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Juhana Harju medicine forum Guru
Joined: 06 May 2005
Posts: 1056
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Posted: Fri May 06, 2005 5:14 pm Post subject:
Re: The issue with grains, some clarifications?
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calypso47@voyager.net wrote:
:: "Then there's the Okinawans, with their greasy pork filled diet.
:: Almost no CVD, diabetes, and extraordinary longevity."
::
:: The pork is a luxury food eaten a few times a year, a sub fraction
:: of the 3 percent of meat in their diets. The diet is a good example
:: of the e. diet.
::
:: "Eat like an Okinawan"
::
:: http://www.berkeleywellness.com/html/wl/2001/wlFeatured0901.html
::
:: "The Okinawan diet might well amaze Americans. The average citizen
:: consumes at least seven servings of vegetables daily, and an equal
:: number of grains (in the form of noodles, bread, and rice--many of
:: them whole grains). Add to this two to four servings of fruit, plus
:: tofu and other forms of soy, green tea, seaweed, and fish rich in
:: omega-3s (three times weekly). Sweet potatoes, bean sprouts, onions,
:: and green peppers are prominent in the diet. Vegetables, grains, and
:: fruits make up 72% of the diet by weight. Soy and seaweed provide
:: another 14%. Meat, poultry, and eggs account for just 3% of the diet,
:: fish about 11%. The emphasis is on dark green vegetables rich in
:: calcium (Okinawans, like other Japanese, don't eat much dairy).
:: Okinawans do drink alcohol, but women usually stick to one drink a
:: day, while men average twice that. Moderation is the key.
::
:: short, the average Okinawan's diet is far richer in complex
:: carbohydrates and plant-based foods, and lower in fat, than the
:: average American's. (It's completely different from low-carbohydrate
:: plans like the Atkins and Zone diets.)"
You are right about the Okinawan diet. The Weston A. Price site gives
inaccurate information about the Okinawan diet. The red meat consumption is
*very* low among Okinawan elders.
--
Juhana |
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Susan medicine forum Guru
Joined: 05 May 2005
Posts: 932
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Posted: Fri May 06, 2005 7:44 pm Post subject:
Re: The issue with grains, some clarifications?
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x-no-archive: yes
calypso47@voyager.net wrote:
| Quote: | "Then there's the Okinawans, with their greasy pork filled diet. Almost
no CVD, diabetes, and extraordinary longevity."
The pork is a luxury food eaten a few times a year, a sub fraction of the
3 percent of meat in their diets. The diet is a good example of the e.
diet.
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No, I believe you and Berkely got that wrong, in an effort to prop up bias.
Susan |
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Susan medicine forum Guru
Joined: 05 May 2005
Posts: 932
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Posted: Fri May 06, 2005 7:47 pm Post subject:
Re: The issue with grains, some clarifications?
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x-no-archive: yes
calypso47@voyager.net wrote:
n article stressing glycemic control, yet."
| Quote: |
One vote for no relevance shown as to questionable scientific validity of
the article. The question was about when looking at the diets of large
populations does the use of whole grains seem related to a lower risk of
developing diabetes. Based on the article, and others, the answer is yes.
Any speculation about any other combination of foods stands mute as
research is lacking. Scientific concensus is built not upon research not
done but that in hand. For a population whose usual diet includes grains,
whole grains is a better choice with regard to developing diabetes.
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Whole grains may simply be a marker for the fact that the less actual
digestible grain one eats, the better off one is.
Since glycemic control was the emphasis, the conclusion would have to be
that replacing grains with, say, green leafies and oils, would be far
more advantageous.
Susan |
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Jefferson medicine forum beginner
Joined: 05 May 2005
Posts: 12
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Posted: Fri May 06, 2005 8:58 pm Post subject:
Re: The issue with grains, some clarifications?
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calypso47@voyager.net wrote:
| Quote: | "It showed a great big assumption that eating whole grains was better
than not eating grains. In an article stressing glycemic control, yet."
One vote for no relevance shown as to questionable scientific validity of
the article. The question was about when looking at the diets of large
populations does the use of whole grains seem related to a lower risk of
developing diabetes. Based on the article, and others, the answer is yes.
Any speculation about any other combination of foods stands mute as
research is lacking. Scientific concensus is built not upon research not
done but that in hand. For a population whose usual diet includes grains,
whole grains is a better choice with regard to developing diabetes.
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Since this thread is going to both nutrition and diabetes NGs, this
article and some of the articles referenced or articles citing, support
calypso theme. It is especially important for offspring of diabetics
who have both genetic and environmental concerns to deal with.
Carbohydrate Nutrition, Insulin Resistance, and the Prevalence of the
Metabolic Syndrome in the Framingham Offspring Cohort -
http://care.diabetesjournals.org/cgi/content/full/27/2/538
Frank |
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Guest
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Posted: Sat May 07, 2005 2:01 pm Post subject:
Re: The issue with grains, some clarifications?
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"Whole grains may simply be a marker for the fact that the less actual
digestible grain one eats, the better off one is.
Since glycemic control was the emphasis, the conclusion would have to be
that replacing grains with, say, green leafies and oils, would be far
more advantageous."
"Whole grains may simply be a marker for the fact that the less actual
digestible grain one eats, the better off one is.
Since glycemic control was the emphasis, the conclusion would have to be
that replacing grains with, say, green leafies and oils, would be far"
Such speculation is intresting but not compelling for lack of evidence.
This research and others similar better support whole grains having a
protective effect against metabolic syndrom and possible diabetes. The
fiber and other nutritional substances in addition to the food values
grain has is thought to confer those protective effects, just as the
conclusion about nuts which are also a higher carbohydrate food source
with less saturated fats. Any way one slices and dices it, consuming
whole grains is one part of common sense approach to avoiding the higher
risk of diabetes.
As mentioned before, those diet tradition areas with better health and
lifespan records use grain in abundance, while not addressing your
speculation directly it does lend support in the oppisite direction.
Further, the glycemic index for whole and white breads is nearly the same
which tends also to mitigate against your thesis. The apparent underlying
assumption is that carbohydrates are the central cause somehow in the
developement of diabetes which has yet to be demonstrated, again pointing
to those diet areas where they are quite high in diet with low diabetes. |
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