Fats, Carbohydrates and Proteins

Deprive yourself: The real benefits of fasting

Emma Young – New Scientist 14 November 2012

THERE’S a fuzz in my brain and an ache in my gut. My legs are leaden and my eyesight is blurry. But I have only myself to blame. Besides, I have been assured that these symptoms will pass. Between 10 days and three weeks from now, my body will adjust to the new regime, which entails fasting for two days each week. In the meantime, I just need to keep my eyes on the prize. Forget breakfast and second breakfast, ignore the call of multiple afternoon snacks, because the pay offs of doing without could be enormous.

What about Low-Carb Hi-Fat instead?

The above quote come from a New Scientist which article covers the same Eat, Fast and Live Long territory of recent BBC TV programme.  It looks as though they have not shed much light in this research due to the same popular pre-conceptions and misconceptions about LDLs.

The usual erroneous use of ‘bad’ cholesterol in association with Low-density lipoprotein hardly is a common error. Although raised blood LDL is associated with heart disease it is not the cause.  The cause is sugar damage to the LDL label which prevents it delivering its payload of fats and fat soluble nutrition to the fat-starved organs of the body. The brain needs huge amounts.

The common medical response to our vital organs being LDL starved is to reduce our fat intake. What they should be doing is preventing the sugar-damage to LDL labels allowing our organs to recognise and consume the LDL associated nutrients.

This is what happens when association of LDL with disease is confused with causation. A complete farce which has blinded medical science for 50 years and more!

Eating carbohydrates will generate sugar which insulin will convert into fat.

Eating proteins instead will generate damaging oxides of nitrogen.

Eating fat makes good sense and will not make you fat.

Low-Carb High-Fat diets achieve what fasting achieves without the same hunger!

Link

In the original study

Among the participants with diabetes, the proportion of glycated haemoglobin at 24 months decreased by 0.4±1.3% in the low-fat group, 0.5±1.1% in the Mediterranean-diet group, and 0.9±0.8% in the low-carbohydrate group. The changes were significant (P<0.05) only in the low-carbohydrate group (P=0.45 for the comparison among groups).

A four year follow up concluded

…a 2-year workplace intervention trial involving healthy dietary changes had long-lasting, favourable post-intervention effects, particularly among participants receiving the Mediterranean and low-carbohydrate diets, despite a partial regain of weight.

Mediterranean and low-carbohydrate diets

Link

The diet was hatched in Poland some 40 years ago by Dr. Jan Kwasniewski, who started developing it while working as a dietician for a military sanitarium in Ciechocinek, Poland. There he observed that many of his patients were sick, “not because of any pathogenic factors … but the result of one underlying cause – bad nutrition,” according to his English language “Optimal Nutrition” book. After experimenting on his family and himself, Kwasniewski concluded that the ideal nutritional combo came from eating three grams of fat for every one gram of protein and half a gram of carbohydrates.

Petro Dobromylskyj

Praise the Lard – indeed!

Link

Lech Walesa was diabetic. He was on 52 units of insulin a day, spent 3 days a month in hospital and was under the care of 3 different ‘experts’. He was then treated by Dr Jan Kwasniewski, who has been successfully treating diabetics for 30 years on a low carb/high fat diet. Lech Walesa is no longer diabetic. The body converts carbs straight into glucose.

Petro Dobromylskyj

Diabetes – Lech Walesa

Primary prevention with a statin increases mortality.

Unless you have already had an MI, say “no, thank-you” to the recommends statin therapy. Statins lead to cognitive impairment, memory loss, mental confusion, depression, dementia, diabetes, neuropathy, parasthesia and neuralgia, and appeared to be at higher risk to the debilitating neurological diseases, ALS and Parkinson’s disease.
The statin industry has enjoyed a thirty year run of steadily cooking the data.
TREAT HEART DISEASE: Spend significant time outdoors; evidence of the benefits of sun exposure to the heart is compelling,……..
eat healthy, cholesterol with animal-based foods like eggs, eat fermented foods like yogurt and sour cream; eat foods rich in sulfur like onions and garlic

James J. King September 22, 2012 12:19 (EDT) see comment #1