Written by Annika Dahlqvist on 6 December, 2009 at 21:22
I read in a forum that the professor Kerstin Brismar, diabetes researcher, Karolinska Institutet, has visited Greater Stockholm´s Diabetes Association talking about diet. She claimed to the diabetics that LCHF is a dangerous diet in the long term. There have been deaths.
LCHF diabetics and others ought to mail Kerstin Brismar kerstin.brismar@ki.se and other professors, and tell them about the health benefits that they have experienced, and how many deaths they know about, which have occurred at LowFatHighCarb diet.
Why aren’t not more comparing studies between LCHF and LFHC on ill Type-2 diabetics done, in order to see how it goes with the deaths?
It can be suggested for a hypothesis assumed The Karlshamns study where 80 % of the lowfat eaters got heart diseases and 40 % died, while none of the lowcarb eaters neither got heart diseases nor died.
You get the feeling that the establishment thinks that it’s completely OK when several diabetics die when eating lowfat, but completely unacceptable when one single person dies when eating lowcarb.
The Establishment claims that the blood lipids elevates on LCHF. Kostdoktorn has a compilation on studies comparing lowfat with lowcarb diet, which” shows” better blood lipids on lowcarb diet.
2009-12-15
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Of course there's been a VERY long term experiment carried out for millennia: it's called "evolution".
ReplyDeleteIn all that time we did not become extinct from eating saturated fats. Nor were there "epidemics" of metabolic disease until recently when low fat diets became established.
Stephan at Whole Health Source
http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/
has collected a lot of research, following in the footsteps of Weston A Price and many others, looking at the factors which are actually associated with these diseases.
Among them are fructose, wheat and Omega 6 oils, and a lack of vitamins D3 and K2, both of which are fat soluble.
Ricardo has put together a huge database
http://www.canibaisereis.com/2009/03/21/nutrition-and-health-database/
which strongly suggests many other correlations.