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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 07:25:31 -0500, Aaron Baugher
wrote: Why should the AHA care what diet works, if their real concern is helping people with heart problems? The AMA is not only concerned with your heart. They do care about the short and long term effects of any diet on the whole of the person. How long will embarrassment over past mistakes trump doing the right thing now? The AHA doesn't consider it the right thing. http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap031021.html Lift well, Eat less, Walk fast, Live long. |
#12
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
"Valley Of Mu_n" wrote in message ... On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 07:25:31 -0500, Aaron Baugher wrote: Why should the AHA care what diet works, if their real concern is helping people with heart problems? The AMA is not only concerned with your heart. They do care about the short and long term effects of any diet on the whole of the person. Unfortunately, the AHA didn't warn doctors about statin-induced rhabdomyolysis until after Bayer pulled Baycol, after hundreds of deaths. Unfortunately, the AHA didn't warn doctors about statin-induced myositis, nor statin-induced myopathy without elevated CK, until a year after the initial recognition of the rhabdomyolysis dangers. Unfortunately, the AHA has yet to warn doctors (beyond a brief mention of a speculation) about statin-induced polyneuropathy and statin-induced peripheral neuropathy. Nor, have they determined that there is any increased urgency in warning doctors to watch for statin-induced polyneuropathy and statin-induced peripheral neuropathy when they are treating diabetics - many of whom are at risk for these very conditions - now that the FDA has approved statins for diabetics. Unfortunately, the AHA has yet to warn doctors about statin-induced cognitive decline, statin-induced memory loss, and statin-induced episodes of Transcient Global Amnesia, often occuring in multiples. (No mention, yet the Australian Drug Administration warned that statins are "Drugs that make you forget" in 1998.) Nor, have they determined that there is any increased urgency in warning doctors to watch for statin-induced cognitive decline, statin-induced memory loss, and statin-induced episodes of Transcient Global Amnesia now that the FDA has approved statins for children ages 11-17. Then again, the AHA has known since 1985 that statins cause a Coenzyme Q10 deficiency, with mitochondrial damage and cardiac impacts, and they have yet to warn doctors to watch for the results of this deficiency, let alone suggest a supplement to prevent it. What are the results of not warning doctors (or patients) about these statin-induced adverse effects? For specific examples, see Smart Money Magazine's November issue, on the stands now, complete with color pictures of the disabled patients. |
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
Sharon Hope wrote:
What are the results of not warning doctors (or patients) about these statin-induced adverse effects? For specific examples, see Smart Money Magazine's November issue, on the stands now, complete with color pictures of the disabled patients. ----------------- Hi, Sharon - I read it and it was pretty frightening. Based on what has already been learned about Baycol it bears a closer look. I don't want to be one of it's victims and have cut back from 20mg. to 10mg and then every other day to nothing. I saw my MD just a few weeks ago and mentioned the weakness in my legs and the pain I was experiencing. He said it was probably just leg cramps and offered a Rx. for quinine tabs to relieve that. Wouldn't you think HE would know if there is a problem with Lipitor ? Guess not. 8-( I plan on consulting with someone else on this...but where to start ? If any permanent damage has been I'm going to be really angry. -- Patricia Florida-USA |
#14
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
Valley Of Mu_n wrote:
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 07:25:31 -0500, Aaron Baugher wrote: Why should the AHA care what diet works, if their real concern is helping people with heart problems? The AMA is not only concerned with your heart. They do care about the short and long term effects of any diet on the whole of the person. How long will embarrassment over past mistakes trump doing the right thing now? The AHA doesn't consider it the right thing. The AHA is not alone. From Dr. Barry Sears (2/24/2000): "Finally, the longer you stay in ketosis, you begin to oxidize lipoproteins, so these are long-term consequences which begin to explain why high protein diets fail." Source: http://www.usda.gov/cnpp/Seminars/GND/Proceedings.txt Pertinent research: http://tinyurl.com/s8mp "This study demonstrates that incubation of AA with normal RBCs in phosphate-buffered saline (37 degrees C for 24 h) resulted in marked GSH depletion, oxidized glutathione accumulation, hydroxyl radical generation, and increased membrane lipid peroxidation." Note that these are *normal* red blood cells (RBCs) incubated under physiological conditions with AA (acetoacetate is a ketone that *is* elevated with ketogenic LC dieting) resulting in measurable toxic (bad) effects on the cells. Especially concerning is the generation of oxygen free radicals and peroxidation of membrane lipids. Humbly, Andrew -- Dr. Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD Board-Certified Cardiologist http://www.heartmdphd.com/ |
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
Sharon Hope wrote:
"Valley Of Mu_n" wrote in message ... On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 07:25:31 -0500, Aaron Baugher wrote: Why should the AHA care what diet works, if their real concern is helping people with heart problems? The AMA is not only concerned with your heart. They do care about the short and long term effects of any diet on the whole of the person. Unfortunately, the AHA didn't warn doctors about statin-induced rhabdomyolysis until after Bayer pulled Baycol, after hundreds of deaths. So you better take heed when the AHA warns you about something. They tend to be late about doing it according to Ms. Hope. -- Dr. Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD Board-Certified Cardiologist http://www.heartmdphd.com |
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
Sat, 25 Oct 2003 03:36:24 GMT in article
m "Dr. Andrew B. Chung, MD/PhD" wrote: Valley Of Mu_n wrote: On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 07:25:31 -0500, Aaron Baugher wrote: Why should the AHA care what diet works, if their real concern is helping people with heart problems? The AMA is not only concerned with your heart. They do care about the short and long term effects of any diet on the whole of the person. How long will embarrassment over past mistakes trump doing the right thing now? The AHA doesn't consider it the right thing. The AHA is not alone. From Dr. Barry Sears (2/24/2000): "Finally, the longer you stay in ketosis, you begin to oxidize lipoproteins, so these are long-term consequences which begin to explain why high protein diets fail." Source: http://www.usda.gov/cnpp/Seminars/GND/Proceedings.txt That is your "evidence"?. Barry Sears' unsubstantiated oral statement over three years ago without any references whatsoever to back it up? You have to do "much" better than that. Pertinent research: http://tinyurl.com/s8mp "This study demonstrates that incubation of AA with normal RBCs in phosphate-buffered saline (37 degrees C for 24 h) resulted in marked GSH depletion, oxidized glutathione accumulation, hydroxyl radical generation, and increased membrane lipid peroxidation." Note that these are *normal* red blood cells (RBCs) incubated under physiological conditions with AA (acetoacetate is a ketone that *is* elevated with ketogenic LC dieting) resulting in measurable toxic (bad) effects on the cells. Especially concerning is the generation of oxygen free radicals and peroxidation of membrane lipids. As ha already been shown, this applies only to type 1 diabetes patients as authors mention in their conclusion. The full text of this study is at http://diabetes.diabetesjournals.org.../48/9/1850.pdf A quote from there gives one explanation why this study applies only to type 1 diabetes: "The blood concentration of ketone bodies may reach 10 mmol/l in diabetic patients with severe ketosis, versus 0.5 mmol/l in normal people (24,25)." -- Matti Narkia |
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
Please see the last couple paragraphs of this news item.
http://www.news.harvard.edu/gazette/...3-lowcarb.html Although the hypotheses I stated are my own, the intuitive logic is compelling--as the above-reference researcher illustrates. To me, this is by far the most obvious reason why LCers may consume more calories (than LFers) and yet lose more weight. It may not ultimately prove to be true, but isn't this the logical place to begin the research? The converse to my simple hypothesis would be: "All foods (i.e. no exceptions, ever, anywhere, under any circumstances) are metabolized in EXACTLY the same way, or at least have EXACTLY the same net metabolic effect on EVERY SINGLE HUMAN BEING". Not particularly likely, IMHO. "Roger Zoul" wrote in message ... cheesegator wrote: :: Why is this such a controversy? Whether or not there truly exists a :: "Metabolic Advantage" as Dr. Atkins used the term, there is another :: very simple explanation. :: :: For some people, if not all people, it MUST be true that: :: :: Consuming 1,000 Kcal of Fructose is NOT metabolically equivalent to :: consuming 1,000 Kcal of Bacon grease. :: :: :: Why not???? I'll tell you why: :: :: 1. Not all foods have EXACTLY the same absorption in the gut. Most :: of the fructose calories will be used by the body, while a greater :: percentage of the bacon grease calories will end up in the toilet. Do you have a cite for this? I'm not saying it isn't true, but I've never read anything convincing on this. I do know, however, that when I eat lots of fat -- stuff floats :: :: 2. The energy USED by the body in metabolizing & processing is not :: EXACTLY the same for all foods. Again, my hypothesis is that :: sugary/starchy foods are much more easily processed by the body. :: :: Even a 1% difference in NET ABSORBED CALORIES (between a low-carb :: and a high-carb diet of equivalent GROSS calories) would be :: significant. I would bet it's much greater than 1%. :: :: If I'm wrong, then Atkins' "Metabolic Advantage" seems to be the only :: logical explanation for these results. I like your notions better than the metabolic advantage. I just don't know if they are true. |
#18
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
Patricia,
Glad you read it. Now you know what my husband is going through and what I face every day. Where to start: Contact the UCSD Statin Study - Dr. Golomb (nearly full page photo in the Smart Money article) has information on her website, and is collecting adverse effects. http://medicine.ucsd.edu/statin/ click on 'contact us'. You can email or call. Read the website http://www.impostertrial.com/, both the section for patients and the section for doctors. Imposter /impóster/ n. (also im·pos´tor) 1 A web site for patients and physicians searching for information concerning Statin Therapy and related issues 2 acronym: Is Myopathy Part Of Statin Therapy? Check the Statin FAQ on http://forum.ditonline.com/viewboard.php?BoardID=38 (I may also post one here again, under its own subject line) Note that the FAQ tends to emphasize non-muscular statin adverse effects, because I was under the erroneous illusion that the myopathy and rhabdomyolysis problems were common knowledge. Again and again I find that is not true, both among treating doctors and patients. (Which indicates the doctors are not even listening to the AHA on the one adverse effect they admit to) Take all of the above to your doctor and DEMAND that he address your pain. He owes you a blood test to check for elevated CK, but he also should know that you can have statin myopathy without elevated CK. Any of the following out of range are danger signs: BUN high Creatine high low CO2 low red blood cells high AST high ALT elevated CPK (aka CK) If he won't help, check the NIH (National Institutes of Health) website for a neuromuscular specialist or a mitochondrial specialist and have them check into the problems. Do not wait! My husband was on 10mg for 4 years and you read some of the statin adverse effects that disabled him in the article (couldn't cover it all in 6 pages - his medical records since quitting Lipitor in January 2002 are over 4 inches thick!). Coenzyme Q10 supplements may help, but they will not be the entire answer. Good luck, and please let me know how you are doing. Take care, Sharon "Patricia" wrote in message ... Sharon Hope wrote: What are the results of not warning doctors (or patients) about these statin-induced adverse effects? For specific examples, see Smart Money Magazine's November issue, on the stands now, complete with color pictures of the disabled patients. ----------------- Hi, Sharon - I read it and it was pretty frightening. Based on what has already been learned about Baycol it bears a closer look. I don't want to be one of it's victims and have cut back from 20mg. to 10mg and then every other day to nothing. I saw my MD just a few weeks ago and mentioned the weakness in my legs and the pain I was experiencing. He said it was probably just leg cramps and offered a Rx. for quinine tabs to relieve that. Wouldn't you think HE would know if there is a problem with Lipitor ? Guess not. 8-( I plan on consulting with someone else on this...but where to start ? If any permanent damage has been I'm going to be really angry. -- Patricia Florida-USA |
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 07:25:31 -0500, Aaron Baugher
wrote: snip "We had a tough time getting our results published - it took 18 months altogether," she says. "The big journals really couldn't handle it. But we're not endorsing the diet: it's just our results." That's really, really sad. Any journal that refuses to publish research simply because it doesn't like the results should cease to exist. They aren't supposed to be in the business of suppressing knowledge. It's the way ALL reputable scientific journals operate. Papers come in. The editors send them off to other reputable scientists in that particular field to be reviewed - basically, the editors want to make sure the paper is 'good science'. The editor then takes into account the comments of the reviewer(s) as to whether or not the paper is plausible, is well written and the experiments (if any) described therein are good science in deciding whether to reject the paper outright, ask for revision and resubmission or publish it. If your work happens to be in accord with current thinking on the topic, it's more likely to be published or at least only minor revision before publication. If your work, no matter how well researched, does NOT fit with current thinking it's more likely to be rejected. As it happens, this is a situation that effects my family on a regular basis. My husband is a professional Research Scientist. His paid work is as a civilian scientist attached to the Australian Defence Force. He publishes about 5 or so papers a year (mostly classified, or I'd point you to them) in that field and they are rarely returned for more than minor revision before publication. He also has (classified) Patents in his name for his sonar enhancement system (ISHTAR - you can see some unclassified information at http://www.dsto.defence.gov.au/corpo...industry1.html if you're interested in what he gets up to). His PhD work was in Tachyon Physics. His theories in this field are VERY controversial, although they fit better with established knowledge than do the current theories in this field. It takes him approximately 3 years of revision and resubmission to get every paper published. It's not that his papers in Tachyons are poorly written. It's not that his papers are poorly researched. It's just that most of the reviewers out there *have a vested interest in having *their* theories be the accepted ones* so they reject papers showing that they might have been wrong. Since most editors of journals *don't* have the expertise to be a peer-reviewer of *every* subject that their journal covers they have to rely on the judgements of those who *do* have the expertise. This is true throughout all the branches of science. And, since scientists are no less human than anyone else you might meet (although some people might think so) they *do* tend to unconsciously protect their livelihoods by demanding greater proof of controversial papers than they might of ones that support their own views. Aramanth |
#20
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ARTICLE: Yet another study has shown that the Atkins diet works
revek wrote ...
"cheesegator" wrote ... For some people, if not all people, it MUST be true that: Consuming 1,000 Kcal of Fructose is NOT metabolically equivalent to consuming 1,000 Kcal of Bacon grease. Why not???? I'll tell you why: 1. Not all foods have EXACTLY the same absorption in the gut. Most of the fructose calories will be used by the body, while a greater percentage of the bacon grease calories will end up in the toilet. 2. The energy USED by the body in metabolizing & processing is not EXACTLY the same for all foods. Again, my hypothesis is that sugary/starchy foods are much more easily processed by the body. I doubt it is so high, myself, for 'average' folks, and I have heard that sort of differential factoring is accounted for in the calculations of caloric loads of different foods (for average folks). Of course, for us overweight people, we have visual evidence that our bodies react differently to food than 'average' folks. It's all about the insulin ... carbs stimulate insulin, protein/fats don't, or at least *very* little. I'm no scientist so bear with me here, but the insulin spike you get with the fructose (or any carbs, to a greater or lesser degree) means your body is going to store any excess calories as fat. Too many such insulin spikes can leave a person insulin resistant, which means the body is producing more and more of the fat-storing insulin because it's not registering ... and if it continues you end up with type 2 diabetes if you're not careful. Hence the idiocy of the high-carb diet so commonly prescribed for diabetics. I'm sure there are others here who can explain it all soooo much better than I can! This is essentially what I can recall from reading DANDR. When my GP told me I was insulin resistant, she said my body is extremely efficient at gaining and retaining weight. bloody brilliant ... ) Rachel (New Zealand) |
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