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Tag: Dr. Dean Ornish

  • Lifestyle changes, memory care shape Alzheimer’s support | Long Island Business News

    In Brief:

    With approximately one in eight elderly Long Islanders diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, treatments for this progressively debilitating disease are essential.

    And as the population ages, yet even more people will be diagnosed with dementia and/or Alzheimer’s and require memory care services either at home or in a group living facility, making services and treatment for people with cognitive impairment more vital than ever.

     

    Improving outcomes with lifestyle change

    DANIEL KNECHT: ‘For several years, the medical community viewed Alzheimer’s as a fixed, chronic and ultimately fatal condition, not one impacted by lifestyle.’ Courtesy of EmblemHealth

    Providing health insurance coverage for 3 million New Yorkers, EmblemHealth continually strives to bring evidence-based, holistic care to the communities it serves, notes Daniel Knecht, the company’s chief medical officer.

    Currently, EmblemHealth is partnering with Dr. Dean Ornish, a lifestyle medicine pioneer, and CookUnity, which prepares home-delivered meal kits. The pilot program—which follows Ornish’s research demonstrating improved health outcomes with intensive lifestyle changes—is designed for those diagnosed with early Alzheimer’s disease.

    According to Knecht, Ornish has found that diet, exercise, stress management and social connectedness–when adhered to by patients with early stage Alzheimer’s or memory loss—significantly changes the trajectory of the condition. Further, Ornish has done clinical studies that show that people on this kind of diet have reduced symptoms of memory loss, experience less of a foggy mind and have more energy through the day.

    Knecht added that the U.S. POINTER Study (conducted by the Alzheimer’s Association), demonstrated that a similar approach to lifestyle changes can reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer’s in the high-risk population.

    For several years, the medical community viewed Alzheimer’s as a fixed, chronic and ultimately fatal condition, not one impacted by lifestyle, notes Knecht .

    “We’re starting to really understand that it [Alzheimer’s] is a chronic condition akin to diabetes or cardiovascular disease where there are many drivers that can cause or worsen Alzheimer’s,” he shared.

    Knecht added that studies have shown that up to 45 percent of Alzheimer’s cases are avoidable by embracing a healthy lifestyle.

    “This is incredibly groundbreaking to have a health plan to advance access to a holistic lifestyle program for cognitive health. And we’re also using our clinics and our neighborhood care centers to bring this program to life,” he said. “We’re hopeful that the information and data will demonstrate efficacy to a point where we’ll just cover this more broadly.”

    Another aspect of Emblem Health’s pilot program entails exercise, Tai chi, mindfulness and meditation–activities offered at their 15 neighborhood care centers, many of them in underserved communities, according to Knecht.

    BRUNO DIDIER: ‘It was a very interesting challenge for the chefs to come up with the recipes that would adhere to the diet.’ Courtesy of CookUnity Business

    Because food is highly personal and has an important cultural aspect to it, the company wanted to “make sure we were bringing culturally relevant, delicious food that certainly aligns with the guidelines Dr. Ornish has set out and top quality,” Knecht said. “That’s where CookUnity fits in.”

    According to Bruno Didier, head of CookUnity Business, the pilot program— which is geared for up to 150 patients—is set to commence on Oct. 22.

    He says it will be a plant-based diet, which will consist of three daily meals, absent of sugar, salt, oil, dairy and meat.

    “It was a very interesting challenge for  the chefs to come up with recipes that would adhere to the diet,” Didier added.

     

    Memory care ‘neighborhood’

    A 20-bed memory care “neighborhood,” The Grove is the newest part of Jefferson’s Ferry’s life plan community.

    Set up in a circular pattern, The Grove is a ground floor unit where residents live in a more homelike setting, with access to a courtyard and an open kitchen. Group programming includes music and art, cooking classes, pet therapy, aromatherapy and virtual reality.

    ANTHONY COMERFORD: ‘An enclosed garden [at Jefferson’s Ferry] provides an additional safe space for enjoying outdoor activities, such as gardening, or for just enjoying fresh air and sunshine.’ Courtesy of Jefferson’s Ferry

    “Grove activities are specifically tailored to the interests and abilities of the residents, including smaller, more intimate activities that encourage greater opportunities for meaningful and engaged participation.” said Anthony Comerford, vice president of health services/administrator for the South Setauket facility.

    To ensure the safety of residents, The Grove is a standalone unit where all activities are conducted within the neighborhood, according to Comerford.

    “An enclosed garden provides an additional safe space for enjoying outdoor activities. such as gardening, or for just enjoying fresh air and sunshine,” Comerford said. “The residents love spending time outdoors.”

     

    Secure unit and community programs

    Parker Jewish Institute for Health Care and Rehabilitation in New Hyde Park has a secured, high acuity 42-bed memory care unit for those who have been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s or dementia.

    “The programming is tailored to people with dementia, and we’re able to successfully maintain people when, unfortunately, they’ve had a diagnosis of dementia,” said Michael Rosenblut, Parker Jewish president
    and CEO.

    Rosenblut adds that for the most part, residents “may have Alzheimer’s or dementia and another related illness.”

    The patients, who are medically managed by physicians, nurses, social workers and nurse’s aides, receive specialized programming through Parker’s recreational department.

    MICHAEL ROSENBLUT: ‘The programming is tailored to people with dementia, and we’re able to successfully maintain people when, unfortunately, they’ve had a diagno-sis of dementia.’ Courtesy of Parker Jewish Institute

    Parker Jewish also operates the “Willing Hearts Helpful Hands” community-based program where people caring for their loved ones at home can get relief outside of their homes at memory cafes with live entertainment in Queens, Nassau and Suffolk counties. Since its inception in 2016, the program has engaged with almost 11,000 caregivers and their care recipients throughout Long Island.

    “We have one patient from years ago who participated in that program, I’ll always remember the wife said to us, she hadn’t been out with her husband—the last family wedding was 20 years earlier—even though he has dementia, she hadn’t been dancing with him in 20 years, and now she was dancing with him,” Rosenblut said.

    In July, Parker Jewish introduced another community-based program—GUIDE (Guiding an Improved  Dementia Experience), which offers caregiver support, education and respite, medication management, and home visits and assessments.


    ARLENE GROSS, LIBN CONTRIBUTING WRITER

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  • Alzheimer’s meals program launches with EmblemHealth | Long Island Business News

    THE BLUEPRINT:

    • Chef-prepared, plant-forward meals are tailored for early-stage Alzheimer’s patients

    • Meals are based on the “Ornish lifestyle” to promote brain health and slow disease progression

    • Program includes 14 culturally relevant, vegetarian meals, expanding to 28 soon

    EmblemHealth, a health insurer with locations on Long Island, is partnering with physician-researcher Dr. Dean Ornish and chef-led meal service CookUnity to provide medically tailored meals as part of a new Alzheimer’s program, according to a news release about the initiative.

    Based in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, CookUnity, which serves Long Island, said it is providing medically tailored meals for participants in the program for those with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease. Backed by emerging research, the meals are delivered to participants’ homes and are designed to slow the onset and progression of the disease.

    “Lifestyle and diet play a critical role in how we live and how we age,” Dr. Dan Knecht, chief medical officer at EmblemHealth, said in the news release.

    “Yet access to healthy, affordable, and delicious meals remains a major challenge for many,” Knecht said. “That’s why our collaboration with CookUnity is so unique and exciting. Their local chefs are helping us bring high-quality, plant-forward meals to participants in our Alzheimer’s program, making it easier to support health through food.”

    The program – it’s in a pilot phase, currently – comes at a time when Alzheimer’s affects more than 426,000 New Yorkers, according to the New York State Office for the Aging. More than 7 million are living with Alzheimer’s across the United States, according to Alzheimer’s Association. And, experts say, there are limited treatment options.

    “For this program to succeed, the food must be both culturally relevant and delicious,” Knecht said. “This program isn’t just about science; it’s about dignity and joy. Meals that reflect our members’ heritage and taste preferences aren’t just nourishing, but they’re healing.”

    Participants can choose from over a dozen chef-prepared, ready-to-eat meals from CookUnity, developed to meet the specific nutritional needs of those with Alzheimer’s while maintaining restaurant-quality flavor.

    “Our chefs view this program as a testament to their ever-evolving expertise and to the belief that food is medicine,” Bruno Didier, head of CookUnity Business, said in the news release.

    “It’s often said that we are what we eat, and we believe the right recipes can empower better health,” Didier added. “This collaboration reflects our mission to deliver nourishing, chef-crafted meals – and deepens our commitment to scaling medically tailored solutions.”

    CookUnity’s veteran chefs – Emily Peck, Einat Admony, Ivy Stark and Lena Elkousy – worked with EmblemHealth’s clinical team and CookUnity’s in-house nutritionist to create a nourishing and flavorful custom menu based on the principles of the “Ornish lifestyle,” according to the news release.

    “When my team first learned about this meal program, we couldn’t contain our enthusiasm,” Admony said in the news release.

    “This initiative not only offers us a platform to showcase our culinary skills, but it also encourages us to think creatively through the lens of health by eliminating excess salt and unhealthy fats while using more nutritious alternatives,” Admony said. “It’s an exciting challenge that allows us to redefine our dishes while promoting better health.”

    The program currently offers 14 vegetarian meals, with plans to double to 28 soon. Each meal is designed to meet strict clinical nutritional guidelines and features diverse global flavors – from Middle Eastern Moroccan vegetable stew to Italian mushroom Stroganoff – designed to satisfy varied palates and encourage long-term adherence.

    Participants in the program are screened by EmblemHealth’s provider group, Advantage Care Physicians, to implement a comprehensive lifestyle medicine program aimed at enhancing brain health and providing crucial support for caregivers, according to EmblemHealth.


    Adina Genn

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  • Treat Type 1 Diabetes with a Plant-Based Diet?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Treat Type 1 Diabetes with a Plant-Based Diet?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Is it possible to reverse type 1 diabetes if caught early enough?

    The International Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention has already had its share of miraculous disease reversals with a plant-based diet. For instance, one patient began following a whole food, plant-based diet after having two heart attacks in two months. Within months, he experienced no more chest pain, controlled his cholesterol, blood pressure, and blood sugars, and also lost 50 pounds as a nice bonus. Yet, the numbers “do not capture the patient’s transformation from feeling like a ‘dead man walking’ to being in command of his health with a new future and life.” 

    I’ve previously discussed cases of reversing the autoimmune inflammatory disease psoriasis and also talked about lupus nephritis (kidney inflammation). What about type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune disease we didn’t think we could do anything about? In contrast to type 2 diabetes, which is a lifestyle disease that can be prevented and reversed with a healthy enough diet and lifestyle, type 1 diabetes is an autoimmune disease in which our body attacks our pancreas, killing off our insulin-producing cells and condemning us to a life of insulin injections—unless, perhaps, it’s caught early enough. If a healthy enough diet is started early enough, might we be able to reverse the course of type 1 diabetes by blunting that autoimmune inflammation?

    As I discuss in my video Type 1 Diabetes Treatment: A Plant-Based Diet, we know that patients with type 1 diabetes “may be able to reduce insulin requirements and achieve better glycemic [blood sugar] control” with healthier diets. For example, children and teens were randomized to a nutritional intervention in which they increased the whole plant food density of their diet—meaning they ate more whole grains, whole fruits, vegetables, legumes (beans, split peas, chickpeas, and lentils), nuts, and seeds. Researchers found that the more whole plant foods, the better the blood sugar control.

    The fact that more whole fruits were associated “with better glycemic [blood sugar] control has important clinical implications for nutrition education” in those with type 1 diabetes. We should be “educating them on the benefits of fruit intake, and allaying erroneous concerns that fruit may adversely affect blood sugar.”

    The case series in the IJDRP, however, went beyond proposing better control of just their high blood sugars, the symptom of diabetes, but better control of the disease itself, suggesting the anti-inflammatory effects of whole healthy plant foods “may slow or prevent further destruction of the beta cells”—the insulin-producing cells of the pancreas—“if dietary intervention is initiated early enough.” Where did this concept come from?

    A young patient. Immediately following diagnosis of type 1 diabetes at age three, a patient began a vegetable-rich diet and, three years later, “has not yet required insulin therapy…and has experienced a steady decline in autoantibody levels,” which are markers of insulin cell destruction. Another child, who also started eating a healthier diet, but not until several months after diagnosis, maintains a low dose of insulin with good control. And, even if their insulin-producing cells have been utterly destroyed, individuals with type 1 diabetes can still enjoy “dramatically reduced insulin requirements,” reduced inflammation, and reduced cardiovascular risk, which is their number one cause of death over the age of 30. People with type 1 diabetes have 11 to 14 times the risk of death from cardiovascular disease compared to the general population, and it’s already the top killer among the public, so it’s closer to 11 to 14 times more important for those with type 1 diabetes to be on the only diet and lifestyle program ever proven to reverse heart disease in the majority of patients—one centered around whole plant foods. The fact it may also help control the disease itself is just sugar-free icing on the cake.

    All this exciting new research was presented in the first issue of The International Journal of Disease Reversal and Prevention. As a bonus, there’s a companion publication called the Disease Reversal and Prevention Digest. These are for the lay public and are developed with the belief I wholeheartedly share that “everyone has a right to understand the science that could impact their health.” You can go behind the scenes and hear directly from the author of the lupus series, read interviews from luminaries like Dean Ornish, see practical tips from dietitians on making the transition towards a healthier diet, and enjoy recipes. 

    The second issue includes more practical tips, such as how to eat plant-based on a budget, and gives updates on what Dr. Klaper is doing to educate medical students, what Audrey Sanchez from Balanced is doing to help change school lunches, and how Dr. Ostfeld got healthy foods served in a hospital. (What a concept!) And what magazine would be complete without an article to improve your sex life? 

    The journal is free, downloadable at IJDRP.org, and its companion digest, available at diseasereversaldigest.com, carries a subscription fee. I am a proud subscriber.

    Want to learn more about preventing type 1 diabetes in the first place? See the related posts below.

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • What About Vegan Junk Food and Vegetarians’ Stroke Risk?  | NutritionFacts.org

    What About Vegan Junk Food and Vegetarians’ Stroke Risk?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Just because you’re eating a vegetarian or vegan diet doesn’t mean you’re eating healthfully.

    “Plant-Based Diets Are Associated with a Lower Risk of Incident Cardiovascular Disease, Cardiovascular Disease Mortality, and All-Cause Mortality in a General Population of Middle-Aged Adults”: This study of a diverse sample of 12,000 Americans found that “progressively increasing the intake of plant foods by reducing the intake of animal foods is associated with benefits on cardiovascular health and mortality.” Still, regarding plant-based diets for cardiovascular disease prevention, “all plant foods are not created equal.” As you can see in the graph below and at 0:40 in my video Vegetarians and Stroke Risk Factors: Vegan Junk Food?, a British study found higher stroke risk in vegetarians. Were they just eating a lot of vegan junk food? 

    “Any diet devoid of animal food sources can be claimed to be a vegetarian [or vegan] diet; thus, it is important to determine” what is being eaten. One of the first things I look at when I’m trying to see how serious a population is about healthy eating is something that is undeniably, uncontroversially bad: soda, aka liquid candy. Anyone drinking straight sugar water doesn’t have health on top of mind.

    A large study was conducted of plant-based eaters in the United States, where people tend to cut down on meat for health reasons far more than for ethics, as you can see in the graph below and at 1:20 in my video.

    Researchers found that flexitarians drink fewer sugary beverages than regular meat eaters, as do pescatarians, vegetarians, and vegans, as you can see below and at 1:30.

    However, in the study from the United Kingdom where the increased stroke risk in vegetarians was found and where people are more likely to go veg or vegan for ethical reasons, researchers found that pescatarians drink less soda, but the vegetarians and vegans drink more, as shown in the graph below and at 1:44. 

    I’m not saying that’s why they had more strokes; it might just give us an idea of how healthfully they were eating. In the UK study, the vegetarian and vegan men and women ate about the same amounts of desserts, cookies, and chocolate, as you can see in the graph below and at 1:53. 

    They also consumed about the same total sugar, as shown below and at 2:02. 

    In the U.S. study, the average non-vegetarian is nearly obese, the vegetarians are a little overweight, and the vegans were the only ideal weight group. In this analysis of the UK study, however, everyone was about the same weight. The meat eaters were lighter than the vegans, as you can see below, and at 2:19 in my video. The EPIC-Oxford study seems to have attracted a particularly “health-conscious” group of meat eaters weighing substantially less than the general population. 

    Let’s look at some specific stroke-related nutrients. Dietary fiber appears to be beneficial for the prevention of cardiovascular disease, including stroke, and it seems the more, the better, as you can see in the graph below and at 2:43 in my video

    Based on studies of nearly half a million men and women, there doesn’t seem to be any upper threshold of benefit—so, again, “the more, the better.” At more than 25 grams of soluble fiber and 47 grams of insoluble dietary fiber, you can start seeing a significant drop in associated stroke risk. So, one could consider these values “as the minimal recommendable daily intake of soluble and insoluble fiber…to prevent stroke at a population level.” That’s what you see in people eating diets centered around minimally processed plant foods. Dean Ornish, M.D., got up around there with his whole food, plant-based diet. It might not be as much as we were designed to eat, based on the analyses of fossilized feces, but that’s about where we might expect significantly lower stroke risk, as shown below and at 3:25 in my video

    How much were the UK vegetarians getting? 22.1 grams. Now, in the UK, they measure fiber a little differently, so it may be closer to 30 grams, but that’s still not the optimal level for stroke prevention. It’s so little fiber that the vegetarians and vegans only beat out the meat eaters by about one or two bowel movements a week, as you can see below and at 3:48 in my video, suggesting the non-meat eaters were eating lots of processed foods. 

    The vegetarians were only eating about half a serving more of fruits and vegetables. Intake is thought to reduce stroke risk in part because of their potassium content, but the UK vegetarians at higher stroke risk were eating so few greens and beans that they couldn’t even match the meat eaters. The vegetarians (and the meat eaters) weren’t even reaching the recommended minimum daily potassium intake of 4,700 mg a day.

    What about sodium? “The vast majority of the available evidence indicates that elevated salt intake is associated with higher stroke risk…” There is practically a straight-line increase in the risk of dying from a stroke, the more salt you eat, as you can see in the graph below and at 4:29 in my video

    Even just lowering sodium intake by a tiny fraction every year could prevent tens of thousands of fatal strokes. “Reducing Sodium Intake to Prevent Stroke: Time for Action, Not Hesitation” was the title of the paper, but the UK vegetarians and vegans appeared to be hesitating, as did the other dietary groups. “All groups exceeded the advised less than 2400 mg daily sodium intake”—and that didn’t even account for salt added to the table! The American Heart Association recommends less than 1,500 mg a day. So, they were all eating a lot of processed foods. It’s no wonder the vegetarians’ blood pressures were only one or two points lower. High blood pressure is perhaps “the single most important potentially modifiable risk factor for stroke.” 

    What evidence do I have that the vegetarians’ and vegans’ stroke risk would go down if they ate more healthfully? Well, in rural Africa, where they were able to nail the fiber intake that our bodies were designed to get by eating so many whole, healthy plant foods—including fruits, vegetables, grains, greens, beans, and protein almost entirely from plant sources—not only was heart disease, our number one killer, “almost non-existent,” but so was stroke. It only surged up from nowhere “with the introduction of salt and refined foods” to their diet. 

    “It is notable that stroke and senile dementia appear to be virtually absent in Kitava, an Oceanic culture [near Australia] whose quasi-vegan traditional diet is very low in salt and very rich in potassium.” They ate fish a few times a week, but the other 95 percent or so of their diet was made up of vegetables, fruits, corn, and beans. They had an apparent absence of stroke, even despite their ridiculously high rates of smoking, 76 percent of men and 80 percent of women. We evolved by eating as little as less than an eighth of a teaspoon of salt a day, and our daily potassium consumption is thought to have been as high as 10,000 mg or so. We went from an unsalted, whole-food diet to eating salty, processed foods depleted of potassium whether we eat meat or not. 

    Caldwell Esselstyn at the Cleveland Clinic tried putting about 200 patients with established cardiovascular disease on a whole food, plant-based diet. Of the 177 who stuck with the diet, only a single patient went on to have a stroke in the subsequent few years, compared to a hundred-fold greater rate of adverse events, including multiple strokes and deaths in those who strayed from the diet. “This is not vegetarianism,” Esselstyn explains. Vegetarians can eat a lot of less-than-ideal foods, “such as milk, cream, butter, cheese, ice cream, and eggs. This new paradigm is exclusively plant-based nutrition.” 

    This entire train of thought—that the reason typical vegetarians don’t have better stroke statistics is because they’re not eating particularly stellar diets—may explain why they don’t have significantly lower stroke rates. However, it still doesn’t explain why they may have higher stroke rates. Even if they’re eating similarly crappy, salty, processed diets, at least they aren’t eating meat, which we know increases stroke risk. There must be something about vegetarian diets that so increases stroke risk that it offsets their inherent advantages. We’ll continue our hunt for the answer next. 

    From a medical standpoint, labels like vegan and vegetarian just tell me what you don’t eat. It’s like identifying yourself as a “No-Twinkie-tarian.” You don’t eat Twinkies? Great, but what’s the rest of your diet like? 

    What are the healthiest foods? Check out my Daily Dozen.

    To catch up on the rest of this series, see related posts below. 

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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  • Muscle Shrinkage and Bone Loss on Keto Diets?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Muscle Shrinkage and Bone Loss on Keto Diets?  | NutritionFacts.org

    Ketogenic diets have been found to undermine exercise efforts and lead to muscle shrinkage and bone loss. 
     
    An official International Society of Sports Nutrition position paper covering keto diets notes the “ergolytic effect” of keto diets on both high- and low-intensity workouts. Ergolytic is the opposite of ergogenic. Ergogenic means performance-boosting, whereas ergolytic means performance-impairing. 
     
    For nonathletes, ketosis may also undermine exercise efforts. Ketosis was correlated with increased feelings of “perceived exercise effort” and “also significantly correlated to feelings of ‘fatigue’ and to ‘total mood disturbance,’” during physical activity. “Together, these data suggest that the ability and desire to maintain sustained exercise might be adversely impacted in individuals adhering to ketogenic diets for weight loss.” 
     
    You may recall that I’ve previously discussed that shrinkage of measured muscle mass among CrossFit trainees has been reported. So, a ketogenic diet may not just blunt the performance of endurance athletes, but their strength training as well. As I discuss in my video Keto Diets: Muscle Growth and Bone Density, study participants performed eight weeks of the battery of standard upper and lower body training protocols, like bench presses, pull-ups, squats, and deadlifts, and there was no surprise. You boost muscle mass—unless you’re on a keto diet, in which case there was no significant change in muscle mass after all that effort. Those randomized to a non-ketogenic diet added about three pounds of muscle mass, whereas the same amount of weight lifting on the keto diet tended to subtract muscle mass by about 3.5 ounces on average. How else could you do eight weeks of weight training and not gain a single ounce of muscle on a ketogenic diet? Even keto diet advocates call bodybuilding on a ketogenic diet an “oxymoron.” 
     
    What about bone loss? Sadly, bone fractures are one of the side effects that disproportionately plague children placed on ketogenic diets, along with slowed growth and kidney stones. Ketogenic diets may cause a steady rate of bone loss as measured in the spine, presumed to be because ketones are acidic, so keto diets can put people in what’s called a “chronic acidotic state.” 
     
    Some of the case reports of children on keto diets are truly heart-wrenching. One nine-year-old girl seemed to get it all, including osteoporosis, bone fractures, and kidney stones, then she got pancreatitis and died. Pancreatitis can be triggered by having too much fat in your blood. As you can see in the graph below and at 2:48 in my video, a single high-fat meal can cause a quintupling of the spike in triglycerides in your bloodstream within hours of consumption, which can put you at risk for inflammation of the pancreas.  

    The young girl had a rare genetic disorder called glucose transporter deficiency syndrome. She was born with a defect in ferrying blood sugar into her brain. That can result in daily seizures starting in infancy, but a ketogenic diet can be used as a way to sneak fuel into the brain, which makes a keto diet a godsend for the 1 in 90,000 families stricken with this disorder.

    As with anything in medicine, it’s all about risks versus benefits. As many as 30 percent of patients with epilepsy don’t respond to anti-seizure drugs. Unfortunately, the alternatives aren’t pretty and can include brain surgery that implants deep electrodes through the skull or even removes a lobe of your brain. This can obviously lead to serious side effects, but so can having seizures every day. If a ketogenic diet can help with seizures, the pros can far outweigh the cons. For those just choosing a diet to lose weight, though, the cost-benefit analysis would really seem to go the other way. Thankfully, you don’t need to mortgage your long-term health for short-term weight loss. We can get the best of both worlds by choosing a healthy diet, as I discussed in my video Flashback Friday: The Weight Loss Program That Got Better with Time.
     
    Remember the study that showed the weight loss was nearly identical in those who had been told to eat the low-carb Atkins diet for a year and those told to eat the low-fat Ornish diet, as seen below and at 4:18 in my video? The authors concluded, “This supports the practice of recommending any diet that a patient will adhere to in order to lose weight.” That seems like terrible advice. 

    There are regimens out there like “The Last Chance Diet which consisted of a low-calorie liquid formula made from leftover byproducts from a slaughterhouse [that] was linked to approximately 60 deaths from cardiovascular-related events.” An ensuing failed lawsuit from one widower laid the precedent for the First Amendment protection for those who produce deadly diet books. 

    It’s possible to construct a healthy low-carb diet or an unhealthy low-fat one—a diet of cotton candy would be zero fat—but the health effects of a typical low-carb ketogenic diet like Atkins are vastly different from a low-fat plant-based diet like Ornish’s. As you can see in the graph below and at 5:26 in my video, they would have diametrically opposed effects on cardiovascular risk factors in theory, based on the fiber, saturated fat, and cholesterol contents of their representative meal plans. 

    And when actually put to the test, low-carb diets were found to impair artery function. Over time, blood flow to the heart muscle itself is improved on an Ornish-style diet and diminished on a low-carb one, as shown below and at 5:44 in my video. Heart disease tends to progress on typical weight-loss diets and actively worsens on low-carb diets, but it may be reversed by an Ornish-style diet. Given that heart disease is the number one killer of men and women, “recommending any diet that a patient will adhere to in order to lose weight” seems irresponsible. Why not tell people to smoke? Cigarettes can cause weight loss, too, as can tuberculosis and a meth habit. The goal of weight loss is not to lighten the load for your pallbearers. 

     
    For more on keto diets, see my videos on the topic. Interested in enhancing athletic performance? Check out the related videos below. 

    Michael Greger M.D. FACLM

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