Tag: Disease

  • Treating Fatty Liver Disease with Diet 

    Treating Fatty Liver Disease with Diet 

    What are the three sources of liver fat in fatty liver disease, and how can we get rid of it?

    Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is now the most frequent chronic liver disease, thanks in part to our epidemic of obesity, and is even seen in children. “[N]early 70–80% of obese children may have NAFLD.” Why do we care? Because a fatty liver can progress into fatty hepatitis, which can cause scarring and liver cirrhosis, and cirrhosis is bad enough, but it may also cause the development of liver cancer.

    What is the source of the liver fat in fatty liver disease? There are three main sources: the excess sugar in our diet, the excess fat in our diet, and the fat spilling over from our excess body fat, as you can see at 0:51 in my video The Best Diet for Fatty Liver Disease Treatment

    How do we know excess dietary sugar is bad? Because it’s been put to the test. When teens with fatty liver disease were randomized to a diet low in free sugars (meaning a diet low in added sugar and sugary beverages), they experienced a significant improvement within eight weeks. Given these new data, a liver journal editorial read that “a strong argument can be made that we are beyond any period of uncertainty about the harmful effects of excess sugar consumption and that we must now act on the large body of available data to inform the public of the health risks of eating too much sugar.”

    And how do we know excess dietary fat is bad? Because it’s also been put to the test. When people were randomized to a low-fat diet or a high-fat diet with the same number of calories, within just two weeks, the liver fat of those on the low-fat diet decreased by 20 percent, whereas it increased by 35 percent in the participants getting the same number of calories but on a high-fat diet.

    On the low-fat diet, insulin levels went down about 15 percent, and on the high-fat diet, insulin levels went up about 15 percent. Low-carbohydrate and ketogenic diet advocates often talk about how we need to eat more fat and less carbs to keep our insulin levels down, but the exact opposite happens when it’s actually put to the test. A single high-fat meal not only increases liver fat but also insulin resistance. Within four hours, our whole-body insulin sensitivity can drop by 25 percent, so our body has to pump out that much more insulin. As the accompanying editorial put it: “A single fat bolus [dose] packs a punch.”

    So, to help prevent or treat fatty liver disease, patients should limit or avoid eating foods rich in fats. While more long-term clinical trials are always needed, “based on current evidence, we would recommend a diet low in fat, notably in saturated fatty acids, and low in refined carbohydrates, notably by reducing soft drinks consumption…as these nutritional factors may play a pivotal role in NAFLD.” So that means a diet low in meat, dairy, junk, and refined carbs, especially soda. Saturated fat is not only “more metabolically harmful for the human liver than unsaturated fat,” but saturated fat is more harmful than straight sugar. What happened when study participants were overfed with 1,000 calories of saturated fat (like cheese and coconut oil), unsaturated fat (like nuts and olive oil), or sugar (like soda and candy)? Overeating 1,000 calories a day of anything isn’t good for us, but the saturated fat increased liver fat by 55 percent, significantly more than the unsaturated fats, with the candy coming in between the two.

    So, “although weight loss is beneficial in NAFLD, certain diets known to induce weight loss can actually cause or exacerbate this disease, and therefore induce insulin resistance, such as very low carbohydrate, high fat diets.” In contrast, “healthy plant-based diets are associated with lower NAFLD risk and more favorable liver function tests profile.” The consumption of legumes (beans, split peas, chickpeas, and lentils), for example, is associated with a lower risk of fatty liver, up to 65 percent lower odds from eating more beans.

    In the earlier study, researchers weren’t looking at people eating strictly plant-based diets, just more or less so. It’s harder to study those eating completely meat-free diets since they currently represent just a small segment of the U.S. population. But what about Americans of Indian descent? South Asians, individuals originating from the Indian subcontinent, are “one of the fastest growing ethnic groups in the United States,” and they appear to largely retain their diets, with about the same percentage of vegetarians as in India—nearly 40 percent. We know that in India, meat eaters are at significantly higher risk of fatty liver disease. It is the same in Taiwan, with vegetarians at significantly lower risk of fatty liver. And even the vegetarians who were affected had significantly less liver scarring, as you can see below and at 4:35 in my video. Their data suggest that “replacing a serving of soy with a serving of meat or fish was associated with 12%-13 % increased risk”—having a single serving of meat instead of soy elevates the risk of fatty liver. 

    And in the United States? Eating a vegetarian diet was associated with being slimmer and having better blood sugars, better cholesterol, and less than half the odds of fatty liver disease. Is it cause and effect? We have to put it to the test. In an effort to reverse a fatty liver patient’s inflammatory bowel disease with a plant-based diet, researchers found that their liver inflammation was dramatically improved, but they also lost about nine pounds in the first 11 days, thanks to eating healthfully, so it’s hard to tease out the specific effects of the diet on its own. In fact, we have to be careful about rapid weight loss, because all that extra fat being broken down can flood into the bloodstream and sometimes make things worse. So, for individuals with fatty liver disease, losing about three pounds a week might be safer.

    Even though a plant-based diet has yet to be properly put to the test in a randomized clinical trial for fatty liver disease, I would submit that it is still the best diet for this disease, and that isn’t based on a single case report, but on the fact that cardiovascular disease, not liver failure, is the most common cause of death among patients with fatty liver disease. And we do have randomized controlled trials proving that a healthy plant-based diet and lifestyle programs can reverse heart disease and open up arteries without drugs, surgery, or stents. Yes, patients with fatty liver disease and fatty hepatitis “may eventually develop cirrhosis [of the liver], but only if they do not die of cardiovascular diseases first.”

    Doctor’s Note:

    There are some specific foods that may also help. See my videos in the related posts below.

    If excess sugar is so bad, what about fruit? Check out If Fructose Is Bad, What About Fruit? and How Much Fruit Is Too Much?



    Source link

  • Anti-Vaxx Mom Whose Daughter Died From Measles Says Disease ‘Wasn’t That Bad’

    Anti-Vaxx Mom Whose Daughter Died From Measles Says Disease ‘Wasn’t That Bad’

    The parents of an unvaccinated Texas child who died from measles appeared in a video formulated by an anti-vaccine advocacy group where they railed against vaccines, even saying the disease “wasn’t that bad.’

    A 6-year-old Texan died after contracting measles last month, marking the first death of a child in the U.S. caused by the highly contagious illness in nearly a decade.

    Following her death, the anti-vaccine advocacy group Children’s Health Defense met with the child’s parents, whose four other children also suffered from milder cases of the same illness, as reported by Mother Jones.

    During the interview, the young couple doubled down on their decision not to vaccinate their child even after her death. Hailing from the Mennonite community, they argued that if measles patients had access to untested treatments, the MMR vaccines would be entirely unnecessary.

    “We spent the morning at Dr. Ben Edwards’ clinic, and the parents are all still sitting there saying they would rather have this than the MMR vaccination because they’ve seen so much injury, which we have as well,” journalist Polly Tommey said while interviewing the couple. “Do you still feel the same way about the MMR vaccine versus measles and the proper treatment with Dr. Ben Edwards?”

    “Absolutely [do] not take the MMR [vaccine],” said the mother. “The measles wasn’t that bad. [The other children] got over it pretty quickly. And Dr. Edwards was there for us.”

    The parents described the symptoms of the illness their child exhibited, beginning with a fever, respiratory symptoms and the notorious rash that often accompanies it. However, days after contracting the illness, the child’s fever continued and respiratory symptoms worsened as she began struggling to breathe.

    The girl’s parents took her to a hospital emergency room where she was admitted and diagnosed with pneumonia. After being placed on a ventilator in the Intensive Care Unit, the child passed away.

    The measles outbreak in Texas has spurred many public and political figures to take to their platforms and encourage residents to get vaccinated and vaccinate their children. This includes Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who previously promoted anti-vaccine views.

    RFK Jr. published an op-ed in Fox Digital earlier this month acknowledging that the decision to vaccinate is a “personal one”, but encouraging people to vaccinate to mitigate the spread of the disease regardless.

    “Vaccines not only protect individual children from measles, but also contribute to community immunity, protecting those who are unable to be vaccinated due to medical reasons,” he wrote earlier this month.

    Originally published by Latin Times.

    Source link

  • Mystery Disease Claims Dozens of Lives, Including Children Who Died After Eating a Bat

    Mystery Disease Claims Dozens of Lives, Including Children Who Died After Eating a Bat

    More than 50 people have died in the northwest Democratic Republic of Congo from a mystery illness that first appeared in three children who ate a bat.

    The disease has an alarming fatality rate, infecting at least 419 people since its outbreak on January 21, according to the World Health Organization (WHO) and local doctors. Many victims die within 48 hours of showing symptoms, as reported by the Associated Press.

    “That’s what’s really worrying,” Serge Ngalebato, the medical director of Bikoro Hospital, told AP.

    The outbreak began in the town of Boloko after three children reportedly consumed a bat and died shortly afterward from hemorrhagic fever symptoms. A second outbreak followed in the nearby town of Bomate on February 9.

    Samples from 13 cases have been sent to Congo’s National Institute for Biomedical Research, but tests for Ebola and other hemorrhagic fevers, such as Marburg, have so far come back negative. Some patients tested positive for malaria, but its connection to the illness remains unclear.

    Congo has battled an overlapping series of disease outbreaks, including typhoid, malaria and mpox. The most recent mpox outbreak surged to 47,000 suspected cases and is thought to have caused over 1,000 deaths. Another unidentified flu-like illness killed more than 143 people in 2024 before health authorities determined malaria was the likely cause, CBS News reported.

    Zoonotic diseases—illnesses that jump from animals to humans—have long been of concern to health officials, particularly in regions where wild animals are commonly consumed. WHO has reported a 60% increase in such outbreaks in Africa over the past decade.

    Originally published by Latin Times.

    Source link

  • One thing everyone should know about cardiovascular disease

    One thing everyone should know about cardiovascular disease

    Alt text: White salt in small bowls and a spoon spill onto a gray surface. A small bowl of pink sea salt is on the left.
    Pinkybird / iStock

    Goodarz Danaei, Bernard Lown Professor of Cardiovascular Health at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, discusses one thing everyone should know about cardiovascular disease—that we can easily prevent fatal heart attacks and strokes by reducing how much salt we eat.


    There is a direct and linear association between the amount of salt we eat and our blood pressure—and high blood pressure, or hypertension, is the most important risk factor for cardiovascular disease globally. Fortunately, it is also the easiest to treat.

    In 2019, I worked with other international scientists to calculate how many lives could be saved around the world if we reduced our average sodium intake by 30 percent. That’s an achievable, and not even particularly ambitious, goal. But it would have a profound impact on public health. In fact, we found that in 25 years, 40 million deaths could be delayed by implementing that intervention alone. That’s almost three deaths every minute.

    Goodarz Danaei
    Goodarz Danaei / Photo: Kent Dayton

    Several policies could help us get there, including the reformulation of packaged foods and the introduction of labels that inform consumers of the sodium content of certain foods. The UK, for example, launched a successful salt reduction initiative in 2001 that within a few years managed to reduce the average salt intake by almost one gram per day through awareness campaigns and by encouraging food manufacturers to reduce their products’ salt content.

    Researchers are also studying whether replacing some of the sodium chloride in our salt with salt substitutes would help reduce blood pressure. We don’t know yet if this effort would be successful or if people would add more salt to their food to compensate for a less-salty taste.

    There’s no doubt, however, that we should eat less salt. Americans eat on average about 8.6 grams of salt per day, which is more than twice the recommended intake by the American Heart Association.

    We have become so accustomed to salt that we feel the need to add it to the food we cook at home or order at a restaurant. The truth is that there is no reason to add salt. Natural foods already contain enough sodium themselves and their flavor can be enhanced by adding other ingredients like herbs, spices, garlic, and citrus.

    It’s especially important that the food our children eat, including school lunches, contains low levels of salt. Habits are hard to change later in life, so intervening early on children’s diets and palates can have huge long-term consequences for public health.


    Last Updated

    Featured in this article

    Get the latest public health news

    Stay connected with Harvard Chan School

    Source link

  • Gum Disease vsl cb | Blue Heron Health News

    Gum Disease vsl cb | Blue Heron Health News

    Product Name: Gum Disease vsl cb | Blue Heron Health News

    Click here to get Gum Disease vsl cb | Blue Heron Health News at discounted price while it’s still available…

    All orders are protected by SSL encryption – the highest industry standard for online security from trusted vendors.

    Gum Disease vsl cb | Blue Heron Health News is backed with a 60 Day No Questions Asked Money Back Guarantee. If within the first 60 days of receipt you are not satisfied with Wake Up Lean™, you can request a refund by sending an email to the address given inside the product and we will immediately refund your entire purchase price, with no questions asked.

    (more…)

  • BMI, Waist Size Aren’t Only Risk Factors Of Heart Disease, This Hidden Fat May Matter More

    BMI, Waist Size Aren’t Only Risk Factors Of Heart Disease, This Hidden Fat May Matter More

    For years, health experts have debated if Body Mass Index (BMI) is the best measure of a person’s health. While waist size has been highlighted as a key factor in predicting heart disease, a recent study reveals that neither BMI nor waist measurement is the ultimate predictor.

    Instead, a hidden factor, intermuscular fat, the fat stored inside muscles might be a more accurate indicator of heart disease risk. Researchers noted that those having higher amounts of this particular type of fat face a greater risk of death and hospitalization from heart attacks or heart failure, regardless of BMI or waist size.

    “Obesity is now one of the biggest global threats to cardiovascular health, yet body mass index – our main metric for defining obesity and thresholds for intervention – remains a controversial and flawed marker of cardiovascular prognosis. This is especially true in women, where high body mass index may reflect more ‘benign’ types of fat,” Professor Viviany Taqueti, who led the study said in a news release.

    The study analyzed how different muscle and fat compositions affected the small blood vessels or “microcirculation” of the heart and influenced the risk of developing heart failure, heart attack, and death.

    The research involved 669 patients at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, with an average age of 63, who were assessed for chest pain or shortness of breath but had no evidence of obstructive coronary artery disease.

    The patients underwent cardiac PET/CT scans to evaluate heart function and CT scans to analyze body composition, including fat and muscle distribution in the torso. Researchers introduced a new measurement called the fatty muscle fraction, which quantifies the ratio of intermuscular fat to total muscle and fat.

    The participants were followed up for around six years to check for outcomes including hospitalization and deaths from a heart attack or heart failure.

    The analysis revealed that higher levels of fatty muscle fraction were linked to a 2% increased risk of coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) and a 7% higher risk of future serious heart disease, with every 1% increase in fatty muscle fraction, regardless of other risk factors and BMI.

    “Compared to subcutaneous fat, fat stored in muscles may be contributing to inflammation and altered glucose metabolism leading to insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome. In turn, these chronic insults can cause damage to blood vessels, including those that supply the heart, and the heart muscle itself,” Professor Taqueti explained.

    Source link

  • Obesity’s Impacts on Gallstones, Acid Reflux, and Heart Disease 

    Obesity’s Impacts on Gallstones, Acid Reflux, and Heart Disease 

    Sufficient, sustained weight loss may cut the risk of fatal heart attacks and strokes in half.

    In the ABCs of health consequences of obesity, G is for Gallstones.

    The top digestive reason people are hospitalized is a gallbladder attack. Every year, more than a million Americans are diagnosed with gallstones, and about 700,000 must have their gallbladders surgically removed. It is a relatively safe procedure, with complication rates tending to be under 5 percent and a mortality rate of only about 1 in 1,000. However one in ten may develop a post-cholecystectomy syndrome of persistent gastrointestinal symptoms long after their gallbladder is removed.

    What are gallstones made of? In 80 to 90 percent of cases, gallstones are mostly crystalized cholesterol, forming like rock candy in our gallbladder when cholesterol gets too concentrated. This was used to explain why some small, early studies found that non-vegetarians had a higher incidence of gallstones. However, results from more recent, larger studies are more equivocal; one study suggests that a “vegetarian diet may therefore protect” against gallbladder disease, for instance, while another shows higher rates among vegetarians, independent of weight.

    As I discuss in my video The Effects of Obesity on Gallstones, Acid Reflux, and Cardiovascular Disease, the biggest purported cause-and-effect risk factor may be obesity, increasing risk as much as sevenfold, as you can see below and at 1:32 in my video, with a doubling of risk even at the heavier side of “the normal BMI range.” 

    Ironically, rapid weight loss may also be a trigger. Half a pound (1.5 kg) a day has been deemed the upper limit for medically safe weight loss, based on gallstone formation. Ultrasound studies found that, above that, the chance of new gallstones can go from less than 1 in 200 a week to closer to 1 in 40, as shown below and at 1:59.

    To help prevent a gallstone attack, we can increase our fiber intake. Not only is dietary fiber intake associated with less gallbladder disease in the first place, but those placed on high-fiber foods during a weight-loss regimen suffered significantly less gallbladder sludging than those losing the same amount of weight without getting the extra fiber.

    G is also for gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD. Fiber-rich food consumption decreases the risk of acid reflux, too. I previously explored how chronically straining at stool may push part of the stomach up into the chest cavity. Well, excess abdominal pressure due to obesity may have the same effect, pushing acid up into the throat and causing heartburn and inflammation. The increased pressure on the abdominal organs associated with obesity may also explain why overweight women suffer from more vaginal prolapse, where organs such as the rectum push out and into the vaginal cavity. 

    The deadliest letter in the alphabet of obesity consequences is H, which is for Heart Disease. Of the four million deaths attributed to excess body weight every year around the world, nearly 70 percent are due to cardiovascular disease. Is it just because of eating poorly? Mendelian randomization studies suggest that people randomized from conception to be heavier—based only on genetics—do indeed have higher rates of heart disease and stroke regardless of what they eat. The question is: If you lose weight, does your risk drop?

    Enter the Swedish Obese Subjects (SOS) trial, the first long-term controlled trial to compare the outcomes of thousands of bariatric surgery patients to matched control subjects who started out at the same weight but went the nonsurgical route. Individuals in the control group maintained their weight, whereas those in the surgical group maintained about a 20 percent weight loss over the next 10 to 20 years. In that period, those in the weight-loss group not only developed 80 percent less diabetes, but they suffered significantly fewer heart attacks and strokes. So, unsurprisingly, they significantly reduced their total mortality overall. Ten years out, the weight-loss group appeared to cut their risk of fatal heart attacks and strokes in half, as shown below and at 4:23 in my video

    If you missed the previous videos in my series on the ABCs of obesity, see:

    I continue the topic of obesity and weight with videos in the related posts below.

    For more on the health conditions discussed in this video, see the gallstones, GERD, and heart disease topic pages.

    The GERD-related video I mentioned is Diet and Hiatal Hernia



    Source link