Vegan diet kills 11 month old Posted by Mike Furci (04/27/2011 @ 9:26 am)
Vegans Sergine and Joel Le Moaligou fed their 11-month-old daughter Louise only mother’s milk, and she died suffering from a vitamin deficiency. The two are currently on trial in northern France, charged with neglect.
The pair called the emergency services in March 2008 after becoming worried about their baby’s listlessness. When the ambulance arrived, the baby was already dead.
According to Yahoo Health:
“An autopsy showed that Louise was suffering from a vitamin A and B12 deficiency which experts say increases a child’s sensitivity to infection and can be due to an unbalanced diet … The couple did not follow the doctor’s advice to hospitalize the baby who was suffering from bronchitis and was losing weight when they went for the nine-month check-up.”
Breast milk is the best food hands-down you can give to your baby. But, it does have one downfall: its nutritional value is influenced by the mother’s diet. If the mother is consuming a diet that tends to be deficient in nutrients, such as a vegan diet, nutrients will be missing in her breast milk.
In the tragic case reported above, it appears 11-month-old Louise lost her life because her mom’s vegan diet created vitamin deficiencies in the breast milk she was exclusively fed on. Sadly, there were warning signs that the milk was not providing proper nutrition months before her death, as the baby was sickly and losing weight, but they were ignored.
People following a strict vegan diet are often convinced that it is the healthiest way of eating possible, which was most likely the case with Louise’s parents. But this tragedy can serve as a powerful warning for those who choose to avoid all animal foods.
Mercola.com
Yahoo Health
Posted in:
Diets, Food preparation, Foods products, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Vitamins/Minerals, Xternal Fitness, Xternal Furci Tags: benefits of a vegan diet, do vegans live longer?, Multivitamins, Vegan, Vegan diet, vegan diet for controlling blood sugar, vegan food, www.yahoo.com, yahoo health, yahoo.com
Testosterone boosters, vegans, creatine and multivitamins Posted by Mike Furci (10/24/2009 @ 9:46 am)
Are taking multivitamins necessary? do they work? How does a vegan get leaner? Should they be eating soy? Are testosterone boosters safe and effective? Which ones should I take and what’s the best way to take them?
Below is a sample of the recent Q&A column on www.bullz-eye.com.
Q:Mike, I?m currently taking a multivitamin because I?m trying to change my health for the better. Is this a good choice? Should I be taking other supplements?
A:Sergio, Short answer No. Multi vitamins are a waste because the absorption is so poor. Some vitamins and minerals compete with one another making absorption even worse.
What I take: Vitamin D (most important) 10,000iu per day, Vitamin A once per week 5000iu, CoQ10 100mg/day, Omega 3 fish oil, CLA, and cook with coconut and olive oils.
I recommend reading my article “Daily consumption for optimum health”, and below are a few other websites to consult.
vitamindcouncil.org
westonaprice.org
vitamin-d-max.com (this is where I purchase vitamin D)
vitacost.com (this is where I get omega 3, CLA and CoQ10.)
therabiotics.net (this is where I get my probiotics)
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Creatine, Diets, Foods products, Nutrition, Protein, Supplements, Testosterone, Testosterone boosters, Vitamins/Minerals Tags: benefits of creatine, best multivitamin, best multivitamin brands, Creatine, creatine facts, creatine monohydrate, daily multivitamin, daily multivitamin mineral supplement, Detrimental effects of soy, herbal testosterone boosters, is creatine safe, multivitamin, Multivitamins, natural testosterone boosters, negative effects of creatine, should I take creatine, side effects of creatine, side effects of soy, soy, soy beans, soy isoflavones, soy milk, soy oil, soy products, soy protein, soy side effects, soy supplements, Testosterone boosters, Vegan diet, vegan food, vegans, when to take multivitamins
One more nail in the vegan diet coffin, but they’re not the only group at risk Posted by Mike Furci (10/02/2009 @ 2:10 pm)
Vitamin B12 is known as the ?energy vitamin,? and it is essential for many critical functions in your body, including energy production, supporting your immune system, and helping to regulate the formation of red blood cells. Recent studies from the US Framingham trial show that one in four adults in the US are deficient in this vitally important nutrient and nearly half of the population has suboptimal blood levels.
Bioavailable (absorbable) Vitamin B12 is present only in animal sources of food, which is one of the many reasons to stay away from a strict vegetarian or a vegan diet. In India, which is primarily a vegetarian based culture, current studies show about 80% of the adults are deficient in vitamin B12. But vegetarians are not the only ones at risk.
The older you get the more likely you are to have a vitamin B12 deficiency. The two ways that you become deficient in vitamin B12 are from not getting enough in your diet and from losing the ability to absorb it.
The older you get the more your digestive system breaks down, especially if you have been following the standard American diet. Specifically the lining of your stomach gradually loses its ability to produce hydrochloric acid which releases vitamin B 12 from your food. The use of antacids or anti ulcer drugs will also lower your stomach acid secretion and decrease your ability to absorb vitamin B 12. Infection with Helicobactor pylori, a common contributor to stomach ulcers, can also result in vitamin B12 deficiency.
However the main cause of vitamin B 12 deficiency is a term researchers call food-cobalamin malabsorption syndrome. Cobalamin is the scientific term for vitamin B12. This typically results when your stomach lining loses its ability to produce intrinsic factor which is a protein that binds to vitamin B12 and allows your body to absorb it at the end of your small intestine.
Mercola.com
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, Diets, Foods products, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Supplements, Vitamins/Minerals Tags: B12, B12 deficiency, B12 injections, benefits of a vegan diet, causes of B12 deficiency, disadvantages of being vefetarian, Headlines, signs of vitamin B12 deficiency, sublingual B12, Vegan diet, vegan food, vegetarian, vegetarian diet, vitamin B12, vitamin B12 deficiency, vitamin B12 injections, vitmanin B12 deficiency symptoms, what causes vitamin B12 deficiency
Wacko vegetarians! Posted by Mike Furci (08/26/2008 @ 9:47 pm)
In a past Q & A column I respond to some hilarious comments?made by a man defending vegetarians.? Here is one of his comments and my response.??
K:? And Vittoni!! for your obviously dumb comment on Asian looks see who all I found to be a vegans- Sir Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein, Leo Tolstoy, Madonna, Paul McCartney, Socrates, Pythagoras, Mahatma Ghandi, H.G. Wells, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Plato, Leonardo Da Vinci, William Shakespeare, Buddha, Voltaire, Charles Darwin to name but a few.
BE:? I would love to see the proof that these people are all vegans, or even vegetarians. Do you really think Buddha got to be such a fat ass from vegetables? Although, maybe he went against the grain of Asian culture and ate large quantities of soy. This would have ensured his obesity, because of the detrimental effects it has on the thyroid. And by the way, Madonna has eaten plenty of meat, and has had her share of protein…if you know what I mean.
Read the rest Here.
Posted in:
Anti-Aging, General fitness, Heart disease, Hormone replacement, Medical Issues for Men, Men's Health and Wellness, Nutrition, Weight training Tags: American Vegetarian Society, Asian Culture, B12, become vegetarian, benefits of a vegan diet, Detrimental effects of soy, disadvantages of being vefetarian, Herbivores, Hormones, meat, Omnivores, soy, soy isoflavones, soy milk, soy products, soy protein, soy side effects, Vegan, vegan food, vegetarian diet, vegetarian food, Vegetarians
|