Geoffrey Purcell wrote:
> Re pemmican comment:- I'm always amazed at why anyone can recommend pemmican. The whole point of the healthy foods movement is to stay well away from any preserved foods which last for decades, as there's a standard rule that the longer the shelf-life of a food , the lower its quality will always be. Pemmican is really no different in this regard from all those processed junk foods designed to last years and years on the supermarket shelf.
>
So pemmican = Pop Tarts?
>
> Re comment:- "Starvation/malnutrition also leaves telltale marks on the bones as well"
>
> As I showed in a recent post, there were indeed examples of telltale marks of starvation on palaeo bones:-
> I made that point re famine as it's commonly accepted by palaeoanthropologists that famine was a routine part of the palaeolithic era:-
>
> "Combined with a relatively low average age at death, the hypoplasia evidence suggests that Neandertals underwent periods of nutritional stress or famine on a frequent basis " taken from:-
>
> http://www.pnas.org/content/98/19/10972.full
>
Yes...my point was that not all paleo bones show signs of malnutrition
or starvation.
> Re comment on AGEs:- "AGE's require glucose and oxidization. Many studies implicating
>
>> cooking/fried foods included high amounts of PUFA's and/or other
>> 'modern' foods including foods that break down to glucose."
>>
>
> This is very misleading. AGEs do NOT just require glucose. That applies to only 1 type of AGE. There is also another category of AGEs, known as "ALEs"(="Advanced Lipoxidation Endproducts") which involve the oxidation of fats and don't require glucose:-
>
>
>
> http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1067029/advanced_glycation_and_lipoxidation_end_productsamplifiers_of_inflammation_the_role/index.html
>
Dairy products contain lactose (sugar). Here's my overall point re:
AGE's/ALE's: do they matter in a healthy body that is not consuming much
sugar or inflammatory foods? This piece said over half the studies have
been performed on ppl either with diabetes or renal disease. These
people already have massive stuff going on, and the association with
AGE's/ALE's could be just that - an association. This was interesting:
"Experimental studies suggest that increased deposition of AGEs/ALEs in
tissues is strongly associated with down-regulation of leptin expression
in adipocytes and metabolic syndrome." Metabolic syndrome = high
circulating insulin levels, insulin resistance, etc. Leptin
down-regulation = high triglycerides, which are a common occurence in
high-carb diets. Suddenly, we're back to glucose as a factor, if not in
their formation but in their deposition. Note I say FACTOR. Everything
works together in the body. So my interest is if AGE's/ALE's are
primarily a problem for people who have an internal situation in which
deposition of these things is increased due to existing diet-related
conditions -- and not a problem (or perhaps much less of a problem) in
people who do not. HIgh levels are repeatedly found in ppl with chronic
disease -- ok, but are they the CAUSE of the disease, or are they a
factor combined with several other factors?
>
>
>
> Interestingly, it's been pointed out that the reason why so many
> studies (correctly) report harmful results from eating diets high in saturated fats may be
> primarily due, not to the issue of saturated fats per se, but to the fact that such diets are also very high in heat-created toxins, resulting
> from cooking, such as AGEs/ALEs(in other words, raw saturated fats are fine but not cooked saturated fats)):-
>
> "It has been suggested that, "given the prominence of this type of food in the
> human diet, the deleterious effects of high-(saturated)fat foods may be in part
> due to the high content in glycotoxins, above and beyond those due to oxidized
> fatty acid derivatives." The glycotoxins, as he called them, are more
> commonly called AGEs:-
>
> http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=21074
>
The control meal in this study was cooked chicken egg whites, and the
AGE meal was egg whites with fructose? Maybe I am missing something?
Also: "Diabetic subjects were maintained on their diabetic diets, as
provided by the metabolic ward, divided into 15–20% protein, 30–35% fat,
and 45–50% carbohydrates, while breakfast carbohydrates were
supplemented with apple juice". It appears as if these researchers
don't consider carbohydrates as particularly important in diabetes,
which is both telling and alarming.
I do find this interesting, I just would like to see better studies. If
they aren't taking other dietary factors into account, we're not really
learning much other than that associations exist, but that's not a whole
lot to go on either. The prevalence of focus on diabetics, for example,
suggests to me that they're searching for a cause of diabetes that
doesn't involve carbs -- in other words, that will fit with what they've
already been recommending for diabetics.
Incidentally - I eat very lightly cooked meat ;) I like my steak seared
on the outside, raw in the middle. I prefer fish raw. Just so you know
I'm not some shoe-leather steak fan trying to justify her love of
overcooked meat. (I do cook my chicken well, though not 1 hour broiled
chicken breast like in one of the studies you linked!)
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