OK, another non technical post. I hit a patch of work so I'm just glad to have arrived home one day while Squiggs was still up and eating.
Voices are the neighbours... Except the lip smacking from Squiggs!
Peter
Sunday, June 29, 2008
Monday, June 23, 2008
Opioid pictures
No, it's not Afghanistan, that's the A34 in the background. The NHS had (has?) a diamorphine supply problem since our foray in to the opium fields of Afghanistan. Now we're in to grow your own!
The surrounding fields are far less recreational but could be far more damaging!
No surprise people like bread, it's acting on the same receptors as the poppy juice....
Peter
The surrounding fields are far less recreational but could be far more damaging!
No surprise people like bread, it's acting on the same receptors as the poppy juice....
Peter
Diabetes in Sweden update
Just an update from Nielson and Joensson, original comment here. Happened on it while chasing assorted lipoprotein numbers for another post.
HbA1c below 5% without meds is possible through diet. I wouldn't describe these people as cured, a pizza a week would have them in trouble, but with HbA1c this low I'd not be worrying about CVD too much.
"Of the total of 10 controls, who have switched diet, 2 persons after a weight reduction of 20 kg each are free of all signs of diabetes after 3 and 2 years respectively i.e. HbA1c below 5.0%, fasting blood glucose below 5.0 mmol/l and free of any blood glucose lowering medication"
Second comment is that, even with successful weight loss and diabetes imporvement, carb creep is real and hard to avoid.
"After 22 months 2 patients had resumed insulin treatment following an increase of carbohydrates."
I know that rye crisp bread was a feature of this diet. I wonder what would have happened in the complete absence of gluten? Or whether the problems of removing this potentially addictive carbohydrate source would just have sabotaged the initial compliance?
Peter
HbA1c below 5% without meds is possible through diet. I wouldn't describe these people as cured, a pizza a week would have them in trouble, but with HbA1c this low I'd not be worrying about CVD too much.
"Of the total of 10 controls, who have switched diet, 2 persons after a weight reduction of 20 kg each are free of all signs of diabetes after 3 and 2 years respectively i.e. HbA1c below 5.0%, fasting blood glucose below 5.0 mmol/l and free of any blood glucose lowering medication"
Second comment is that, even with successful weight loss and diabetes imporvement, carb creep is real and hard to avoid.
"After 22 months 2 patients had resumed insulin treatment following an increase of carbohydrates."
I know that rye crisp bread was a feature of this diet. I wonder what would have happened in the complete absence of gluten? Or whether the problems of removing this potentially addictive carbohydrate source would just have sabotaged the initial compliance?
Peter
Sunday, June 22, 2008
Gluten, thyroid and auto immunity
This an old press release, no longer available, sent to me by a friend from Dr Bernstein's forum. It appears to relate to this paper. Can't get the full text but the abstract and PR seems to sum up the results quite well.
There are three things of particular interest, one was the suggestion that coelaic disease patients develop other auto immune diseases. Second was that on withdrawl of gluten they not only loose both their anti endomysial antibody titers (traditional marker of coeliac disease) but they also loose their auto immune disease antibodies too. Third is that it's not overnight, 3-6 months is more like it.
From several people I get the impression that 2 weeks is often enough to see some change in an auto immune disease, a month is needed for convinving improvement and resolution needs about 6 months. There are good and bad patches in the process.
Nice to see a research group backing up the anecdote. Here's the press release:
"Dr. Tarcisio Not, of Clinica Pediatrica, I.R.C.C.S., Trieste, and colleagues, studied 172 patients with autoimmune thyroid disorders, and two control groups. The control groups comprised 498 patients with other diseases and 4,000 healthy blood donors. Screening was done with IgA-class endomysium antibody using immunofluorescence.
The findings, reported in the February issue of Digestive Diseases and Sciences, show that the prevalence of celiac disease was 3.4% in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, and 0.6% and 0.25% among the two control groups.
Moreover, the study found an association between untreated celiac disease, gluten intake and autoimmune disorders. The researchers write, "We believe that undiagnosed celiac disease can cause other disorders by switching on some as yet unknown immunological mechanism. Untreated celiac patients produce organ-specific autoantibodies."
They add, "By following these subjects longitudinally, it has been seen that not only do the anti-gliadin antibodies and anti-endomysium antibodies disappear after 3 to 6 months of a gluten-free diet, but so do the organ-specific autoantibodies."
Given these results, Dr. Not and his team suggest that patients with autoimmune thyroiditis "may benefit from a screening for celiac disease so as to eliminate symptoms and limit the risk of developing other autoimmune disorders."
Dig Dis Sci 2000;45:403-406.(end)"
Peter
There are three things of particular interest, one was the suggestion that coelaic disease patients develop other auto immune diseases. Second was that on withdrawl of gluten they not only loose both their anti endomysial antibody titers (traditional marker of coeliac disease) but they also loose their auto immune disease antibodies too. Third is that it's not overnight, 3-6 months is more like it.
From several people I get the impression that 2 weeks is often enough to see some change in an auto immune disease, a month is needed for convinving improvement and resolution needs about 6 months. There are good and bad patches in the process.
Nice to see a research group backing up the anecdote. Here's the press release:
"Dr. Tarcisio Not, of Clinica Pediatrica, I.R.C.C.S., Trieste, and colleagues, studied 172 patients with autoimmune thyroid disorders, and two control groups. The control groups comprised 498 patients with other diseases and 4,000 healthy blood donors. Screening was done with IgA-class endomysium antibody using immunofluorescence.
The findings, reported in the February issue of Digestive Diseases and Sciences, show that the prevalence of celiac disease was 3.4% in patients with autoimmune thyroiditis, and 0.6% and 0.25% among the two control groups.
Moreover, the study found an association between untreated celiac disease, gluten intake and autoimmune disorders. The researchers write, "We believe that undiagnosed celiac disease can cause other disorders by switching on some as yet unknown immunological mechanism. Untreated celiac patients produce organ-specific autoantibodies."
They add, "By following these subjects longitudinally, it has been seen that not only do the anti-gliadin antibodies and anti-endomysium antibodies disappear after 3 to 6 months of a gluten-free diet, but so do the organ-specific autoantibodies."
Given these results, Dr. Not and his team suggest that patients with autoimmune thyroiditis "may benefit from a screening for celiac disease so as to eliminate symptoms and limit the risk of developing other autoimmune disorders."
Dig Dis Sci 2000;45:403-406.(end)"
Peter
Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Gluten and gall bladders
Chris from Conditioning Research emailed this link to me, just before Troy asked about high fat eating after the surgical loss of your gall bladder. Many thanks Chris, immaculate timing. The main problem without a gall bladder is that there is no pulsatile release of bile acids to allow the formation of the lipid miceles needed for fat digestion and absorption. However, even without a gall bladder, there must be some on going bile secretion, even if there is no storage for a big release after a large meal. Is this enough? I commented that medium chain triglycerides might help, these are slowly absorbed without pancreatic lipase, but now I think about it, I'm not sure if this would work without bile acids to get the MCTs in to the enterocytes in the first place...
But there is a separate problem anyway. If you have coeliac disease you don't seem to produce cholecystokinin (CCK) when fat hits your small intestine. So under these circumstances, you may as well not have a gall bladder anyway!
There is obviously a trade off between the severity of the coeliac disease and the degree of cholestasis. The link above mentions active disease... I get the impression that villous atrophy is needed to get the blunted CCK response.
But then it's worth remembering that 1mg, that's one milligram, no typo, of gluten per day will sustain villous atrophy in unlucky individuals. They will be clinically and serologically normal under these conditions. I bet they don't make a lot of CCK though! Or get picked up by the average gastroenterologist.
So is subclinical coeliac disease any worse than having no gall bladder? Many many many people have sub clinical coeliac disease. Perhaps this is the wrong question. Maybe it would be better to ask whether THE reason you have had your gall bladder removed is that sub clinical coeliac disease was the underlying cause of your gall stone anyway. No CCK means no gall bladder contraction, which means no bile acid deposition, which means cholestasis, which means gall stones. Also means blunted fat absorption. Which means no CCK release... It's a chicken and egg situation.
Apart from coeliac disease and CCK, the other aspect which fascinates me is the effect of opioids on the sphincter of Oddi, at the end of the bile duct (includes the pancreatic duct in some individuals). Opioids spasm this sphincter. I know, I precipitated pancreatitis in a dog with a (big) dose of morphine once. It recovered.
So what does a continuous flow of gluten derived opioids through the gut do to the sphincter of Oddi? There's nothing I can find on pubmed directly related to this, but anyone with cholestasis problems or recurrent "idiopathic" pancreatitis wants to dump gluten big time. As if there weren't enough reasons to do this already.
So is anyone who is missing their gall bladder any worse off than someone eating to the food pyramid? Probably not. But who would want to be as dyspepsic as a food pyramid eater anyway???????? I guess the answer is dump the gluten, start with medium fat carried in real Food, dump the gluten, work up to higher fat loads, dump the gluten and try for 70% fat calories if any Olestra like effect allows, dumping the gluten. Whatever the outcome, sticking to Food and dumping gluten is the best you can do. Did I mention gluten?
Peter
PS at my time of peak gluten eating I was ultra sound scanned for gall stones. Negative, but that's just how it felt. Reading the celiac.com comments, it turns out you get that particular ache from gluten even after your gall bladder is removed! Maybe it's spasm in the sphincter of Oddi!
PPS When spell checking "Oddi" in google I found a host of support sites for people with dysfunction of this particular organ. Looks like it is coeliac disease rearing its head again.
And again, note the stupidity of ONLY biopsy sampling people who are anti endomysial antibody positive. Under diagnosis rules. As does 1mg per day of gluten induced, sero negative coeliac disease. Causing gall bladder disease. Or pancreatitis. You do not want pancreatitis. Honestly.
But there is a separate problem anyway. If you have coeliac disease you don't seem to produce cholecystokinin (CCK) when fat hits your small intestine. So under these circumstances, you may as well not have a gall bladder anyway!
There is obviously a trade off between the severity of the coeliac disease and the degree of cholestasis. The link above mentions active disease... I get the impression that villous atrophy is needed to get the blunted CCK response.
But then it's worth remembering that 1mg, that's one milligram, no typo, of gluten per day will sustain villous atrophy in unlucky individuals. They will be clinically and serologically normal under these conditions. I bet they don't make a lot of CCK though! Or get picked up by the average gastroenterologist.
So is subclinical coeliac disease any worse than having no gall bladder? Many many many people have sub clinical coeliac disease. Perhaps this is the wrong question. Maybe it would be better to ask whether THE reason you have had your gall bladder removed is that sub clinical coeliac disease was the underlying cause of your gall stone anyway. No CCK means no gall bladder contraction, which means no bile acid deposition, which means cholestasis, which means gall stones. Also means blunted fat absorption. Which means no CCK release... It's a chicken and egg situation.
Apart from coeliac disease and CCK, the other aspect which fascinates me is the effect of opioids on the sphincter of Oddi, at the end of the bile duct (includes the pancreatic duct in some individuals). Opioids spasm this sphincter. I know, I precipitated pancreatitis in a dog with a (big) dose of morphine once. It recovered.
So what does a continuous flow of gluten derived opioids through the gut do to the sphincter of Oddi? There's nothing I can find on pubmed directly related to this, but anyone with cholestasis problems or recurrent "idiopathic" pancreatitis wants to dump gluten big time. As if there weren't enough reasons to do this already.
So is anyone who is missing their gall bladder any worse off than someone eating to the food pyramid? Probably not. But who would want to be as dyspepsic as a food pyramid eater anyway???????? I guess the answer is dump the gluten, start with medium fat carried in real Food, dump the gluten, work up to higher fat loads, dump the gluten and try for 70% fat calories if any Olestra like effect allows, dumping the gluten. Whatever the outcome, sticking to Food and dumping gluten is the best you can do. Did I mention gluten?
Peter
PS at my time of peak gluten eating I was ultra sound scanned for gall stones. Negative, but that's just how it felt. Reading the celiac.com comments, it turns out you get that particular ache from gluten even after your gall bladder is removed! Maybe it's spasm in the sphincter of Oddi!
PPS When spell checking "Oddi" in google I found a host of support sites for people with dysfunction of this particular organ. Looks like it is coeliac disease rearing its head again.
And again, note the stupidity of ONLY biopsy sampling people who are anti endomysial antibody positive. Under diagnosis rules. As does 1mg per day of gluten induced, sero negative coeliac disease. Causing gall bladder disease. Or pancreatitis. You do not want pancreatitis. Honestly.
Wednesday, June 11, 2008
Breast cancer BRCA1 and metabolic syndrome
There is a breast cancer gene, the BRCA1 gene. It controls certain aspects of metabolism, it's not just some random gene=cancer mystery mechanism. It's to do with energy metabolism. Just look at what delays the onset of breast cancer in BRCA1 genetically prone women:
"Interestingly, physical exercise and lack of obesity in adolescence have been associated with significantly delayed breast cancer onset for Ashkenazi Jewish women carrying BRCA1 gene mutations"
Now look at the potential therapies being considered:
"Further clinical work may explore a chemopreventative role of "low-energy-mimickers" deactivating the ACCA-driven "lipogenic phenotype" in women with inherited mutations in BRCA1. This goal might be obtained with current therapeutic approaches useful in treating the metabolic syndrome and associated disorders in humans (e.g., type 2 diabetes and obesity), including metformin, thiazolidinediones (TZDs), calorie deprivation, and exercise"
What is the glaring omission, the raging silence????
What is most effective management of metabolic syndrome, diabetes, hypertension, central obestity, dyslipidaemia, hyperglycaemia? Just pretend breast cancer is really diabetes. Never mind metformin (good) or TZDs (bad). Do I hear carbohydrate restriction anywhere?
No I don't.
I should.
Peter (grinding teeth)
PS Never mind <10% of calories from fat and all of those fat calories to be from fish oil. What would that do for diabetes? (not a dig at you Gyan, the low fat mantra is ubiquitous and wrong).
"Interestingly, physical exercise and lack of obesity in adolescence have been associated with significantly delayed breast cancer onset for Ashkenazi Jewish women carrying BRCA1 gene mutations"
Now look at the potential therapies being considered:
"Further clinical work may explore a chemopreventative role of "low-energy-mimickers" deactivating the ACCA-driven "lipogenic phenotype" in women with inherited mutations in BRCA1. This goal might be obtained with current therapeutic approaches useful in treating the metabolic syndrome and associated disorders in humans (e.g., type 2 diabetes and obesity), including metformin, thiazolidinediones (TZDs), calorie deprivation, and exercise"
What is the glaring omission, the raging silence????
What is most effective management of metabolic syndrome, diabetes, hypertension, central obestity, dyslipidaemia, hyperglycaemia? Just pretend breast cancer is really diabetes. Never mind metformin (good) or TZDs (bad). Do I hear carbohydrate restriction anywhere?
No I don't.
I should.
Peter (grinding teeth)
PS Never mind <10% of calories from fat and all of those fat calories to be from fish oil. What would that do for diabetes? (not a dig at you Gyan, the low fat mantra is ubiquitous and wrong).
Fruit and vegetables, WHEL study and McDougall
This was mentioned in the comments section of another thread. Needs its own post!
Because Stan (Heretic) visits some pretty weird places on the net, he led me astray to this bizarre commentary from some vegan low fat nut on the WHEL study. McDougall is a Dr no less. Here are some of the things he has to say:
"Breast cancer is a fatal disease and women will do almost anything to live. They will endure poisoning by toxic chemotherapy, burning with radiation, and mutilation from breast-amputating mastectomy; in the hopes of living a few more days. Obviously, if asked to do so, and given proper support from their doctors and dietitians, they would do something as simple, safe, costeffective, and enjoyable as eating oatmeal and bean burritos while avoiding beefsteaks and cheese omelets"
This initial quote from McDougall sums up what I imagine is the mental outlook of the WHEL study intervention group nicely. Women in the aftermath of breast cancer surgery DO want to live. As the dietary intervention tested in the WHEL study failed utterly to make an iota of difference to breast cancer recurrence, what is the explanation for its failure? This is how McDougall sees it:
"Data collected by asking the study participants about what they ate suggested they were eating more fruits and vegetables and less fat after being given instructions dictated by the study guidelines. But people don’t always tell the truth—they often want to please the investigators, so they tell them what they think they want to hear, which in this case was clearly inaccurate"
I'd summarise this as "the patients lied and the patients cheated". Now just try and reconcile statement one with statement two. Women will do anything to survive, statement one. Women will cheat and lie in a study which is trying to save their lives with vegetables, statement two. McDougall's answer as to what actually happened?
Statement one is correct, they cheated and lied. How can he tell?
Easy, next quote:
"Proof that the data collected from asking the women what they ate was inaccurate is shown in table 2. The women eating “a dietary pattern very high in vegetables, fruit, and fiber and low in fat” were reported to have decreased their daily calorie intake by an average of 181 calories (1719 initially, and 1538 six years later), yet they gained weight"
I hate to mention insulin, but ALL fruit and vegetables raise insulin levels. No one looses weight while insulin levels are high. Fruit and vegetables raise insulin. The only way that you can loose weight on a carbohydrate based diet is by caloric restriction to the extent that insulin levels fall between meals. The WHEL study was not a weight loss project, it was a "fruit and vegetables to save your life" project. Lack of weight loss can be taken as the removal of a variable extraneous to the study. It's a marked plus point about this particular study.
The increased weight in the intervention group, to my mind, is the clincher that the patients DID comply. They ate fruit and veggies, raised their insulin and kept any fat they stored post prandially.
I'd just like to point out that anyone on a vegan low fat diet who IS loosing weight is sourcing their calories from the ANIMAL fat on their own butt (this was a USA study, pardon the phraseology). Any health benefits claimed for veganism WITH weight loss has to accept this undeniable fact. Humans carry animal fat on their butt. Wasting muscles will provide animal protein.
I do have to thank Dr McDougall for one pointer.
Long term readers will know that I tend to believe people unless it's patently obvious that they're lying. The WHEL intervention group FAILED to maintain their fat intake reduction, and reported this truthfully. It was always below the non intervention group's fat intake, but it drifted up to 28.9% of 1538kcal, ie about 40g/d. The non intervention group ended up on 32.4% of 1159kcal (50g/d) of fat.
Why is this good? I was worried, at the back of my mind, that there had to be a reason why the death rate was identical in both groups. Given the background of the SAD, any increase of carbohydrate on top of the saturation levels of PUFA and sugar likely to be eaten routinely should have increased the death rate. The answer seems to be that the fat intake drop never really happened, so carbs never really increased and so luckily no one extra died in the intervention group.
This lack of compliance in dietary fat reduction occurred because the elevated insulin was locking energy in to adipose tissue and so energy had be sourced from the diet. That's called hunger. The effect on weight gain was small, in proportion to the small decrease in dietary fat.
The kindest thing I can say about McDougall is that he is a ranting extremist. He is stuck in his vegan rut and doesn't seem to understand how metabolism works.
The weird thing is that I believe he gets results! How come?
A real low fat diet will dump almost all PUFA. A real Food diet will eliminate all sugar. A hypocaloric weight reduction diet will both reduce insulin levels (a growth promoter for breast cancer) and switch metabolism to animal sourced saturated fat, the best source of calories available. Of course ketosis is out of the question, low fat veganism is a very limited approach.
Does McDougall know what he's doing, to get whatever results he does get?
No way.
Peter
Because Stan (Heretic) visits some pretty weird places on the net, he led me astray to this bizarre commentary from some vegan low fat nut on the WHEL study. McDougall is a Dr no less. Here are some of the things he has to say:
"Breast cancer is a fatal disease and women will do almost anything to live. They will endure poisoning by toxic chemotherapy, burning with radiation, and mutilation from breast-amputating mastectomy; in the hopes of living a few more days. Obviously, if asked to do so, and given proper support from their doctors and dietitians, they would do something as simple, safe, costeffective, and enjoyable as eating oatmeal and bean burritos while avoiding beefsteaks and cheese omelets"
This initial quote from McDougall sums up what I imagine is the mental outlook of the WHEL study intervention group nicely. Women in the aftermath of breast cancer surgery DO want to live. As the dietary intervention tested in the WHEL study failed utterly to make an iota of difference to breast cancer recurrence, what is the explanation for its failure? This is how McDougall sees it:
"Data collected by asking the study participants about what they ate suggested they were eating more fruits and vegetables and less fat after being given instructions dictated by the study guidelines. But people don’t always tell the truth—they often want to please the investigators, so they tell them what they think they want to hear, which in this case was clearly inaccurate"
I'd summarise this as "the patients lied and the patients cheated". Now just try and reconcile statement one with statement two. Women will do anything to survive, statement one. Women will cheat and lie in a study which is trying to save their lives with vegetables, statement two. McDougall's answer as to what actually happened?
Statement one is correct, they cheated and lied. How can he tell?
Easy, next quote:
"Proof that the data collected from asking the women what they ate was inaccurate is shown in table 2. The women eating “a dietary pattern very high in vegetables, fruit, and fiber and low in fat” were reported to have decreased their daily calorie intake by an average of 181 calories (1719 initially, and 1538 six years later), yet they gained weight"
I hate to mention insulin, but ALL fruit and vegetables raise insulin levels. No one looses weight while insulin levels are high. Fruit and vegetables raise insulin. The only way that you can loose weight on a carbohydrate based diet is by caloric restriction to the extent that insulin levels fall between meals. The WHEL study was not a weight loss project, it was a "fruit and vegetables to save your life" project. Lack of weight loss can be taken as the removal of a variable extraneous to the study. It's a marked plus point about this particular study.
The increased weight in the intervention group, to my mind, is the clincher that the patients DID comply. They ate fruit and veggies, raised their insulin and kept any fat they stored post prandially.
I'd just like to point out that anyone on a vegan low fat diet who IS loosing weight is sourcing their calories from the ANIMAL fat on their own butt (this was a USA study, pardon the phraseology). Any health benefits claimed for veganism WITH weight loss has to accept this undeniable fact. Humans carry animal fat on their butt. Wasting muscles will provide animal protein.
I do have to thank Dr McDougall for one pointer.
Long term readers will know that I tend to believe people unless it's patently obvious that they're lying. The WHEL intervention group FAILED to maintain their fat intake reduction, and reported this truthfully. It was always below the non intervention group's fat intake, but it drifted up to 28.9% of 1538kcal, ie about 40g/d. The non intervention group ended up on 32.4% of 1159kcal (50g/d) of fat.
Why is this good? I was worried, at the back of my mind, that there had to be a reason why the death rate was identical in both groups. Given the background of the SAD, any increase of carbohydrate on top of the saturation levels of PUFA and sugar likely to be eaten routinely should have increased the death rate. The answer seems to be that the fat intake drop never really happened, so carbs never really increased and so luckily no one extra died in the intervention group.
This lack of compliance in dietary fat reduction occurred because the elevated insulin was locking energy in to adipose tissue and so energy had be sourced from the diet. That's called hunger. The effect on weight gain was small, in proportion to the small decrease in dietary fat.
The kindest thing I can say about McDougall is that he is a ranting extremist. He is stuck in his vegan rut and doesn't seem to understand how metabolism works.
The weird thing is that I believe he gets results! How come?
A real low fat diet will dump almost all PUFA. A real Food diet will eliminate all sugar. A hypocaloric weight reduction diet will both reduce insulin levels (a growth promoter for breast cancer) and switch metabolism to animal sourced saturated fat, the best source of calories available. Of course ketosis is out of the question, low fat veganism is a very limited approach.
Does McDougall know what he's doing, to get whatever results he does get?
No way.
Peter
Junk Food binge
My greenhouse is full of junk food, sugar ladened and delicious. Pretty hot on fructose too. These are gustatory recreation, not food. Going to live dangerously for a few weeks!
The weeds below are growing in an untended border outside my son's nursery. The unripe fruits are as big as they are going to get, though they too will go red and delicous in a week or so. They appear to be food, certainly better than starvation if hunting is bad. How long would it take to gather enough to keep yourself out of ketosis for a day?
I don't think many hunter gatherers had greenhouses or ate strawberries!
Peter
The weeds below are growing in an untended border outside my son's nursery. The unripe fruits are as big as they are going to get, though they too will go red and delicous in a week or so. They appear to be food, certainly better than starvation if hunting is bad. How long would it take to gather enough to keep yourself out of ketosis for a day?
I don't think many hunter gatherers had greenhouses or ate strawberries!
Peter
Monday, June 09, 2008
Gluten Dr Briffa link
Not sure if this sort of thing has ever happened in the UK before, perhaps the parents and child discussed by Dr Briffa live in Nottingham. The case is highly complex, but here's the summary:
Wheat=diarrhoea
No wheat=no diarrhoea
Now, to assemble this Apollo 13 rocket, first remove all contents from packaging and make sure all pieces are present, locate an appropriately sized launch pad, take the first nut and an appropriately sized spanner (not supplied)...
The question is whether the dietitian and gastroenterologist can hide behind a negative coeliac antibody test (in a wheat avoiding, currently digestively normal coeliac) to justify their execrable behaviour.
I'm not much of a clinician nowadays, I'm pretty well ruined as far as belief structure in the marvels of the latest anti inflammatory drug or chemo protocol goes, but the one thing that I do still try very hard to do is to listen to my patient's owners. In their own way, from articulate to incoherent, these people are trying to tell you what the problem is. Relying on a set of bloods (normal) and an abdominal ultrasound (inconclusive) will miss you the opportunity to sort out an awful lot of problems.
Luckily the child's problems were limited to the superficial and highly responsive problem of diarrhoea in response to gluten. What if the presenting symptom had been gluten ataxia, hypothyroidism or systemic lupus. Scary.
Anyway, skip's arrived, time to shift some rubble!
Peter
Wheat=diarrhoea
No wheat=no diarrhoea
Now, to assemble this Apollo 13 rocket, first remove all contents from packaging and make sure all pieces are present, locate an appropriately sized launch pad, take the first nut and an appropriately sized spanner (not supplied)...
The question is whether the dietitian and gastroenterologist can hide behind a negative coeliac antibody test (in a wheat avoiding, currently digestively normal coeliac) to justify their execrable behaviour.
I'm not much of a clinician nowadays, I'm pretty well ruined as far as belief structure in the marvels of the latest anti inflammatory drug or chemo protocol goes, but the one thing that I do still try very hard to do is to listen to my patient's owners. In their own way, from articulate to incoherent, these people are trying to tell you what the problem is. Relying on a set of bloods (normal) and an abdominal ultrasound (inconclusive) will miss you the opportunity to sort out an awful lot of problems.
Luckily the child's problems were limited to the superficial and highly responsive problem of diarrhoea in response to gluten. What if the presenting symptom had been gluten ataxia, hypothyroidism or systemic lupus. Scary.
Anyway, skip's arrived, time to shift some rubble!
Peter
Wednesday, June 04, 2008
IHD and ghee
Just while ghee is in focus, there's this abstract from Jaipur. There's a typo three lines from the end where the 1 is missing from the "greater than 1 kg". I've re checked the "greater than" sign in IBIDS and it is correct, the one is still missing.
So the ghee eaters were fatter, ate more calories, more sat fat and more monounsaturated fat. Same total PUFA as the low ghee eaters. Oh, they had less coronary heart disease too. The only serious potential confounder is that the ghee eaters were younger. With multivariate analysis to account for this, p was still less than 0.001. The odds ratio was 0.23. I think this means that they were less than a quarter as likely to have a heart attack. Eat your heart out statinators! Oh!!! That pun was NOT intentional. If only ghee were patentable!
Of course the dietitians probably forgot to ask about sugar consumption. If they did check, they're not saying. Certainly not in the abstract. This gets a bit tedious sometimes!
Fatty acid intake summary from the abstract:
"This group [ghee eaters] consumed significantly more calories, saturated and mono-unsaturated fats while the consumption of polyunsaturated fats was similar in the two groups"
"Fatty acid intake analysis showed that group 1 males consumed more mono-unsaturated (n-9) fatty acids than group 2. Intake of polyunsaturated n-3 and n-6 fatty acids was similar"
I take it from the second quote that the cardiologists are falling back on monounsaturates to save the lipid hypothesis. In their repetition, they forgot to repeat the higher saturated fat intake. Some people are just so forgetful!
But it looks to me to be more likely that you can eat extra calories and be fatter while being less likely to have heart disease, provided your excess calories come from non PUFA fat sources. The sugar intake? If anyone has the full text, and if it was even remotely enquired about, I'll bet it was lower in the healthier, heavier ghee eaters.
Peter
So the ghee eaters were fatter, ate more calories, more sat fat and more monounsaturated fat. Same total PUFA as the low ghee eaters. Oh, they had less coronary heart disease too. The only serious potential confounder is that the ghee eaters were younger. With multivariate analysis to account for this, p was still less than 0.001. The odds ratio was 0.23. I think this means that they were less than a quarter as likely to have a heart attack. Eat your heart out statinators! Oh!!! That pun was NOT intentional. If only ghee were patentable!
Of course the dietitians probably forgot to ask about sugar consumption. If they did check, they're not saying. Certainly not in the abstract. This gets a bit tedious sometimes!
Fatty acid intake summary from the abstract:
"This group [ghee eaters] consumed significantly more calories, saturated and mono-unsaturated fats while the consumption of polyunsaturated fats was similar in the two groups"
"Fatty acid intake analysis showed that group 1 males consumed more mono-unsaturated (n-9) fatty acids than group 2. Intake of polyunsaturated n-3 and n-6 fatty acids was similar"
I take it from the second quote that the cardiologists are falling back on monounsaturates to save the lipid hypothesis. In their repetition, they forgot to repeat the higher saturated fat intake. Some people are just so forgetful!
But it looks to me to be more likely that you can eat extra calories and be fatter while being less likely to have heart disease, provided your excess calories come from non PUFA fat sources. The sugar intake? If anyone has the full text, and if it was even remotely enquired about, I'll bet it was lower in the healthier, heavier ghee eaters.
Peter
Tuesday, June 03, 2008
EFA deficiencies?
Arachidonic acid is essential. Apart from the fact that your brain is largely made out of it (I exaggerate here slightly) and it has a roll as a precursor to a myriad signaling molecules, there is a definite deficiency syndrome in the skin. The deficiency syndrome is a bit dubious in humans, especially adults, but pretty clear cut in lab animals, especially during growth. Chris Masterjohn covers this pretty thoroughly and it seems quite plausible.
In most adult humans there is enough linoleic acid stored in fatty tissue to act as a reservoir for the synthesis of arachidonic acid for a long time. Even after years on a PUFA free diet it is unlikely you could precipitate an arachidonic acid deficiency. Bear in mind that a completely PUFA free diet must be synthetic or largely so. No food, just a fat free protein source, sucrose, glucose and some multivits should cover it! Otherwise enough arachidonic acid would sneak in from meat and eggs to supply an adult's needs. Or maybe some linoleic acid from lettuce!
I suppose the flip side of this is that if you drop your PUFA intake deliberately it may well be quite a long time before you lower your blood linoleate levels. Obviously this depends on how much vegetable oil you've squirreled away in your fatty tissue, how much fat you (and your gut microbiota) actually own and if your hormone sensitive lipase ever actually gets working... And of course how low you think you need to get your linoleate level before a deficiency syndrome appears. No healthy adult has managed so far in the literature.
So arachidonic acid deficiency in an adult human seems to be very, very unlikely. Especially if they occasionally eat items of food.
What about DHA? Amongst the many things which control elongation and desaturation of fatty acids I posted about recently, the parent molecules, linoleic acid and alpha linolenic acids, are effective depressors of the system. That is, if you eat a diet absolutely loaded with linoleic acid there is a down regulation of its conversion to arachidonic acid. That's logical. No one would want an unlimited supply of arachidonic acid. It does a lot of things to you, all of which would want to be done under careful control. It doesn't seem to be possible to down regulate to the point of arachidonic acid deficiency though, some will get through even under very high linoleate intake. Not so DHA.
Exactly the same elongase desaturase system used to manufacture arachidonic acid converts alpha linolenic acid to EPA, heading for DHA. Down regulating the system with linoleic acid, as above, will down regulate DHA production too.
Anyone on a "healthy" oils diet may well need to be getting preformed DHA. As DHA is only available from animal (or algal) sources, the problem person here looks to be the high PUFA eating vegan. That's fair enough, that particular diet choice comes with its own special consequences!
The quote below, which comes from this paper, seems to sum up the current state of unknowledge as to whether this problem is real:
"individuals who adhere to vegetarian and vegan diets do synthesize small amounts of DHA, and evidence to indicate deficits in brain development among vegetarians has not been published"
Of course there is plenty of evidence that being on total intravenous nutrition (TPN), based on linoleic acid as your sole source of lipid, means that you will require more than an absolute minimum of alpha linolenic acid before you actually get any DHA produced at all.
Under these conditions there could easily be an absolute DHA deficiency. There often is.
I think a strong admonition to avoid abdominal gunshot wounds, or anything else requiring years on intravenous feeding, would (if heeded) improve your DHA status. If you must do the iv feeding thing, adding some ALA to the lipid emulsion might be a good idea. Getting pregnant under these conditions might not be the best idea either, even if you felt that way inclined and were adult...
If you are a pregnant mother who avoids fish because of the mercury concern, avoids liver due to the vitamin A concern, avoids animal fats due to the cholesterol concern then your child's eyes and brain might be marginal on the DHA front. Pregnancy and growth seems to be when the body needs bulk DHA. Again, working through this review will fill in the background. Being DHA deficient in utero and during early post natal development seems to be bad news, not fully correctable by later DHA supplementation.
Of course, once you have started eating food as opposed to junk, dumped your heart healthy oils and are eating a little liver occasionally, the chance of developing any sort of PUFA deficiency seems rather small. Occasional fish or a decent amount of ruminant meat would eliminate the risk.
The problem is, how many people eat food and how many live on junk? If everyone were to switch to eating food, would DHA supplements be needed? If the intake of linoleic acid is low enough no doubt even the alpha linolenic acid from green leaf vegetables might end up as DHA.
So it looks as if there are certain circumstances, especially with those junk food based vegetarian diets easily achieved today, when DHA may not be available to meet foetal and neonatal needs. Taking a little DHA supplement may well be needed at this time or, better still, eat some food. Food's a good idea.
That seems to sum up the risk of deficiency to me, as far as I can see. We need some EFAs, more during pregnancy and nursing. Arachidonic acid is not a problem, DHA looks to be the weakest link. TPN is bad news (in case you want more bad news than whatever the reason is for your being on intravenous feeding).
So should we all be taking fish oil supplements, all of the time? Do we need to do anything except to avoid frank DHA deficiency as a foetus or newborn baby?
Maybe, maybe not. That's another post.
Peter
In most adult humans there is enough linoleic acid stored in fatty tissue to act as a reservoir for the synthesis of arachidonic acid for a long time. Even after years on a PUFA free diet it is unlikely you could precipitate an arachidonic acid deficiency. Bear in mind that a completely PUFA free diet must be synthetic or largely so. No food, just a fat free protein source, sucrose, glucose and some multivits should cover it! Otherwise enough arachidonic acid would sneak in from meat and eggs to supply an adult's needs. Or maybe some linoleic acid from lettuce!
I suppose the flip side of this is that if you drop your PUFA intake deliberately it may well be quite a long time before you lower your blood linoleate levels. Obviously this depends on how much vegetable oil you've squirreled away in your fatty tissue, how much fat you (and your gut microbiota) actually own and if your hormone sensitive lipase ever actually gets working... And of course how low you think you need to get your linoleate level before a deficiency syndrome appears. No healthy adult has managed so far in the literature.
So arachidonic acid deficiency in an adult human seems to be very, very unlikely. Especially if they occasionally eat items of food.
What about DHA? Amongst the many things which control elongation and desaturation of fatty acids I posted about recently, the parent molecules, linoleic acid and alpha linolenic acids, are effective depressors of the system. That is, if you eat a diet absolutely loaded with linoleic acid there is a down regulation of its conversion to arachidonic acid. That's logical. No one would want an unlimited supply of arachidonic acid. It does a lot of things to you, all of which would want to be done under careful control. It doesn't seem to be possible to down regulate to the point of arachidonic acid deficiency though, some will get through even under very high linoleate intake. Not so DHA.
Exactly the same elongase desaturase system used to manufacture arachidonic acid converts alpha linolenic acid to EPA, heading for DHA. Down regulating the system with linoleic acid, as above, will down regulate DHA production too.
Anyone on a "healthy" oils diet may well need to be getting preformed DHA. As DHA is only available from animal (or algal) sources, the problem person here looks to be the high PUFA eating vegan. That's fair enough, that particular diet choice comes with its own special consequences!
The quote below, which comes from this paper, seems to sum up the current state of unknowledge as to whether this problem is real:
"individuals who adhere to vegetarian and vegan diets do synthesize small amounts of DHA, and evidence to indicate deficits in brain development among vegetarians has not been published"
Of course there is plenty of evidence that being on total intravenous nutrition (TPN), based on linoleic acid as your sole source of lipid, means that you will require more than an absolute minimum of alpha linolenic acid before you actually get any DHA produced at all.
Under these conditions there could easily be an absolute DHA deficiency. There often is.
I think a strong admonition to avoid abdominal gunshot wounds, or anything else requiring years on intravenous feeding, would (if heeded) improve your DHA status. If you must do the iv feeding thing, adding some ALA to the lipid emulsion might be a good idea. Getting pregnant under these conditions might not be the best idea either, even if you felt that way inclined and were adult...
If you are a pregnant mother who avoids fish because of the mercury concern, avoids liver due to the vitamin A concern, avoids animal fats due to the cholesterol concern then your child's eyes and brain might be marginal on the DHA front. Pregnancy and growth seems to be when the body needs bulk DHA. Again, working through this review will fill in the background. Being DHA deficient in utero and during early post natal development seems to be bad news, not fully correctable by later DHA supplementation.
Of course, once you have started eating food as opposed to junk, dumped your heart healthy oils and are eating a little liver occasionally, the chance of developing any sort of PUFA deficiency seems rather small. Occasional fish or a decent amount of ruminant meat would eliminate the risk.
The problem is, how many people eat food and how many live on junk? If everyone were to switch to eating food, would DHA supplements be needed? If the intake of linoleic acid is low enough no doubt even the alpha linolenic acid from green leaf vegetables might end up as DHA.
So it looks as if there are certain circumstances, especially with those junk food based vegetarian diets easily achieved today, when DHA may not be available to meet foetal and neonatal needs. Taking a little DHA supplement may well be needed at this time or, better still, eat some food. Food's a good idea.
That seems to sum up the risk of deficiency to me, as far as I can see. We need some EFAs, more during pregnancy and nursing. Arachidonic acid is not a problem, DHA looks to be the weakest link. TPN is bad news (in case you want more bad news than whatever the reason is for your being on intravenous feeding).
So should we all be taking fish oil supplements, all of the time? Do we need to do anything except to avoid frank DHA deficiency as a foetus or newborn baby?
Maybe, maybe not. That's another post.
Peter
Monday, June 02, 2008
Casein, gluten and gastric pH
In a very interesting paper from Bloggeier on rheumatoid disease and multiple food allergies (worth a post on its own) there was this snippet:
"Thus infants are prone to develop cow’s milk allergy while their gastric acidity is pH 3–4 (compared with pH 2 in adults); at pH 4 the degradation of a-lactalbumin, BSA, and bovine IgG is markedly reduced in contrast to b lactoglobulin".
Following the ref gave this abstract. Just a pity that they didn't look at casein too. It brought to mind the idea that taking gastric acidity suppressing drugs is possibly the best technique we've developed to get ourselves a food allergy, obviously excluding wheat consumption. Of course the combination is probably a cracker.
Now, what does the cow's milk get poured over when weaning a child, who's gastric pH is 3-4?
Well, in this house the wheat is notably absent! Actually so is the cow's milk pretty well and weaning, what there is of it, seems to be going fine on beef and pork purees with some root veggies (plus a little vitamin C to be on the safe side) thrown in.
Peter
"Thus infants are prone to develop cow’s milk allergy while their gastric acidity is pH 3–4 (compared with pH 2 in adults); at pH 4 the degradation of a-lactalbumin, BSA, and bovine IgG is markedly reduced in contrast to b lactoglobulin".
Following the ref gave this abstract. Just a pity that they didn't look at casein too. It brought to mind the idea that taking gastric acidity suppressing drugs is possibly the best technique we've developed to get ourselves a food allergy, obviously excluding wheat consumption. Of course the combination is probably a cracker.
Now, what does the cow's milk get poured over when weaning a child, who's gastric pH is 3-4?
Well, in this house the wheat is notably absent! Actually so is the cow's milk pretty well and weaning, what there is of it, seems to be going fine on beef and pork purees with some root veggies (plus a little vitamin C to be on the safe side) thrown in.
Peter