost memory function.
Human trials are underway.
The earliest indicator of coming Alzheimer?s may not be a memory test at all, but a test of your sense of balance.
Dr. Kaufman often tested the impact of niacinamide on balance, and my colleague Julian Whitaker, M.D., editor of Health & Healing, uses it as a test of aging. Borrowing a bit from both of them, here is how you can test yourself:
1. Stand on an uncarpeted floor barefoot or in low-heeled shoes. Close your eyes and balance on your right foot. Slowly draw the heel of your left foot up to where it touches your right kneecap. Don?t wave your arms for balance, just see how long you can stand there. (If you?re accident-prone, have somebody to catch you.)
2. Do the same standing on your left foot.
3. Repeat #1 and #2.
Then average your four scores.
The average by age group is:
Your Age – Seconds
Up to 20 – 30
30?39 – 25
40?49 – 15
50?59 – 10
60?69 – 7
70+ – 5
Why such a large difference between ages? It?s because certain nerve fibers in your spinal column tell your brain the location and angle of each joint in your body…but if you stop assimilating enough B vitamins, the fibers eventually stop sending their messages upstairs?and that?s definitely a pre-Alzheimer?s condition.
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Cholesterol levels, Dementia/Alzheimer's Disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: age dementia symptoms, alzheimer disease early symptoms, alzheimer test, Alzheimer's disease, Alzheimer's patients, alzheimers, alzheimers and coffee, alzheimers association, alzheimers signs and symptoms, alzheimers symptoms, Dementia, dementia and alzheimers, dementia symptoms, dementia types, dementia vs alzheimers, early symptoms of alzheimers, Headlines, national alzheimer s association, niacinamide, niacinamide cures vertigo, reversing dementia niacinamide, stages of alzheimer s disease, stages of alzheimers, symptoms of dementia, treatment dementia, University of California, University of California Irvine, vascular dementia, vitamin b3, vitamin b3 deficiency, what is the life expectancy for alzheimer s
Statins benefits do not outweigh risks. Posted by Mike Furci (04/03/2009 @ 11:06 am)
A review of the literature by the Department of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego, cites nearly 900 studies which show adverse effect of statins, which are widely used in treating high cholesterol. Researchers report that muscle adverse effects are the most commonly reported problem in the literature and by patients. Adverse effects are dose dependent, and risks are amplified by drug interactions, thyroid disease, high blood pressure, diabetes and genetics.
The risk of adverse side effects goes up as age goes up, and this helps to explain why statins benefits have not been found to exceed their risks. Unfortunately, researchers report the physician awareness of statin side effects is low.
Statin side effects may include:
Increased cancer risk
Sexual dysfunction
Immune system suppresion
Cognitive loss
Neuropathy (numbness, tingling in extremities)
Anemia
Cataracts
Hepatic dysfunction.
Pancreatic dysfunction
American Journal of Cardiovascular Drugs
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Sexual Health Tags: adverse effects of statins, cholesterol drugs, increased risks with statins, statin benefits, Statin side effects, Statins, statins benefits versus risks, treating high cholesterol
|