Veggies vs animals Posted by Mike Furci (08/20/2010 @ 9:46 am) A study published in Nutrition, Metabolism and Cardiovascular Disease, 28 February, 2009, found vitamin K consumption to strongly reduce the risk of coronary heart disease. This finding surfaced with an analysis of a cohort study, Prospect-EPIC, consisting of 16,057 women aged between 49 and 70, none of whom had cardiovascular disease at the start of the study. To the surprise of many, those who got their vitamin K from plant forms by eating lots of leafy vegetables did not fare better than the normal population. However, those women who got their vitamin K from animal sources like whole eggs, cheese, goose liver, and animal fats had substantially reduced incidence of cardiovascular disease. Enig, Mary., and Sally Fallon. ?Caustic commentary? Wise Traditions, 2009;(10)2:11 Unfortunately, the researchers are calling for vitamin K2 supplementation not a healthy diet consisting of animal products, which would yield a whole host of other health benefits. Posted in: Anti-Aging, Diets, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Nutrition, Vitamins/Minerals, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: Cardiovascular Disease, cardiovascular disease facts, cardiovascular disease risks, causes of cardiovascular disease, coronary heart disease, facts about heart disease, foods containing vitamin k, foods high in vitamin k, foods that fight heart disease, Headlines, Heart disease, heart disease information, heart disease prevention, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, Obesity and cardiovascular disease, prevent heart disease, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, symtoms of heart disease, types of heart disease, vitamin k, vitamin k food list, vitamin k foods, what causes heart disease
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
8 reasons to eat more saturated fat Posted by Mike Furci (06/19/2010 @ 9:16 am) Sources of saturated fat: Beef, beef tallow (fat), dairy, palm oil, coconut oil. Saturated fats? roles in the body include: [1] ? They constitute at least 50% of our cell membranes and give our cells integrity. ? They play a vital role in the health of our bones. ? They lower Lp(a), a substance in the blood that is said to indicate proneness to heart disease. ? They protect the liver from alcohol and other toxins like Tylenol (Acetaminophen). ? They enhance the immune system. ? They are needed for proper utilization of essential fatty acids. ? Stearic acid and palmitic acid, both saturated fats, are the preferred energy source of the heart. This is why the fat around the heart muscle is mainly saturated. The best sources for palmitic acid are beef, butter and palm oil. ? Short and medium chain saturated fatty acids have strong antimicrobial properties. They help protect us from harmful microorganisms. The best sources are tropical oils such as coconut oil and palm oil. (Enig, Mary., and Sally Fallon. ?The Skinny on Fats,? westonaprice.org http://www.westonaprice.org/knowyourfats/skinny.html#benefits) Posted in: Diets, Fatty acids, Food preparation, Heart disease, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: Beef tallow, Cardiovascular Disease, coronary heart disease, Dr. Weston A. Price, foods that fight heart disease, Heart disease, heart disease risk factor, how to prevent heart disease, organic beef, polyunsaturated fat side effects, prevent heart disease, saturated, Saturated fat, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat consumption, symtoms of heart disease, types of heart disease, Weston A. Price, Weston A. Price Foundation, westonaprice.com, what causes heart disease, www.westonaprice.com
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
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