A high ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acid was also detrimental. On the other hand, high monounsaturated fat consumption was protective of the brain.
A high ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acid was also detrimental. On the other hand, high monounsaturated fat consumption was protective of the brain.
Comments Off on In Women, Age-Related Brain Decline Linked to High Saturated Fat Intake
Posted in Uncategorized
Dr. Freedhoff is a bariatric physician and a good writer. For example:
The book was written by non-practicing physician turned journalist Dr. Michael Mosley and his journalist co-author Mimi Spencer and it leads with the theory that because humans evolved during times of severe dietary insecurity, where fasting was the unavoidable norm, that fasting has unique properties that in turn are healthful and protective. And while that may be true, it certainly has yet to be proven as the science is nowhere near conclusive yet just as the authors themselves point out on the second introductory page, “Scientists are only just beginning to discover…“
…Sadly, the cautionary comment that the science of fasting is young was a rarity in this book that takes hyperbole, conjecture, anecdote and hope to truly dramatic levels and even just 5 pages following the “just beginning” statement the state of the evidence has somehow morphed into, “The scientific evidence was extensive and compelling“. Odd that statement in the context of this book given the vast bulk of the book is quite literally built off the personal (and clearly conflicted) anecdotal evidence of Dr. Mosley and Ms. Spencer’s own experiences with their diet – one might have thought that were there actually extensive and compelling evidence a medically trained award winning journalist might have preferred to rely on it to tell the story rather than what he ate for breakfast.
Comments Off on Considering “The Fast Diet”? Read Dr. Freedhoff’s Review First
Posted in Uncategorized
Neuropsychologist Ian Robertson writes at Psychology Today:
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder is being grossly overdiagnosed for a range of commercial and social reasons. For millions of children to be taking powerful drugs which can have dangerous side effects is an example of the sort of pharmaceutical scandal that emerges every few decades, usually as a result of lazy and lax prescribing habits by doctors.
Dr. Robertson cites the 20th century over-use of amphetamines and benzodiazepines.
h/t Dennis Mangan
Dennis Mangan notes a series of scientific articles suggesting that zinc deficiency may be an important cause of male hypogonadism. This could lead to low libido, low sperm counts, and low testosterone levels. Pay attention and talk to your doctor if you’re having virility issues.
Comments Off on Men, Your Gonads May Need More Zinc
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged libido, semen volume, sperm count, testosterone, zinc
…so how do you raise your omega-3 level? Eat cold-water fatty fish, as recommended in my Advanced Mediterranean and Ketogenic Mediterranean diets. A quote from the New York Times Well blog:
The lead author, Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, an associate professor of medicine at Harvard, said that the most beneficial levels could be achieved by consuming an average of 400 milligrams of omega-3s a day — the equivalent of weekly consumption of about 3.5 ounces of farmed salmon, 5 ounces of anchovies or herring, or 15 to 18 ounces of cod or catfish.
Harriet Hall at Science-Based Medicine writes about and defines Integrative Medicine:
First it was called various names like folk medicine, quackery, and unproven/untested treatments, then all of those (the less rational right along with the more rational) were lumped together under the umbrella term “Alternative Medicine,” then it became “Complementary and Alternative Medicine” (CAM), and now it has been re-branded as “Integrative Medicine.” The term is designed to make unscientific treatments seem more acceptable to science-based doctors. “Integrative Medicine” is a marketing term, not a meaningful scientific category. It is a euphemism for combining Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) with mainstream medical practice, unproven with proven, magic with science.
Comments Off on I Appreciate It When Products or Services Are Labelled as “Integrative Medicine”: Straight Away I Know It’s Quackery
Posted in Uncategorized
Comments Off on Medicare To Let Lawyers Decide If They’ll Pay for Sex-Change Operations
Posted in Uncategorized
Vegetables in particular. Here’s the 2009 abstract from the journal HortScience:
“Three kinds of evidence point toward declines of some nutrients in fruits and vegetables available in the United States and the United Kingdom: 1) early studies of fertilization found inverse relationships between crop yield and mineral concentrations—the widely cited ‘‘dilution effect’’; 2) three recent studies of historical food composition data found apparent median declines of 5% to 40% or more in some minerals in groups of vegetables and perhaps fruits; one study also evaluated vitamins and protein with similar results; and 3) recent side-by-side plantings of low- and high-yield cultivars of broccoli and grains found consistently negative correlations between yield and concentrations of minerals and protein, a newly recognized genetic dilution effect. Studies of historical food composition data are inherently limited, but the other methods can focus on single crops of any kind, can include any nutrient of interest, and can be carefully controlled. They can also test proposed methods to minimize or overcome the diluting effects of yield whether by environmental means or by plant breeding.”
Read the rest, if you dare.
Comments Off on Vegetables and Fruits May Not Be As Nutritious Now As In the Past
Posted in Uncategorized