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
Eat fat, forget about cholesterol Posted by Mike Furci (07/24/2009 @ 11:41 am) The lipid hypothesis states there is a direct link between the amount of saturated fat and cholesterol in the diet and the incidence of heart disease. This couldn’t be further from the truth. Before the mid 1920’s cardiovascular disease was literally unheard of and eggs, butter and lard were consumed in abundance. In 1900 when heart attacks were nonexistent, egg consumption was three times what it was in the mid 1950’s when cardiovascular disease was already the nations #1 killer. Scientific data just doesn’t support the supposed benefits of reducing saturated fat and cholesterol. 20 studies have shown that people who have had heart attacks haven’t eaten any more saturated fat than other people, and the degree of atherosclerosis at autopsy is unrelated to diet. On the contrary, saturated fats have been nourishing societies for milenia. Below is a list of guidelines we can and should follow to be healthier and reduce our risk of the nations number one killer: Read food labels. Consume whole, unprocessed foods. Don’t consume any product that contains trans fat. Don’t be fooled by products that advertise “zero trans fat.” Always read the ingredient list and if “hydrogenated vegetable oil,” “partially hydrogenated vegetable oil” or “shortening” are listed, understand that it has trans fat. By law, companies can claim “zero” if there is .5 grams or less of trans fat per serving. There is no safe level of trans fat. Don’t consume any product that contains vegetable oil, hydrogenated vegetable oil, partially hydrogenated vegetable oil or shortening listed as one of the ingredients. Only use oils that are labeled “Cold Pressed,” “Expellar Pressed” or “Extra Virgin.” Consume eggs laid by free range chickens. They are a good source of omega-3 fatty acids, biotin, and vitamins A, D and E. Use peanut oil, sesame oil or olive oil for cooking if you do not want to use animal fats. These oils can also be used for one-time frying. Use coconut oil for cooking or frying. It’s very stable, and has strong antimicrobial properties. Use butter, not margarine. Don’t use trans fat-free spreads. They are still made with highly processed oils that are rancid. Keep your consumption of polyunsaturated fats to a minimum. They are high in omega-6 fatty acids. Consume meat. Don’t eat like a vegetarian. We do not possess multiple stomachs, nor do we chew cud. Our stomachs produce hydrochloric acid, which is not found in herbivores. We are omnivores. There are essential nutrients in animal products that cannot be gotten in sufficient amounts by eating plants. Don’t feed your children a low-fat diet. If they’re fat, it’s because they sit on their asses too much and eat too much junk. Not coincidentally, these are the same two reasons many adult Americans are overweight. Supplement your diet with vitamins and other nutrients: A, D, E and C, CoQ10, fish oil (omega-3), selenium. Don’t smoke. Exercise at least three days per week. Taken from, “Fats, Cholestarol and the Lipid Hypothesis“
Posted in: Cholesterol, Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition Tags: Cardiovascular Disease, CVD, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, link between sturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat, saturated fat and cardiovascular disease, saturated fat and cholesterol, Saturated fat consumption, the lipid hypothesis
Good Calories, Bad Calories By Gary Taubes Posted by Mike Furci (09/25/2008 @ 7:39 pm) For decades we have been taught that fat is bad for us, carbohydrates are good, and that the key to a healthy weight is eating less and exercising more. Yet with more and more people acting on this advice, we have seen unprecedented epidemics of obesity and diabetes. With seven years of research, Taubes argues persuasively that the problem lies in refined carbohydrates (white flour, sugar, easily digested starches) ?via their dramatic effect on insulin, the hormone that regulates fat accumulation?and that the key to good health is the kind of calories we take in, not the numbers. There are good calories, and bad ones. Taubes traces how the common assumption that carbohydrates are fattening was abandoned in the 1960’s when fat and cholesterol were blamed for heart disease and then?wrongly?were seen as the causes of a host of other maladies, including cancer. He shows us how these unproven hypotheses were emphatically embraced by authorities in nutrition, public health, and clinical medicine, in spite of how well-conceived clinical trials have consistently refuted them. He also documents the dietary trials of carbohydrate-restriction, which consistently show that the fewer carbohydrates we consume, the leaner we will be. Good Calories Bad Calories is the end of the debate about the foods we consume and their effects on us. Posted in: Anti-Aging, Book Reviews, Cancer, Cholesterol, Cholesterol levels, Diabetes, Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Heart disease, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Obesity, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: animal fat and cholesterol, Bad Calories, benefits of eating fat, calorie theory, Calories in food, Calories in ingredients, calories in versus calories out, Carbohydrates, carbohydrates and obesity, causes of obesity, Cholesterol, Cholesterol Levels, counting calories, Det, eating fat to lose fat, Fat, Fattening, Gary Taubes, Good calories, good calories bad calories, good calories bad calories traube, Good Cholesterol, Headlines, Heart disease, high carbohydrate diet, high fat diets, how many calories should i eat, how many calories should i eat to lose weight, link between sturated fat and cholesterol, lossing body fat, Low Carb diet, Lowering Cholesterol, Nutrition, Obesity, Obesity and cardiovascular disease, Obesity epidemic, should you count calories, Sugar, tips to how to burn fat, Ways to burn fat, White flour
|