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		<title>Shocking Ingredient in Plant-Based Foods</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/shocking-ingredient-in-plant-based-foods-8622/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=shocking-ingredient-in-plant-based-foods-8622</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[The AHA! Team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2025 05:05:42 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Diet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Health Disruptors]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[Dr. Al Sears MD]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fake foods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[GMO foods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[healthy protein]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[inflammatory proteins]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=17900</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Al Sears, MD, CNS &#8211; Big Agra, mainstream medicine, and the media have all declared war on traditional protein-rich foods. I remember staying at my grandparents’ farm when I was growing up. I’d wake up to the smell of steak and eggs and race down the stairs to be the first at the table. Your grandparents most likely ate this way, too. But today, it’s a different story. Big Agra, mainstream medicine, and the media have all declared war on traditional protein-rich foods. As a result, you’ve been forced onto a radical, unhealthy, inflammatory, disease-producing diet without your consent. Then in 2016, the war on traditional foods took a drastic new turn. The vegan lifestyle was once again all the rage. Demand for plant-based meat and egg products soared with foods like the Impossible Burger, Beyond Burger, and Quorn “chicken” nuggets. These fake foods began to appear on supermarket shelves and restaurant menus everywhere. Big Agra wanted you to believe these “meat alternatives” were healthier than what nature provides. But they’re not. Clever marketing campaigns wanted you to believe that these meat mockeries taste just like the real thing. But they don’t. And the public knows it. Demand for these fake foods has plummeted. So what are the manufacturers of these knockoff products doing now? They’re adding animal fat back into them to get them to taste more like the real thing! I’ve been warning my patients to avoid meat alternatives for almost a decade. By definition, plant-based “egg and meat products” are processed, unnatural fake foods. They’re made from more than 50 ingredients that are decidedly unrelated to the animals they mimic. Most plant-based products also contain soy and seitan, which gives them their “authentic” texture. Despite the media and marketing hype around soy being a source of good health, the GMO frankenfood is one of the worst plant foods you can possibly consume. Soy is loaded with estrogen mimickers that cause erectile dysfunction, “man boobs,” loss of bone and muscle mass, and at least half a dozen different types of cancer. Soy also impairs insulin secretion and might actually cause diabetes. And new studies reveal that it may even be connected to dementia and mental illness.1,2 Meanwhile, seitan – also known as “wheat meat” – is a starchy, grain-based concoction made from gluten and is highly processed. And as you know, I’ve been recommending that you avoid grain-based foods for more than 30 years. If you followed a grain-based diet like the USDA recommends you’d be diseased, overweight, and prematurely old in no time at all. Unhealthy Ingredients Hiding in These Fake Foods These products, despite clever marketing, are anything but good for you. Soy and seitan, while horrible for your health, are at least real foods. The other ingredients hiding in your veggie burger are anything but… To get these ultra-processed meat alternatives to look and taste like real meat means they have a whole lot of chemical additives. Here’s a small example of what’s hiding in your plant “burger:” Tertiary butylhydroquinone. This synthetic preservative is linked to cancer, vision loss, liver enlargement, and convulsions in lab animals. Research suggests that in humans it damages the immune system, leaving you vulnerable to disease.3 Propylene glycol. This water-absorbing synthetic substance is often used in the cosmetic industry. But it’s also an ingredient in e-cigarettes and antifreeze. Magnesium carbonate. Used as a food additive to prevent caking and retain color, magnesium carbonate is also used in flooring, fireproofing, and fire-extinguishing compounds. Too much causes a laxative effect. Makers of meat alternatives point to studies that declare these compounds are safe. But here’s what they fail to mention… Independent research has discovered the “studies” have been funded or commissioned by the very same companies that manufacture these fake foods. Of course, you’ll never hear from the FDA or the mainstream media that meat alternatives are an unhealthy choice. They’re still pushing the big lie that cholesterol is bad for your heart and your health. As a regular reader, you know I consider the war on cholesterol one of the greatest health food cons of all time. Despite misinformation repeated endlessly by mainstream doctors, the media, and Big Agra, trying to remove animal fats and cholesterol from your diet is a bad idea. A meat-based diet is what made us the humans we are today. It’s grains, carbohydrates, and processed foods that cause excessive weight gain, inflammation, and chronic disease – not dietary fat. Bring Back Real Beef I consider grass-fed meat to be perhaps the healthiest food you can eat. Compared to grain-fed animals, products from grass-fed animals have 10 times more omega-3 fats, more vitamins B, E, D, and K2, more CoQ10 and zinc, and more antioxidants like glutathione and superoxide dismutase (SOD).4 But don’t be fooled by Big Food fakes. To make sure you’re getting the real deal, here’s what to look for: 1. Search For These Keywords When Shopping. Next time you’re shopping, keep an eye out for key terms that show your food isn’t coming from Big Agra farm. “Grass-fed and grass-finished” ensures animals ate a natural diet their whole lives and were never “fattened up” with grain. “Organic” signifies avoidance of synthetic pesticides and fertilizers. “Biodynamic” farming goes even further, treating farms as closed, self-nourishing systems. 2. Order Your Food Online. For a list of farms that only raise grass-fed and finished meat, check out these two websites: American Grassfed, Eat Wild, and A Greener World. To order online, I suggest these sites: ✓ US Wellness Meats. I know the owner John Woods and I trust his products. ✓ Polyface Farms. The food from my friend Joel Salatin’s farm isn’t just healthier, it tastes a heck of a lot better. ✓ Okeechobee Farms. This farm is not too far from my clinic. They make and deliver the homemade bone broth I offer all my patients. 3. Look for third-party certification. Groups like AGA, A Greener World, or the Global Animal Partnership offer certification labels you can check to verify it is real grass-fed beef. To Your Good Health, Al Sears, MD, CNS References: Lavigne C, et al. “Cod and soy proteins compared with casein improve glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity in rats.” Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab. 2000;278(3):E491-E500. Svensson T, et al. “Midlife Intakes of the Isoflavone Genistein and Soy and the Risk of Late-life Cognitive Impairment: The JPHC Saku Mental Health Study.” J Epidemiol. 2023;33(7):342-349. Naidenko OV, et al. “Investigating Molecular Mechanisms of Immunotoxicity and the Utility of ToxCast for Immunotoxicity Screening of Chemicals Added to Food.” Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021;18(7):3332. Published 2021 Mar 24. Nogoy KMC, et al. “Fatty Acid Composition of Grain- and Grass-Fed Beef and Their Nutritional Value and Health Implication.” Food Sci Anim Resour. 2022;42(1):18-33. To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/shocking-ingredient-in-plant-based-foods-8622/">Shocking Ingredient in Plant-Based Foods</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>Is All Vegan Food Healthy?</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/is-all-vegan-food-healthy-8291/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=is-all-vegan-food-healthy-8291</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[The AHA! Team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 30 Sep 2024 08:03:40 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Archive]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Diet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Vegan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[NutritionFacts]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plant-based diet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plant-based foods]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plant-based nutrition]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=16330</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Michael Greger M.D. FACLM via Nutrition Facts &#8211; How do healthier plant-based diets compare to unhealthy plant foods and animal foods when it comes to diabetes risk? In my video on flexitarians, I discuss how the benefits of eating a plant-based diet are not all-or-nothing. “Simple advice to increase the consumption of plant-derived foods with compensatory [parallel] reductions in the consumption of foods from animal sources confers a survival advantage”— a live-longer advantage. The researchers call it a “pro-vegetarian” eating pattern, one that’s moving in the direction of vegetarianism, “a more gradual and gentle approach.” The benefits of eating a plant-based diet are not all-or-nothing. If you’re dealing with a serious disease, though, like diabetes, completely “avoiding some problem foods is easier than attempting to moderate their intake. Clinicians would never tell an alcoholic to try to simply cut down on alcohol. Avoiding alcohol entirely is more effective and, in fact, easier for a problem drinker… Paradoxically, asking patients to make a large change may be more effective than making a slow transition. Diet studies show that recommending more significant changes increases the chances that patients can accomplish [them]. It may help to replace the common advice, ‘all things in moderation’ with ‘big changes beget big results.’ Success breeds success. After a few days or weeks of major dietary changes, patients are likely to see improvements in weight and blood glucose [sugar] levels—improvements that reinforce the dietary changes that elicited them. Furthermore, they may enjoy other health benefits of a plant-based diet” that may give them further motivation. As you can see below and at 1:43 in my video Friday Favorites: Is Vegan Food Always Healthy?, those who choose to eat plant-based for their health say it’s mostly for “general wellness or general disease prevention” or to improve their energy levels or immune function, for example. They felt it gives them a sense of control over their health, helps them feel better emotionally, improves their overall health, makes them feel better, and more, as shown below and at 1:48. Most felt it was very important for maintaining their health and well-being. For the minority who used it for a specific health problem, mostly high cholesterol or weight loss, followed by high blood pressure and diabetes, most reported they felt it helped a great deal, as you can see below and at 2:14. Some choose plant-based diets for other reasons, such as animal welfare or global warming, and it looks like “ethical vegans” are more likely to eat sugary and fatty foods, like vegan donuts, compared to those eating plant-based because of religious or health concerns, as you can see below and at 2:26 in my video. The veganest vegan could make an egg- and dairy-free cake, covered with frosting, marshmallow fluff, and chocolate syrup, topped with Oreos, and served with a side of Doritos. Or, they may want fruit for dessert, but in the form of Pop-Tarts and Krispy Kreme pies. Vegan, yes. Healthy, no. “Plant-based diets have been recommended to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, not all plant foods are necessarily beneficial.” In the pro-vegetarian scoring system I mentioned above, you get points for eating potato chips and French fries because they are technically plant-based, as you can see below and at 3:07 in my video, but Harvard researchers wanted to examine the association of not only an overall plant-based diet, but healthy and unhealthy versions. So, they created the same kind of pro-vegetarian scoring system, but it was weighted towards any sort of plant-based foods and against animal foods; then, they created a healthful plant-based diet index, where at least some whole plant foods took precedence and Coca-Cola and other sweetened beverages were no longer considered plants. Lastly, they created an unhealthful plant-based diet index by assigning positive scores to processed plant-based junk and negative scores for healthier plant foods and animal foods. Their findings? As you can see below and at 3:51 in my video, a more plant-based diet, in general, was good for reducing diabetes risk, but eating especially healthy plant-based foods did better, nearly cutting risk in half, while those eating more unhealthy plant foods did worse, as shown in the graph below and at 4:03. Now, is that because they were also eating more animal foods? People often eat burgers with their fries, so the researchers separated the effects of healthy plant foods, less healthy plant foods, and animal foods on diabetes risk. And, they found that healthy plant foods were protectively associated, animal foods were detrimentally associated, and less healthy plant foods were more neutral when it came to diabetes risk. Below and at 4:32 in my video, you can see the graph that shows higher diabetes risk with more and more animal foods, no protection whatsoever with junky plant foods, and lower and lower diabetes risk associated with more and more healthy whole plant foods in the diet. So, they concluded that, yes, “plant-based diets…are associated with substantially lower risk of developing T2D.” However, it may not be enough to just lower the intake of animal foods; consumption of less healthy plant foods may need to decrease, too. As a physician, labels like vegetarian and vegan just tell me what you don’t eat, but there are a lot of unhealthy vegetarian fare like French fries, potato chips, and soda pop. That’s why I prefer the term whole food and plant-based nutrition. That tells me what you do eat—a diet centered around the healthiest foods out there. The video I mentioned is Do Flexitarians Live Longer?. You may also be interested in some of my past popular videos and blogs on plant-based diets. Check related posts below. Key Takeaways Adopting a “pro-vegetarian” eating pattern is associated with a survival advantage and may contribute to a longer, healthier life. That means gradually increasing the consumption of plant-derived foods while reducing animal-based foods. In cases of serious diseases like diabetes, completely avoiding problematic foods may be more effective than attempting moderation. Making significant dietary changes can lead to rapid improvements in weight, blood glucose levels, and overall health, and reinforce positive habits. Individuals choosing a plant-based diet for health reasons often do so for general wellness, disease prevention, improved energy levels, and immune function. The sense of control over health, emotional well-being, and overall health improvements are common motivations. People may choose plant-based diets for various reasons, including health concerns, animal welfare, or environmental reasons. A study suggests that “ethical vegans” might be more inclined to consume sugary and fatty foods compared to those motivated by religious or health concerns. While plant-based diets are recommended to reduce the risk of type 2 diabetes, not all plant foods offer the same benefits. A diet emphasizing healthy plant-based foods significantly reduces diabetes risk, while an intake of unhealthy plant-based foods may be associated with higher risk. Researchers suggest that reducing animal foods and choosing healthy plant-based options are crucial for diabetes prevention. To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/is-all-vegan-food-healthy-8291/">Is All Vegan Food Healthy?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>Should You Grind Your Chia Seeds?</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/should-you-grind-your-chia-seeds-8003/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=should-you-grind-your-chia-seeds-8003</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[AHA Publisher]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 20 Jun 2022 07:00:14 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[Diet]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Nutrition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chia seeds]]></category>
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		<category><![CDATA[ground chia seeds]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[omega-3 fatty acids]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[plant-based nutrition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[weight loss]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=14716</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Michael Greger M.D. FACLM via Nutrition Facts &#8211; The secret to unlocking the benefits of chia seeds may be grinding them up.  When recently reviewing the literature on the health-promoting properties and therapeutic applications of chia seeds, I ran into a lot of studies discussing, for example, “strategies for incorporation of chia (Salvia hispanica L.) in frankfurters as a health-promoting ingredient.” After all, “recent years have seen increasing pursuit of healthier lifestyles, among them dietary habits. In response to this, there has been a great deal of interest worldwide in…compounds originally present in plants to provide health benefits in foods.” Yes, but in hot dogs? And, indeed, “reformulated frankfurters with chia contained significantly greater amounts of [plant] proteins, insoluble dietary fiber, [and] minerals….Given this nutritional profile, the products thus produced could qualify for labelling with a variety of nutrition and health claims.” And, what do you know? “Chia oil–enriched restructured pork” actually does affect “aged rats” fed bad diets. So…let’s slap on that health claims label! Chia has been eaten for thousands of years, suggesting it’s at least safe to consume, but does it offer any special benefits? It’s certainly nutritious. Chia seed has a lot of fiber, antioxidants (black chia seeds perhaps more than white), and plant protein, and also contains a lot of B vitamins and minerals. So, yes, it’s nutritious—like nearly any whole plant food. But, again: Does it have any special benefits? People trying to sell you chia seeds make all sorts of claims, but to “definitively establish their actual beneficial effects,” we need a little something called “scientific evidence instead of cultural traditions, personal beliefs, or even inaccurate advertising,” a redundant term if I’ve ever heard one.  For example, if you look on YouTube, you’ll find more than 50,000 videos on chia seeds and belly fat, but what does the science say? Apparently, dietary chia seeds do reduce belly fat…in rats. They also reduce the weight…of chickens. Evidently, “consumers are reluctant to eat poultry products smelling or tasting like fish,” so by feeding chickens chia seeds, you can boost their omega-3 levels without turning the meat into funky chicken. What happens if you just cut out the middlehen and eat chia yourself? I discuss this in my video Do Chia Seeds Help with Belly Fat?. What happens, for instance, if you add a teaspoon or two of chia seeds to yogurt as a snack? After eating yogurt with chia, “participants reported significantly lower scores for hunger” and ended up eating fewer calories at lunch two hours later. My initial thought was, well, duh—if you give people more food by adding chia to whatever they’re eating, then of course they’ll be less hungry. But, as you can see at 2:44 in my video, the researchers gave the subjects less yogurt to compensate for the addition of chia, so each snack had the same number of calories. What happened at lunch two hours later? The study participants didn’t just eat a little less food; they ate about 25 percent fewer calories after the chia. A teaspoon of chia seeds only has around 50 calories, and subjects ended up eating nearly 300 fewer calories at lunch, so that’s way more than just compensating. We can at least say that chia seeds are more satiating than yogurt. So, if you ate some chia seeds every day as a snack—one teaspoon seemed to work as well as two—you’d expect to lose weight over time. You don’t know, though, until you…put it to the test. Subjects were randomized to a whole tablespoon of chia seed twice a day before their first and last meal for 12 weeks, and the researchers found that “[c]hia seed does not promote weight loss” after all. That’s disappointing.  Well, we know from the flaxseed literature that if you give people muffins made out of whole flax seeds, they don’t seem to really absorb all the benefit compared to ground flaxseed muffins. The same appears to be true with chia seeds. As you can see at 3:57 in my video, if you eat whole chia seeds for ten weeks, there’s no increase in short-chain omega 3 levels or long-chain omega 3s. But, if you eat the same amount of ground chia seeds, levels shoot up. So, maybe the problem with that study is that the researchers gave people whole chia seeds. What we really need is a study on ground chia and weight loss, and researchers gave us just that. In a randomized controlled trial, one group was given about two tablespoons of ground chia a day, and another group got a fiber-matched control made of mostly oat bran. This is how you know it wasn’t funded by a chia seed company: The researchers pitted the chia head-to-head against a real control to match the fiber content instead of just putting it up against a sugar pill. That way, if there were weight loss, we’d know it wasn’t due just to the fiber, but something particular to the chia. And, indeed, as you can see at 4:42 in my video, those eating the ground chia lost significantly more weight and significantly more waist in terms of waist circumference, which is a measure of belly fat, and, as a bonus, had a decrease in their c-reactive protein levels, suggesting an anti-inflammatory effect as well. So, maybe some of those 50,000 YouTube videos aren’t completely off.  There is one form of chia powder I’d stay away from, though. In a previous video, Which Are Better: Chia Seeds or Flaxseeds?, I talked about using chia gel to replace eggs or oil in baking, by mixing a teaspoon of chia seeds with a quarter cup of water and letting it sit for a half an hour. It’s certainly a way to lower cholesterol and skipping the eggs seems like it would cut down your Salmonella risk, but there was an international outbreak of Salmonella linked to sprouted chia seed powder that infected 94 people across 16 U.S. states and 4 Canadian provinces. Sprouting can “create an ideal environment for bacterial growth.” Granted, it’s not as bad as Salmonella-tainted eggs, which may sicken 79,000 Americans every year, but I would still recommend staying away from sprouted chia seed powder. KEY TAKEAWAYS Chia (Salvia hispanica ) has been eaten for thousands of years and has a lot of fiber, antioxidants (black chia seeds perhaps more than white), protein, B vitamins, and minerals. Myriad claims have been made about chia seeds’ special benefits, such as reducing belly fat. In fact, more than 50,000 videos on chia and belly fat are on YouTube. From the flaxseed literature, we know benefits are absorbed better when eating ground flax than whole flax, and the same appears to be true with chia seeds. In a randomized controlled trial, researchers gave one group about two daily tablespoons of ground chia and another group got a fiber-matched control made mostly of oat bran. Those in the ground chia group lost significantly more weight and significantly more waist in terms of waist circumference, which is a measure of belly fat, as well as had a decrease in their c-reactive protein levels, which suggests an anti-inflammatory effect. In a previous video, Which Are Better: Chia Seeds or Flaxseeds?, I talked about using chia gel (mixing a teaspoon of chia seeds with a quarter cup of water and letting it sit for a half an hour) instead of eggs or oil in baking. This helps to lower cholesterol and may reduce your Salmonella risk by omitting eggs, but there was an international Salmonella outbreak linked to sprouted chia seed powder, so I recommend staying away from sprouted chia seed powder. To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/should-you-grind-your-chia-seeds-8003/">Should You Grind Your Chia Seeds?</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>Heavy Metal Detox Diet</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/heavy-metal-detox-diet-7995/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=heavy-metal-detox-diet-7995</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[AHA Publisher]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 13 Jun 2022 07:00:44 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=14692</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Michael Greger M.D. FACLM via Nutrition Facts &#8211; What dietary change can simultaneously help detoxify mercury, lead, and cadmium from the body? I’ve previously explored the issue of lead contamination in calcium supplements, such as bonemeal, but bone meal isn’t all that can be contaminated. “Substantial quantities of lead have been reported in some over-the-counter calcium supplement preparations,” and testing has revealed continued public health concern over bonemeal. Thankfully, bonemeal isn’t as popular these days, so most of us aren’t likely to get exposed directly to the lead in bonemeal anymore. We may, however, get exposed indirectly through the animals we eat, as I show at 0:31 in my video How to Lower Heavy Metals with Diet. In the United States, five billion pounds of meat and bonemeal are produced annually as slaughterhouse by-products. What do we do with these millions of tons every year? We feed it back to farm animals, particularly chickens. Now, most of the lead in the bonemeal passes right through the animals into their waste, but we take that waste—that cow, pig, and chicken feces—and feed it right back to the animals once again. So, you can see how the levels of contaminants might build up in their bodies. You may remember that I’ve talked before about what all this might mean for making something like chicken soup, but the original concern about these kinds of feeding practices, such as feeding cows to pigs, chickens, and even other cows, was about spreading prion diseases, like mad cow. This kind of recycling not only magnifies prions, however; it also magnifies other toxic substances, including lead. So, a more plant-based diet may be able to lower lead exposure, and an even more plant-based diet could theoretically lower exposure even more. What happens when you put it to the test? Should we really expect to find a benefit? As you can see at 1:42 in my video, even though lead is one of the toxins found in meat, half of our dietary exposure probably comes from plant foods. In fact, dietary modeling studies in Europe suggest that vegetarians would be exposed to about the same amount of lead compared to the general population, with the exception of those who eat a lot of wild game, which can have a thousand times more lead than most other foods, as you can see at 2:02 in my video. A vegetarian diet may even be higher in lead. It’s not what you eat, though; it’s what you absorb. As I’ve discussed previously, researchers found that the uptake of toxic heavy metals from “animal food sources” into human intestinal lining cells may be higher than from vegetable sources. This is why you can have a vegetarian with some of the lowest concentrations of lead and cadmium in their blood, despite having higher concentrations in their diet. As you can see at 2:41 in my video, there seems to be a tendency towards higher fecal elimination of lead following a change to a vegetarian diet. Researchers found that nine subjects, on average, tripled their elimination of lead, three were unaffected, and four saw their levels drop by about half. The study only lasted a few months, though, and the difference wasn’t statistically significant. So, what would happen in a year? Subjects made the shift to a diet “characterized by large amounts of raw vegetables, fruits, unrefined foods, and whole-meal products [whole grains] and the exclusion of meat, poultry, fish, and eggs” (though it did include fermented dairy, like a type of soured milk). They also cut back on processed foods and junk. Researchers took clippings of their hair before and after the dietary shift and got significant reductions in heavy metals, including cutting their lead level nearly in half. As you can see at 3:28 in my video, within three months of the dietary shift, the mercury, cadmium, and lead that had been oozing from their body into their hair went down and stayed down. How do we know the reduction in toxic heavy metal levels wasn’t just a coincidence? A few years after the study was over, after the participants had gone back to more of their regular diet, their mercury, cadmium, and lead levels shot back up to where they were before. Researchers found the same with a different group of subjects after two years on a vegetarian diet. The drop in mercury is easy to explain, as it’s presumably due to the drastic drop in fish consumption, and the drop in alcoholic beverages may have contributed to the drop in lead. There also could have been a cadmium-like effect, where the decrease in hair lead content could be due to the dietary shift that resulted in less absorption of lead into the body in the first place. I have a 16-part series on lead, starting with How the Lead Paint Industry Got Away with It. The series includes videos with specific food recommendations. For example, check out Best Food for Lead Poisoning: Garlic and Yellow Bell Peppers for Male Infertility and Lead Poisoning? KEY TAKEAWAYS Substantial quantities of lead have been found in some over-the-counter calcium supplements, and there is continued public health concerns over bonemeal. Although bonemeal is not as popular today, we may be getting exposed to lead indirectly through the animals we eat. Millions of tons of meat and bonemeal are produced each year in the United States as slaughterhouse by-products and may be fed back to farm animals, particularly chickens. Most of the lead in the bonemeal passes through them into their, but that cow, pig, and chicken feces may then be fed back once again to farm animals. In this way, levels of contaminants may build up in their bodies. These kinds of recycled feeding practices, such as feeding cows to pigs, chickens, and even other cows, facilitate the spread of prion diseases, like mad cow, but they also magnify other toxic substances, including lead. Lead is a toxin found in meat, but half of our dietary exposure likely comes from plant foods. (Notably, wild game can have a thousand times more lead than most other foods.) It’s not what we eat, though; it’s what we absorb, and researchers have found that the uptake of toxic heavy metals from “animal food sources” into our intestinal lining cells may be higher than from vegetable sources, explaining why vegetarians can have some of the lowest concentrations of lead and cadmium in their blood, despite having higher concentrations in their diet. After changing to a vegetarian diet, there seems to be a tendency towards higher fecal elimination of lead. Indeed, researchers took clippings of study participants’ hair before and after the dietary shift and found significant reductions in heavy metals, including cutting their lead level nearly in half and lowering the mercury and cadmium in their bodies. A few years after the study concluded and the subjects had gone back to more of their regular diet, their mercury, cadmium, and lead levels elevated back up. To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/heavy-metal-detox-diet-7995/">Heavy Metal Detox Diet</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>An Apple a Day May Keep the Pharmacist Away</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/an-apple-a-day-may-keep-the-pharmacist-away-7965/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=an-apple-a-day-may-keep-the-pharmacist-away-7965</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 May 2022 07:21:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=14571</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Michael Greger M.D. FACLM via Nutrition Facts &#8211; Which would save more lives: eating an apple a day or taking statin drugs? Does an apple a day really keep the doctor away? That’s a public health message that’s beenaround since 1866, but is it true? You don’t know, until you put it to the test. As I discuss in my video Flashback Friday: Does an Apple a Day Really Keep the Doctor Away?. The objective of “The Association Between Apple Consumption and Physician Visits,” an article published in the American Medical Association’s internal medicine journal, was simple: “To examine the relationship between eating an apple a day and keeping the doctor away.”  The message has been “promoted by the lay media and powerful special interest groups, including the US Apple Association”—a force so powerful that it spent a whopping $7,000 lobbying politicians during the 2017-18 election cycle. (Okay, so maybe Big Apple is more like an itty bitty appletini.) At any rate, the beneficial effects of apple consumption may include facilitation of “weight loss, prevention of neurologic degradation [protection of the brain], cancer suppression, reduction in asthma symptoms, and improved cardiovascular health.” So, apple consumers ought to require less medical care, right? “Although some may jest, considering the relatively low cost of apples…a prescription for apple consumption could potentially reduce national health care spending if the aphorism holds true.”  Researchers compared daily apple eaters to non-apple eaters and asked if they had been to the doctor in the last year, been hospitalized, seen a mental health professional, or took any prescription medication within the last month. More than 8,000 individuals were surveyed, and only about one out of ten reported they had eaten an apple in the last 24 hours. The finding? “Evidence does not support that an apple a day keeps the doctor away…” Maybe it takes more than an apple a day? Maybe we need to center our whole diet around plant foods. “However, the small fraction of US adults who eat an apple a day do appear to use fewer prescription medications.” Given that, perhaps we should “update the well-known proverb to clarify that, if anything, apple eating may help keep the pharmacist away.”  But, based on the average medical prescription cost, the researchers estimate that “the difference in annual prescription medication cost per capita between apple eaters ($1697) and non-apple eaters ($1925) to be $228”—hundreds of dollars saved. So, if all U.S. adults were apple eaters, we could save nearly $50 billion. Of course, if you factor in the cost of the apples themselves, our net savings would be closer to $19 billion, but that’s still a hefty chunk of change. If this all seems a bit like tongue-in-cheek-apple-polishing, you may be tickled to learn this study was published suspiciously close to April Fool’s Day. Indeed, this was in the tradition of the British Medical Journal’s annual Christmas issue that features scientifically rigorous, yet light-hearted, research. In fact, the BMJ itself took on the apple issue to model the effects on stroke and heart attack mortality of all older adults prescribed either a cholesterol-lowering statin drug or an apple a day. Essentially, researchers took studies like the one I show at 3:06 in my video, where we see a nice dose response indicating the more fruit you eat, the lower your stroke risk appears to fall, as well as similar data found for heart disease compared to the known drug effects, and concluded that prescribing an apple a day “is likely to have a similar effect” on population stroke and heart attack mortality as giving everyone statin drugs instead. Bonus that apples only have good side effects. “Choosing apples rather than statins may avoid more than a thousand excess cases of myopathy [muscle damage] and more than 12 000 excess diabetes diagnoses” (because statins increase the risk of diabetes). And, this article was from the UK. In the United States, one would expect five times those numbers. Ironically, though, the cost of apples is likely to be greater than that of statin drugs. (Generic Lipitor is only around 20 cents a day.) So, yes, “with similar reductions in mortality, the 150 year old health promotion message [of an apple a day] is able to match modern medicine and is likely to have fewer side effects,” but apples are a few pennies a day more expensive, not to mention they “require the more complex and time consuming process of coordinated mastication and swallowing.” Just one gulp with the drug compared to all that time-consuming chewing… Should we see our doctors every year regardless of how we’re feeling? See my videos Is It Worth Getting Annual Health Check-Ups?, Is It Worth Getting an Annual Physical Exam?, and Flashback Friday: Worth Getting Annual Health Check-Ups and Physical Exam?. Do you like the thought of taking a more food-based approach to treatment? If so, you’ll love lifestyle medicine. Check out Lifestyle Medicine: Treating the Causes of Disease. Sadly, Physicians May Be Missing Their Most Important Tool. KEY TAKEAWAYS The public health message an apple a day keeps the doctor away has been circulating since 1866. Benefits of apple consumption may include facilitation of weight loss, protection of the brain, cancer suppression, reduced asthma symptoms, and improved cardiovascular health. When researchers compared daily apple eaters to non-apple eaters, they found that evidence does not support the well-known proverb, although those eating an apple a day do appear to use fewer prescription drugs. Given average medical prescription costs, researchers estimated that each person could save hundreds of dollars annually just by eating apples. In fact, if all U.S. adults ate apples, we could save about $19 billion after factoring in the cost of the fruits themselves. The more fruits we eat, the lower our stroke risk appears to fall. Researchers concluded that a daily apple may have a similar effect on stroke and heart attack mortality as statin drugs, and apples only have good side effects, unlike statins, which increase the risk of diabetes. To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/an-apple-a-day-may-keep-the-pharmacist-away-7965/">An Apple a Day May Keep the Pharmacist Away</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>Negotiating for Life: Mexico&#8217;s Oasis of Hope Hospital Touching Patients&#8217; Body, Mind &#038; Soul</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/negotiating-for-life-mexicos-oasis-of-hope-hospital-touching-patients-body-mind-soul-7701/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=negotiating-for-life-mexicos-oasis-of-hope-hospital-touching-patients-body-mind-soul-7701</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Nov 2021 08:00:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=13433</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>George Thomas via CBN News &#8211; August 2017. Michelle Tucker remembers the words from that day while she was in the doctor&#8217;s office as her oncologist delivered the news. &#8220;I was told I had about four weeks to live, to go home and get my affairs in order,&#8221; Tucker told CBN News. The 46-year-old mother of three from Arizona had battled cancer since she was 19. It started in her breast, first spreading to her thyroid and then pancreas. &#8220;I figured I would take my children maybe to the beach for the first week of those four weeks,&#8221; Tucker recalled. &#8220;We love hearing the waves crash, so I figured let me take them to the beach and we&#8217;ll just kind of like ride it out.&#8221; Yet, there was something stirring in her that said she simply could not give up without a fight. &#8220;I had the attitude of like &#8216;Who are you to tell me my expiration date? There&#8217;s only one person that can do that and that&#8217;s not a doctor, no offense to medicine, that&#8217;s the man upstairs,'&#8221; Tucker recalled. In desperation, she researched alternative cancer treatments and ended up at the Oasis of Hope Hospital. &#8220;You get diagnosed with cancer, you&#8217;re not going to travel to Tijuana, Mexico. But when they have reached a point where the doctor is saying &#8216;We really can&#8217;t do anything else for you.&#8217; This is the typical person that comes to Oasis of Hope,&#8221; said Oasis of Hope CEO Daniel Kennedy. Twenty-five miles south of San Diego and just across the U.S. &#8211; Mexican border, Tucker believes God is using Oasis of Hope to give her a chance to continue living. &#8220;From the moment you walk in the door, you feel this overwhelming spiritual presence,&#8221; she told CBN News during a visit to the facility in Tijuana. &#8220;There&#8217;s the pastor that sings with you. They pray with you. They become a family with people with strangers, complete strangers, from all over the world, all walks of life.&#8221; Tucker has been in remission now for two years. &#8220;Four years later, I&#8217;m still alive,&#8221; she exclaimed. Hospital Founded in 1963 Oasis of Hope was started in 1963 by the late Mexican doctor Ernesto Contreras, Sr., who believed in taking a holistic approach to fighting cancer. His son, Dr. Francisco Contreras, a surgeon and oncologist specialist, now serves as the hospital&#8217;s president. &#8220;My father felt that the reason for the failure in oncology, and medicine overall, is that we have become just mechanics of the human body,&#8221; said Contreras. The idea for Oasis of Hope originated back in the early 1960s when Contreras&#8217; father, who was also a physician, decided to go on a mission trip to Greece and on that trip discovered three important elements that are today at the core of the hospital. Contreras says while traditional oncology focuses on destroying the tumor, his father wanted the hospital to focus on the patient&#8217;s emotional renewal, spiritual revival as well as physical restoration. The founder&#8217;s grandson, Daniel Kennedy, is proud of his grandfather&#8217;s lasting legacy. &#8220;There is no other clinic in Tijuana that actually has a pastor on the payroll, praying for patients every day, opening with praise and worship,&#8221; Kennedy told CBN News. Miracles Bringing Back Life, Hope, Faith, and a Future Ernesto Lopez is that pastor. He used to lead a local church in Tijuana. Now he walks the corridors of the hospital ministering to the spiritual and emotional needs of patients. CBN News asked Lopez if he&#8217;s encountered miracles at the hospital. &#8220;Yes, a lot of miracles,&#8221; Lopez responded. &#8220;Miracles of healing, miracles of salvation, miracles of bringing life back, bringing hope again, bringing faith again and have a hope and a future.&#8221; Using a combination of conventional treatments with alternative therapies such as whole-body hyperthermia, Ozone therapy, and dendritic cell vaccine immunotherapy, Oasis of Hope says it has treated more than 100,000 cancer patients from 60 countries. &#8220;The majority come from the United States because we&#8217;re just across the border from San Diego, but we&#8217;ve had patients from South Africa, from Vietnam, from China, from all over the world,&#8221; Kennedy said. Cancer-fighting Food Program Rosa Tessada is the hospital&#8217;s nutritionist. Working with kitchen staff, Tessada has designed a cancer-fighting plant-based food program to help patients live a healthier life. Ninety percent of meals served at the hospital are vegan-based. &#8220;We don&#8217;t want to make anybody feel like you have to leave your old life. Let&#8217;s just add more greens, more vegetables, and kind of enjoy food and go along with it,&#8221; Tessada told CBN News during a cooking demonstration. The hospital grows vegetables on its rooftop garden and teaches patients how to prepare healthy meals. &#8220;What the patients tell us is, &#8216;I&#8217;ve never done this. I&#8217;ve not used to eating these foods,'&#8221; Tessada said. &#8220;So what we do is help them to see, hey, you can make very healthy dishes, very fast, and very easy.'&#8221; It took a while, but Caleb Dominguez is now sold on eating healthier thanks to Oasis of Hope. Doctors in the U.S. told the 35-year-old they could do nothing for him after being diagnosed with an advanced stage of leukemia. Then he came to Tijuana. &#8220;I was going through their treatment plan and within weeks everything that my doctors were trying to fight had shrunk by half. The cancer numbers were going down. My strength was rising. My blood counts were coming back up. I just felt life being restored back to me,&#8221; Dominguez told CBN News. That was in 2007. Today, because of his experience at the hospital, Dominguez said his whole approach to life has completely changed. His eating habits, his attitude, and his walk with God have gone through a radical transformation. &#8220;Having known what I&#8217;ve been through. To be alive and well and healthy, taking all the lessons and experience here, I carry it with me everywhere I go,&#8221; Dominguez said. All Patients Need to be Treated with Compassion and the Love of Christ There remain several opinions on this alternative approach and others. For example, the American Cancer Society states some complementary methods have generally not been proven to help prevent or treat cancer or its symptoms. It recommends discussing any treatment patients might consider with their doctor or cancer team. While the doctors at Oasis of Hope are proud to share success stories like Dominguez, Tucker&#8217;s, and others, they point out not all patients who come here will make it. Still, Contreras believes all deserve to be treated with compassion and the love of Christ. &#8220;I believe that hope is a very powerful tool and that all patients should have hope because as a very old doctor said many, many years ago to a parent of a child, &#8216;While there&#8217;s life, there&#8217;s hope,'&#8221; he said. Contreras explained what he, along with his team of doctors, nurses, nutritionists, pastors, and counselors is negotiating for, is more time for patients. &#8220;I cannot guarantee anything,&#8221; he said. &#8220;The only thing I can guarantee is that I&#8217;m going to sit with you and I&#8217;m going to do everything possible. And I&#8217;m going to negotiate with you for life and God will decide yes, no, or maybe.&#8221; To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/negotiating-for-life-mexicos-oasis-of-hope-hospital-touching-patients-body-mind-soul-7701/">Negotiating for Life: Mexico&#8217;s Oasis of Hope Hospital Touching Patients&#8217; Body, Mind &#038; Soul</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>The Effect of Avocados on Small, Dense, LDL Cholesterol</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/the-effect-of-avocados-on-small-dense-ldl-cholesterol-7511/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=the-effect-of-avocados-on-small-dense-ldl-cholesterol-7511</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 19 Aug 2021 07:00:34 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://amazinghealthadvances.net/?p=12557</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Michael Greger M.D. FACLM via Nutrition Facts &#8211; What are the effects of oatmeal, walnuts, extra virgin olive oil, and avocados on LDL cholesterol size?  When a headline reads “Avocados could improve your cholesterol—and more,” the article and others like it are largely talking about substitution experiments, where avocado is added to the diet as a replacement for animal fats. In that case, it’s no wonder cholesterol goes down. Dairy and poultry are the two greatest contributors of cholesterol-raising saturated fat intake, so if you take people eating a standard North American diet including animal fats, they may start out with an LDL cholesterol level up around 95mg/dl. If you add avocado to their diet without doing anything else, their cholesterol does not go down; instead, it may go up to around 105mg/dl. If you add avocado while reducing saturated fat intake, though, cholesterol falls to about 90mg/dl—but that drop isn’t very different from what you’d get by just reducing saturated fat and adding nothing, which was shown to give an LDL under 90mg/dl, as you can see at 0:34 in my video Avocados Lower Small Dense LDL Cholesterol. What if you compared the effects of eating no meat at all with a meat-free diet that included avocado? Researchers took people with sky-high cholesterol levels up around 300mg/dl and switched them to either a relatively low-fat vegetarian diet with about 20 percent of calories from fat or a vegetarian diet with added avocado that took it up about 30 percent of calories from fat, which is a more typical fat content. As you can see at 1:22 in my video, the study participants started out with LDLs through the roof, and, while cutting out meat may have helped, cutting out meat and adding avocado seemed to help even more—and it may help best with the worst type of LDL. As I’ve touched on before, all LDL cholesterol is bad cholesterol. However, large, fluffy LDL may only increase the odds of cardiac events such as heart attacks by 31 percent, whereas small, dense LDL is even worse and increases the odds by 44 percent. If you feed people a lot of oatmeal and oat bran, not only does that cause their LDL to go down overall, but it specifically brings down the small LDL, the worst of the worst. What happens if you add walnuts to a low-fat diet? As you can see at 2:04 in my video, LDL goes down and, at the same time, the size distribution of the LDL shifts to be a little more benign. What if you put people on a plant-based diet with lots of fiber and nuts? As shown as 2:15 in my video, you can get a massive 30 percent drop in LDL, a drop that is comparable to a cholesterol-lowering statin drug. What’s more, this includes a drop in the small, dense LDL, which is the most dangerous. This does not happen with extra-virgin olive oil, however, so it’s not just a monounsaturated fat effect. In the famous PREDIMED study, which you can see at 2:35 in my video, those randomized to the extra nuts group got a significant drop in the smallest, densest LDL, but those randomized to the extra-virgin olive oil group did not. So, there appears to be some special components in nuts that lowers the worst of the worst LDL cholesterol. Do avocados offer similar benefits? We didn’t know until the first randomized controlled feeding trial to look at avocados and LDL size. The researchers removed animal fat from people’s diet and replaced it with either carbohydrates, avocado, or vegetable oils that had a similar fat profile to the avocados. In this way, the avocado group and the vegetable oil group were put on very similar diets, except one had the nutrients unique to avocados and the other did not. What happened? Any time you lower intake of saturated fat, such as replacing animal fat with plant fat (vegetable oil in this case) or carbohydrates, you’re going to bring down LDL. Okay, but does replacing animal fat with the whole plant food avocado make a difference? Yes. That resulted in an even better effect. To see why, the researchers broke the LDL down into large versus small. All three treatments brought down the dangerous large LDL, but the avocado had the additional effect of also bringing down the super dangerous small LDL. That’s where that extra drop came from. You can see a graph depicting these findings at 3:27 in my video. So, it’s not just a matter of replacing animal fat with plant fat. There are additional benefits to the fiber and phytonutrients of whole plant foods like avocados. If there’s something good in avocados, should we just add avocado extracts to meat? Well, incorporating avocado extracts into pork patties evidently reduces the meat’s cholesterol oxidation products that “have been well documented” to be toxic, carcinogenic, and atherosclerotic, but it doesn’t eliminate them. KEY TAKEAWAYS Dairy and poultry are two of the most significant contributors of cholesterol-raising saturated fat in the diet. Simply adding avocado to the diet without also reducing saturated fat intake does not appear to lower cholesterol and, in fact, may cause it to rise. Substitution experiments, where avocado replaces animal fats in the diet, have shown improvements in cholesterol, however, the drop does not appear to differ much from just reducing saturated fat consumption without adding anything else. Comparing the effects of a meat-free diet to a meat-free diet with added avocado, researchers found that eschewing meat while also adding avocado helped even more than merely skipping meat, and it may help more effectively with the worst type of bad LDL cholesterol, small, dense LDL. Oatmeal, oat bran, walnuts, and a plant-based diet rich in fiber and nuts have all been shown to cause LDL to lower overall and the more dangerous, small LDL, specifically, but this was not seen with extra-virgin olive oil, suggesting it is not only a monounsaturated fat effect. Researchers removed animal fat from subjects’ diets and replaced it with either carbohydrates, avocado, or vegetable oils with similar fat profiles to avocados and found that replacing the animal fat with the whole plant food avocado had the best results in reducing LDL. All three treatments lowered large LDL, but avocado had the added effect of also lowering the more dangerous small LDL. To read the original article click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/the-effect-of-avocados-on-small-dense-ldl-cholesterol-7511/">The Effect of Avocados on Small, Dense, LDL Cholesterol</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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		<title>Are You Hooked on America&#8217;s Deadly Diet? Heal Your Body with These Life-Saving Foods</title>
		<link>https://amazinghealthadvances.net/are-you-hooked-on-americas-deadly-diet-heal-your-body-with-these-life-saving-foods-7260/#utm_source=rss&#038;utm_medium=rss&#038;utm_campaign=are-you-hooked-on-americas-deadly-diet-heal-your-body-with-these-life-saving-foods-7260</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Apr 2021 07:00:55 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<p>Lori Johnson via CBN News &#8211; The coronavirus pandemic is still consuming most media coverage about health and wellness these days. But underneath all the concerns about this deadly virus, there&#8217;s a deeper issue – a majority of the fatalities and serious cases of the disease involve patients with significant underlying health problems. Medical issues like diabetes, heart disease, and obesity were already a serious health risk for millions of Americans, but the COVID-19 outbreak only makes matters worse. Even before the pandemic, scientists were pointing out that the Standard American Diet (SAD) causes even more deaths than smoking. This diet largely consists of ultra-processed foods loaded with chemicals, added sugars, and industrial oils. A growing number of doctors and other health experts recommend replacing the SAD diet with one that&#8217;s full of whole, plant-based foods. Whole foods are ones that are as close to their original state as possible, and plant-based foods, as the name suggests, are those that grew out of the ground. A Grandmother&#8217;s Testimony As a young boy, Michael Greger saw how food can be medicine. When doctors couldn&#8217;t treat his 65-year-old grandmother&#8217;s heart disease, they sent her home to die. However, at that time she started eating a plant-based diet, reversed her heart disease, and lived to the ripe old age of 96! Astounded by what he saw in his grandmother&#8217;s life, Michael decided to help others achieve the same results. Now as a physician, Dr. Greger offers free nutrition advice, including hundreds of healthy recipes on his non-profit website, nutritionfacts.org. Dr. Greger points to an increasing number of scientific studies showing a plant-based diet proves to be the healthiest of all diets for people like his grandmother who deal with heart problems. &#8220;Not only can heart disease be prevented and arrested with a plant-based diet,&#8221; he told CBN News, &#8220;It&#8217;s the only diet ever proven to reverse heart disease in the majority of patients, opening up arteries without drugs, without surgery.&#8221; Every Small Change Can Make a Difference Every 37 seconds someone in America dies from heart disease. Cardiologists like Dr. Deepak Talreja urge their patients to switch to a whole-food, plant-based diet before it&#8217;s too late. For some patients, particularly those who&#8217;ve been eating processed foods for many years, they&#8217;re encouraged to do the best they can. &#8220;We try to push people towards as optimal a diet as they can really stick with,&#8221; Dr. Talreja told CBN News. In short, he tells them to eat as many plants and as few animals as possible. He also recommends eating foods as close to their natural state as possible. For example, instead of highly processed breakfast cereal, Dr. Talreja recommends whole-grain oatmeal. He says every small change can make a difference. &#8220;Some people are very committed and they&#8217;ll fall into a program where they do 100 percent the right thing,&#8221; he explained, &#8220;Some people can&#8217;t do that, but if they can do the right thing 70 or 80 percent of the time that moves them closer to where they&#8217;re either going to get more committed or at least get some benefits from that diet.&#8221; Prevents Other Causes of Death Heart disease is just one of many chronic diseases a plant-based diet has been shown to prevent or reverse. The list includes other leading causes of death including cancer, diabetes, and obesity. Case in point: Loma Linda, California, is the American city with the highest percentage of centenarians per capita. It&#8217;s also home to the highest concentration of Seventh Day Adventists, a denomination which advocates a plant-based diet. Dr. Larry Beeson, a researcher at the Loma Linda School of Public Health, analyzed over 50 years of studies done by himself and others. &#8220;Adventists have approximately the same proportion of people who die of cancer, heart disease or stroke,&#8221; he told CBN News, &#8220;But the age that they get diagnosed is much later.&#8221; Beeson said within the Seventh Day Adventist community, people follow various plant-based diets, but noted the ones who ate more plants and fewer animal products lived longer, healthier lives in general. Different Plant-Based Diets Here are the four major plant-based diets. 1. Vegan: 100% plant food. No animal products whatsoever 2. Vegetarian: Mostly plants but some eggs and dairy foods 3. Pescatarian: Mostly plants but some eggs, dairy and seafood 4. Flexitarian: Mostly plants but some eggs, dairy, seafood, poultry, and meat For the last 15 years, dietician Julieanna Hever has been teaching people how to switch to a more plant-based diet, which she says can reverse Type 2 Diabetes, high blood pressure, and more. &#8220;It reduces obesity and extra weight,&#8221; she said. &#8220;It reduces medication requirements. I love to say decreasing your medication results are normal. My clients get off their medications.&#8221; In her cookbook, The Healthspan Solution, she offers recipes and tips for newcomers to this lifestyle, adding there&#8217;s a bit of a learning curve. &#8220;I liken it to learning a new language,&#8221; she said, &#8220;Anything, when you&#8217;re transitioning to something major, like the way you&#8217;ve eaten your whole life, you just have to learn a few new words, a few new ingredients, tie them together in sentences and paragraphs and some recipes and then if you keep doing it over and over again you become fluent.&#8221; ALSO recommended by Lorie Johnson: The How Not To Die Cookbook. Hooked for Life Dr. Greger says if he can get his patients to try a plant-based diet for three weeks, they&#8217;re usually hooked for life. &#8220;They&#8217;re going to sleep so much better, their digestion&#8217;s better, their periods {are} less painful, they have more energy,&#8221; he said, &#8220;In fact, some people say &#8216;Oh, I felt fine, Doc,&#8217; but then they didn&#8217;t realize they had chronic indigestion. They just thought it was normal to feel like this after a meal. But no, you don&#8217;t know how good you&#8217;re going to feel until you give it a try.&#8221; Dr. Greger tells his patients to consume the following plant-based foods each day: 3 Servings of Beans (such as hummus, lentils or tofu) 1 Serving of Berries 3 Servings of Other Fruit 1 Serving of Cruciferous Vegetables (such as broccoli, cauliflower or Brussels sprouts) 2 Servings of Greens (such as kale, romaine or collards) 2 Servings of Other Vegetables (such as mushrooms) 1 Tablespoon of Ground Flaxseed 1 Serving of Nuts 1/4 Teaspoon of Turmeric 3 Servings of Whole Grains (such as 100% whole grain bread, oatmeal or pasta) To read the original article click here. For more articles from CBN News click here.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net/are-you-hooked-on-americas-deadly-diet-heal-your-body-with-these-life-saving-foods-7260/">Are You Hooked on America&#8217;s Deadly Diet? Heal Your Body with These Life-Saving Foods</a> appeared first on <a href="https://amazinghealthadvances.net">Amazing Health Advances</a>.</p>
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