MANY people have
been making the case that Americans have grown fat because they eat too much
starch and sugar, and not enough meat, fat and eggs. Recently, the Dietary
Guidelines Advisory Committee lifted recommendations that consumption of
dietary cholesterol should be restricted, citing research that dietary
cholesterol does not have a major effect on blood cholesterol levels. The
predictable headlines followed: “Back to Eggs and Bacon?”
But, alas, bacon
and egg yolks are not health foods.
Although people
have been told for decades to eat less meat and fat, Americans actually
consumed 67 percent more added fat, 39 percent more sugar, and 41 percent more
meat in 2000 than they had in 1950 and 24.5 percent more calories than they had
in 1970, according to the Agriculture Department. Not surprisingly, we are
fatter and unhealthier.
The debate is
not as simple as low-fat versus low-carb. Research shows that animal protein
may significantly increase the risk of premature mortality from all causes,
among them cardiovascular disease, cancer and Type 2 diabetes. Heavy
consumption of saturated fat and trans fats may double the risk of developing
Alzheimer’s disease.
A study
published last March found a 75 percent increase in premature deaths from all
causes, and a 400 percent increase in deaths from cancer and Type 2 diabetes,
among heavy consumers of animal protein under the age of 65 — those who got 20
percent or more of their calories from animal protein.
Low-carb,
high-animal-protein diets promote heart disease via mechanisms other than just
their effects on cholesterol levels. Arterial blockages may be caused by
animal-protein-induced elevations in free fatty acids and insulin levels and
decreased production of endothelial progenitor cells (which help keep arteries
clean). Egg yolks and red meat appear to significantly increase the risk of
coronary heart disease and cancer due to increased production of trimethylamine
N-oxide, or TMAO, a metabolite of meat and egg yolks linked to the clogging of
arteries. (Egg whites have neither cholesterol nor TMAO.)
Animal protein
increases IGF-1, an insulin-like growth hormone, and chronic inflammation, an
underlying factor in many chronic diseases. Also, red meat is high in Neu5Gc, a
tumor-forming sugar that is linked to chronic inflammation and an increased
risk of cancer. A plant-based diet may prolong life by blocking the mTOR
protein, which is linked to aging. When fat calories were carefully controlled,
patients lost 67 percent more body fat than when carbohydrates were controlled.
An optimal diet for preventing disease is a whole-foods, plant-based diet that
is naturally low in animal protein, harmful fats and refined carbohydrates.
What that means in practice is little or no red meat; mostly vegetables, fruits,
whole grains, legumes and soy products in their natural forms; very few simple
and refined carbohydrates such as sugar and white flour; and sufficient “good
fats” such as fish oil or flax oil, seeds and nuts. A healthful diet should be
low in “bad fats,” meaning trans fats, saturated fats and hydrogenated fats.
Finally, we need more quality and less quantity.
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My colleagues
and I at the nonprofit Preventive Medicine Research Institute and the
University of California, San Francisco, have conducted clinical research
proving the many benefits of a whole-foods, plant-based diet on reversing
chronic diseases, not just on reducing risk factors such as cholesterol. Our
interventions also included stress management techniques, moderate exercise
like walking and social support.
We showed in
randomized, controlled trials that these diet and lifestyle changes can reverse
the progression of even severe coronary heart disease. Episodes of chest pain
decreased by 91 percent after only a few weeks. After five years there were 2.5
times fewer cardiac events. Blood flow to the heart improved by over 300
percent.
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RECENT COMMENTS
Larry 2 days ago
Dr. Ornish is
one hundred percent spot on about plant based nutrition but just try staying on
his restrictive diet regime for more than a...
August Wright 2
days ago
Brilliantly
researched article, Dean Ornish! You should be our next President!We need fearless
leadership to immediately improve our...
NE 2 days ago
Why does the NY
Times (and others) continue publishing misleading titles? Maybe there's a myth
surrounding protein because we are...
SEE ALL COMMENTS
Other
physicians, including Dr. Kim A. Williams, the president of the American
College of Cardiology, are also finding that these diet and lifestyle changes
can reduce the need for a lifetime of medications and transform people’s lives.
These changes may also slow, stop or even reverse the progression of
early-stage prostate cancer, judging from results in a randomized controlled
trial.
These changes
may also alter your genes, turning on genes that keep you healthy, and turning
off genes that promote disease. They may even lengthen telomeres, the ends of
our chromosomes that control aging.
The more people
adhered to these recommendations (including reducing the amount of fat and
cholesterol they consumed), the more improvement we measured — at any age. But
for reversing disease, a whole-foods, plant-based diet seems to be necessary.
In addition,
what’s good for you is good for our planet. Livestock production causes more
disruption of the climate than all forms of transportation combined. And
because it takes as much as 10 times more grain to produce the same amount of
calories through livestock as through direct grain consumption, eating a
plant-based diet could free up resources for the hungry.
What you gain is
so much more than what you give up.
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