Did you hear? The latest version of the U.S. Dietary Guidelines, released earlier this year, has removed the recommended limit on cholesterol in the diet. Cholesterol is no longer a nutrient of concern. While most of us in the nutrition world have known for a long time that cholesterol in the diet does not affect risk for heart disease, we also know that it sometimes takes a while for policy to catch up with science.

So if cholesterol in food doesn’t cause high cholesterol, what does? While some might blame saturated fat and fructose (the latest fad), I’m going to dive in and explain to you a more in-depth, big picture view of cholesterol labs and your health.

The most important thing to know is that is that cholesterol isn’t this bad-for-you-you substance that it’s made out to be. Most people think, the lower your cholesterol, the better. If you could just get it down to zero you’d be in great shape! However, cholesterol is absolutely vital to the proper function of the human body. Your body makes cholesterol, regardless of your dietary intake, for good reason. If you had no cholesterol in your body, you would be dead! It plays an important role in digestion, Vitamin D status, hormone production and balance, and many other human body processes.

You also need to know that high cholesterol isn’t a diagnosis. It’s a symptom. Just because you have high cholesterol, doesn’t mean anything bad will happen! The words ‘high cholesterol’ inspire a feeling of dread as something akin to a death sentence. The mainstream narrative on cholesterol is that arteries are like pipes and cholesterol is like gunk. The pipes get clogged up with cholesterol, and then you have a heart attack. This is a powerful image, but it’s not accurate at all. First of all, at least half of all people who suffer a heart attack have normal cholesterol levels (1, 2). Second of all, after age 65, high cholesterol is associated with health and longevity (3). Third, plaques that “clog” arteries are actually made up of calcium and oxidized LDL particles (think rancid – more on that later), and they form under the artery wall (4). So get that vision of “clogged arteries” out of your head, and if you are a health professional, quit using those test tubes full of fat to scare people at health fairs!

fa 2

Instead of looking at your high cholesterol labs with a sense of doom, let’s look at how cholesterol levels in the blood rise and when it becomes a problem.

One of the basic functions of cholesterol is to stabilize the mitochondria (the energy powerhouse of the cell), preventing their destruction by stress. Anytime you’re under a stressful situation, cholesterol rises as a protective response to the stressor. Yes, you read that right: cholesterol is a protective substance! Stress also lowers intracellular magnesium, which also causes cholesterol production to increase, since magnesium regulates the enzyme that makes cholesterol (5). Stress can be anything from psychological stress like that from jobs, family, money, etc., to physiological stress like skipping meals, not getting enough sleep, and eating poorly.

In youth and those with high metabolisms (good thyroid output AND uptake of thyroid hormone by cells), cholesterol is converted inside cells into pregnenolone, DHEA, testosterone, progesterone, and other important protective hormones. You cannot make these hormones without cholesterol!

Cells need two things to make the conversion: Vitamin A in its active form and thyroid hormone. As humans get older, their ability to convert beta carotene into active Vitamin A decreases, most Americans don’t eat much active Vitamin A in their diet, and metabolism decreases. In fact, up until about 40 years ago, high cholesterol was diagnostic of hypothyroidism, and routinely treated with supplemental thyroid hormones.

Protect

So high cholesterol is a problem because you’re not making youthful, protective hormones. But it’s also a problem because cholesterol oxidizes if it hangs around in the blood stream long enough, losing its protective functions. The cholesterol — or more accurately, the lipoproteins like LDL that are carrying cholesterol — get damaged by oxidation, and then the immune system’s response to that oxidative process is what causes the buildup of plaque and then ultimately the rupture of plaque and heart attack.

So the real question everyone should be asking when it comes to atherosclerosis and heart disease is: “what causes LDL to oxidize?”

There are three main ways oxidized cholesterol builds up in your bloodstream (6):

  • eating commercially fried foods, such as fried chicken and French fries
  • eating excess polyunsaturated fatty acids, which are found in vegetable oils, packaged food and restaurant food
  • cigarette smoking

Your doctor, and most dietitians for that matter, will tell you that polyunsaturated fats from refined vegetable oils, margarine, nuts, seeds, and other plant foods lower your cholesterol. And they’re right! But given what you just learned about cholesterol, do you really think lowering your body’s protective production of cholesterol is a good idea?! Within this framework, the effect of polyunsaturated fats is the same as the effect from statins, which come along with nasty side effects. I hope after reading this, you’ll start to understand physiologically why statins have the side effects they do, and why they’re not very helpful for most people (7).

A note about Paleo diets and fructose. Paleo bloggers and gurus have been pretty hard on fructose recently, blaming carbs and sugar for raising cholesterol. “Quit sugar and watch your cholesterol plummet!” Yup, also watch your libido and energy tank from lack of fuel for the liver and brain. Don’t fall for the low-carb trap when trying to lower your cholesterol. Fructose has pretty much been absolved of any wrongdoing in my book (8, 9).

If you have high cholesterol and your doctor is concerned, here is what I would advise:

  • Ask your doctor for a cholesterol particle size test (LDL-P). Small LDL particles are more likely to oxidize and form plaques under the artery walls (10).
  • Know your calcium status. One of my favorite things about Mineral Analysis, is the crucial information on tissue calcium it gives me. Coronary calcium scans will also give you good information about your tissue calcium buildup (4).
  • Have your thyroid status checked. This involves more than a TSH test! Blood lab work, including TSH, will tell you if your thyroid gland is producing enough thyroid hormone, but tells you nothing about your cells’ ability to use it. Broda Barnes was an American physician who was able to reduce heart disease incidence in his almost 2,000 patients by 90 percent. He used basal body temperature first thing in the morning as an indicator for thyroid uptake. Anything less than 97.8 degrees was considered functionally hypothyroid (11).

If you want to lower your cholesterol in a physiologically-sound way, that ensures proper body function for years to come:

  • Make sure your diet has plenty of sources of active Vitamin A. Eggs, liver, and grass-fed dairy are examples. Hmmm, imagine that….all potent sources of cholesterol! It’s like nature has a plan or something…
  • Make sure your diet has plenty of Vitamin K2, active Vitamin K. K2 is a calcium director and can remove calcium buildup from the arteries (12). It’s found in, again, eggs, liver, and grass-fed dairy. This is sounding more and more like a French diet. It’s not genes or the wine protecting them from heart disease (13).
  • Eat plenty of potassium-rich foods, like fruits and vegetables (14). You are likely not eating enough.
  • Eat more magnesium and supplement if needed. Cooked dark leafy greens and organic dark chocolate are good sources. Magnesium is also absorbed topically through the skin.
  • Destress!
  • Focus on all the things that improve thyroid uptake by cells: get enough calories, protein, carbohydrates, potassium and other minerals, good estrogen metabolism, and good liver function – AKA all the things I work on with clients!
  1. https://www.uclahealth.org/most-heart-attack-patients-cholesterol-levels-did-not-indicate-cardiac-risk
  2. https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/23/health/cholesterol-versus-saturated-fat-wellness/index.html
  3. https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2016/06/160627095006.htm
  4. http://jeffreydachmd.com/how-to-reverse-heart-disease-with-the-coronary-calcium-score/
  5. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16272615
  6. https://universityhealthnews.com/daily/heart-health/oxidized-cholesterol-vegetable-oils-identified-as-the-main-cause-of-heart-disease/
  7. http://www.thennt.com/nnt/statins-for-heart-disease-prevention-without-prior-heart-disease/
  8. http://www.alanaragonblog.com/2010/01/29/the-bitter-truth-about-fructose-alarmism/
  9. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20047139
  10. https://labtestsonline.org/understanding/analytes/lipoprotein-subfractions/tab/test/
  11. https://www.amazon.com/Hypothyroidism-Unsuspected-Illness-Broda-Barnes/dp/069001029X/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1469410638&sr=8-3-fkmr1&keywords=hypothyroid+broda
  12. http://www.todaysdietitian.com/newarchives/060113p54.shtml
  13. http://www.drdeborahmd.com/healing-multiplied-k2-super-supplement
  14. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/2632721

 

 

  • Do you struggle with weight gain or loss?
  • Do you have trouble falling asleep or feel tired no matter how much sleep you get?
  • Are you a woman of childbearing age or a woman going through hormonal shifts?
  • Do you have a miserable menstrual cycle?
  • Do you have constant GI issues like bloating, constipation, stomach aches, or urgency?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, I welcome you to join me for an evening of education.

I’m teaching a workshop on the endocrine system. I’ll touch on how the adrenals and thyroid interact and affect body function, and also the importance of estrogen/progesterone balance. You’ll leave with new ideas on what makes a food healthy, and learn why some mainstream views on health and nutrition may be misguided.The Endocrine System

I’m planning on covering:

  1. Why does everyone think they have “Adrenal Fatigue”?
  2. Why thyroid utilization matters more than thyroid production (AKA why your doctor tells you “Your thyroid is fine.”)
  3. What is metabolic rate and why it’s the key to maintaining proper function and good health.
  4. Digestion and the menstrual cycle as key indicators of body dysfunction.
  5. What the heck do I eat? Plant-based, vegan, Paleo, Primal, WAPF, USDA Dietary Guidelines – why can’t anyone agree on what to eat?!
  6. Other Big Picture practices that are just as important as diet.
  7. Labs schmabs. How to really measure health.

Join me and Maggie Dubois from Being on Purpose – a Wellness Lifestyle for an evening workshop focused on nutrition and natural solutions for endocrine health.

Thursday March 31st, 7-9pm

Robinwood Church

12030 Warrenfeltz Lane, Hagerstown, MD 21742

Bring a friend and bring questions! The cost is $5. You can RSVP on Facebook here, or email Nicole at WholeHealthRD dot com.

It’s that time of year: everyone is making New Year’s Resolutions. And yet again, weight loss is the leading resolution for 2016.

There is a growing number of health experts who have seen the statistics and understand the physiology of weight loss who are saying, “quit focusing on weight and focus on health.” Unfortunately, there are too many other voices crowding out that message. We live in a society where overweight and obesity are seen as issues of willpower or character. The truth is, they are just symptoms. It’s true that being overweight or obese puts you at higher risk for disease. But weight is only one of many risk factors for disease, and it’s NOT the most important one. Thin people can also be malnourished and at risk for disease. A focus on weight obscures the other risk factors and equates thinness with health.

A focus on weight instead of nutrition will lead people to adopt diets, rather than eating nutritious foods. And we know with 100% certainty that current strategies to tackle overweight and obesity, which mainly focus on cutting calories and boosting physical activity, are FAILING to help the majority of people shed weight and maintain that weight loss.

Instead of focusing on weight loss in this new year, how about focusing on the health parameters that truly show your body is functioning properly?

  1. Normal body temperature (98.6 degrees) with warm hands and feet.
  2. Healthy, moist, fast-growing hair, skin, and nails.
  3. At least one bowel movement a day and little to no gas, bloating, or heartburn.
  4. The ability to sleep 8 consecutive hours with no urination or wake-ups (minus children, of course).
  5. Normal menstrual cycles with little to no PMS, bloating, or cramps; and a healthy libido in both men and women.
  6. Steady mood.
  7. Better than average resistance to colds, flu, and other infections.

There are dozens more, but these are the basic competencies of good physical function that most deserve your attention. These health parameters will tell you more about your health than your weight or any lab test. They all have to do with blood sugar regulation and metabolism. Master these and a healthy weight will likely follow.

If you are failing in one or many of these areas, the problems you are experiencing probably are, at least in part, due to your diet and lifestyle practices. Focusing on weight loss WILL NOT HELP, and can make many of these problems worse.

Take your attention away from the small details of nutrition (organic! superfoods! gluten! antioxidants! fat! fiber! carbs!). I work with clients on the “big picture practices” that help the body achieve good function: eating easy-to-digest, balanced, mineral-dense meals and snacks regularly throughout the day. If you’re sick of feeling unhealthy, and want a better solution than “eat less and move more,” I’d love to work with you!

Happy New Year!

Confession: I used to be a water-holic. I used to carry around a water bottle with me at all times to remind myself to be sipping throughout the day. I had a giant water bottle on my desk and my goal was always to drink two by the end of the work day. I collected expensive, patterned stainless steel water bottles. I only ever drank water (or alcohol…hey, I was in my 20s!).

I’m not alone. Americans are water guzzlers, taking the “8-glasses-a-day” (or more!) mantra to heart, even though there is ZERO evidence for that often-repeated recommendation.

“Stay hydrated” and “drink more water” seem to be the cure for any health issue. Health gurus promise weight loss, clear soft skin, shiny hair, reduced appetite, and more energy. <-Yes, much of this can happen when we are properly hydrated, but drinking water is not how we stay hydrated!

Confusing? Hear me out.

Around 2/3 of the water in our bodies is contained inside our cells in intracellular fluid. The remaining 1/3 of the water in our bodies is outside of our cells in our extracellular fluid (e.g. blood, interstitial fluid, cerebrospinal fluids).

The intracellular fluid is high in potassium and low in sodium. The extracellular fluid is high in sodium and low in potassium. Remember it by thinking how salty tears are – extracellular fluid is salty (hence saline in IVs!). In order to maintain a strong cell membrane and a stable environment in the cell, the fluid on the inside of the cell and the outside of the cell must maintain those opposite electrolyte qualities.

The body is always striving to maintain a balanced, homeostatic state. That’s really what hydration is, your body being in a homeostatic, balanced state where stress hormones are not activated. It’s important that the extracellular fluid is neither too concentrated nor too diluted. Either way can start a chain reaction resulting in cellular death, which means less ATP (energy) produced and a slower metabolism.

Luckily our bodies have a pretty ingenious way to signal when we need more and less water.

Thirst and urine color.

Overriding your body’s signals for more fluid (thirst) or less fluid (clear urine) is a surefire way to upset that balance and to keep the composition of the extracellular fluid dramatically different from the fluid in the cell. There is a trend I’ve noticed where people are trying to “pee clear.” I’m not sure why you would want to pee clear, as that is a stress response! Urine in the toilet bowl should be the color of lemonade, darker of course in a lab sample cup.

When I started learning more about minerals and physiology (body function), I realized all that water was basically diluting my body at a cellular level. Especially since I also eat foods that are watery, like fruits and vegetables. I have a hard time holding onto sodium and potassium (thanks for the info, mineral analysis!), and was kind of washing myself out.

Now, I drink when I’m thirsty. I drink water sometimes, but I also drink beverages that have minerals, such as mineral water, coconut water, coffee, milk, and orange juice, often with a pinch of salt. This works for my body and my metabolism.

To close, here is another perspective I found interesting, from a European with U.S. citizenship:

“It is my experience traveling with university students to Europe that many young Americans routinely over-hydrate, drinking water from Nalgene bottles, buying cold beverages any opportunity they can find and then stopping by Starbucks for a specialized coffee drink. And that is all extra to the normal meal hydration.

The biggest complaint I get from my students is the lack of free public restrooms that they are used to at home in shopping centers, stores, and fast food restaurants. When you over-hydrate, you also depend on regular rest stops. I note, for instance, that my French friends are likely to order an espresso at the same coffee shop where my students are ordering a 16-20 ounce drink.

One of the reasons for the American over-hydration is the level of propaganda they get regarding the need to drink several liters of water per day just to lose weight.”

*Note: In the elderly, the balance between sodium, potassium, and fluid is much harder to maintain. Fluid intake and nutrition in general has to be closer to ideal to keep from causing dehydration. Start monitoring NOW so you know what is optimal for you later in life.

*Note 2: Are you thirsty all the time AND peeing clear? That might actually have to do with blood sugar regulation. Come see me!

*Note 3: Has drinking copious amounts of water helped your health definitively? I’d love to hear from you! Because all I’ve seen in clients and in the general public is lots of peeing and lots of stress hormones.

Sources:

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Wellness/waterlogged-america-drink/story?id=14054401
http://180degreehealth.com/your-body-is-mostly-water-not-exactly/
http://science.jrank.org/pages/1320/Cell-Death.html
https://chriskresser.com/the-water-myth/

First things first – let’s get this out of the way. I don’t have a lot of experience feeding children. I have a 2-year-old and a newborn. While the toddler seems to be in great health, she sits at the dinner table, and she eats a variety of foods, I know that at age 3, 4, and 5, things could change dramatically for us! And I know my second child could be quite different!

However, I do have a lot of experience researching feeding children. I worked for three years at a non-profit where I helped research and write reports on childhood obesity and child nutrition for the Federal Government. I had access to the sharpest, brightest minds in the child nutrition world. I’ve also learned a lot since then, through both counseling clients and families, and through reading and staying up-to-date on nutrition research. At the bottom of this post are my favorite resources on feeding your children.

In this post, I wanted to highlight a study from the 1920’s I stumbled upon recently. It attempts to answer the question, “What will babies eat if they’re given free choice?” It was a research study that would never be allowed to happen today. It’s been called “the world’s longest, most detailed, most ambitious food experiment.”

Fifteen children were observed over a period of 6 years. Every day, they were offered a selection of 34 different foods, and researchers noted what they chose to eat and how much they ate. Mealtimes were set up to prevent the staff from influencing what the babies ate.

When the children’s food choices were analyzed, they were very different from each other and from the standard diet of the time. But, when the diets were examined as a whole, they showed similar macronutrient intake (calories, proteins, carbohydrate and fats).

The children were very healthy during the study and were remarkably free of the common childhood diseases of the time. Constipation was unknown among the children in the study and any colds were mild. Five of the children had rickets at the start of the experiment, which resolved without medical treatment. One child with severe rickets actually spontaneously drank cod liver oil on his own! The children’s health was monitored by physical and biochemical examinations, and by X-rays of their bones. Apparently, the radiologist at the children’s hospital was very excited at the “beautiful calcification” of the bones on the children’s X rays.

Although some of the children were undernourished when they arrived, this evened out until there were no notably overweight or thin children. Remember: this was a result of letting the children eat according to their own fullness and satiety cues.

Check out the list of 34 whole foods they used in the study. Some might surprise you!

  1. Water
  2. Sweet milk
  3. Sour milk
  4. Sea salt
  5. Apples
  6. Bananas
  7. Orange juice
  8. Fresh pineapple
  9. Peaches
  10. Tomatoes
  11. Beets
  12. Carrots
  13. Peas
  14. Turnips
  15. Cauliflower
  16. Cabbage
  17. Spinach
  18. Potatoes
  19. Lettuce
  20. Oatmeal
  21. Wheat
  22. Corn meal
  23. Barley
  24. Ry-krisp
  25. Beef
  26. Lamb
  27. Bone marrow
  28. Bone jelly
  29. Chicken
  30. Sweetbreads
  31. Brains
  32. Liver
  33. Kidneys
  34. Fish (haddock)

 

Oatmeal, wheat, beef, bone marrow, eggs, carrots, peas, cabbage, and apples were served both raw and cooked.

I found it interesting that the children’s tastes changed unpredictably from time to time (hello picky toddlers!), and meals were often combinations of foods that were strange to us and would have been “a dietitian’s nightmare” (from the article). For example, a breakfast of a pint of orange juice and liver, and a supper of several eggs, bananas, and milk.

Another interesting result? All infants shared a low preference for all 10 vegetables, as well as for pineapple, peaches, liver, kidney, fish, and sea salt. These foods constituted less than 10% of the total calorie intake. This goes along with many feeding experts advice today to present vegetables, but to not force feed or bribe children to eat them.

In my practice (and in general day-to-day life!), I see a lot of parents worry about their child’s weight, that their kids aren’t eating vegetables, or that their children only eat a few foods. I see food restriction, and the misguided promotion of the idea that certain foods are “better” or healthier than others.

But this study, and much of research since then, proves that children can be trusted to eat what they need for good health and growth, as long as presented with a variety of whole foods. The key is to nurture and foster that intuition as much and as long as possible, to create adults with a healthy relationship with food and who know how to listen to and respond to their body’s cues.

Trust the instincts of your children. Their bodies are much smarter than YOUR mind.

 

References: 

Results of the Self-Selection of Diets of Young Children, by Clara M. Davis, M.D.

Clara M. Davis and the wisdom of letting children choose their own diets, by Stephen Strauss

 

More resources on child feeding:

 

Ellyn Satter’s Division of Responsibility in Feeding

Child of Mine, by Ellyn Satter

Your Child’s Weight: Helping Without Harming, by Ellyn Satter

Ellyn Satter’s website

Food Ninjas: How to Raise Kids to be Lean, Mean, Eating Machines, by Matt Stone

Don’t Make Children Eat their Greens, by Tim Lott

 

I talk a lot about “hormone balance” in my blog posts and with my clients. People nod their heads enthusiastically when I mention this concept, but I wanted to write a little bit about what I mean when I say hormone balance. There are many hormones involved in human physiology – I’m going to focus on one in this post: estrogen. Estrogen actually refers to a whole family of hormones. There are estrogens that your body produces and estrogens you get from outside the body, like the synthetic estrogen in birth control and phytoestrogens from certain plants. And don’t forget about xenoestrogens, those endocrine-disrupting chemicals like BPA we hear about so often in the news. Xenoestrogens are found all around us, especially in what I like to call the “Four P’s”: pesticides, plastics, pollution, and personal care products.

Since the Women’s Health Initiative study results were released in 2002, which showed the detrimental effects of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) for women, the public’s and experts’ opinion of estrogen has been one of confusion.

Is estrogen a ¨bad” hormone? No, but it can quickly accumulate when the body isn’t functioning properly, and that’s when the problems begin.

“Excess estrogen” is a difficult concept for many of my clients to understand. They tell me, “oh, my doctor checked my estrogen levels and they are fine.” But our bodies can become overloaded with an excess of estrogen and estrogen-like chemicals in tissues, resulting in impaired fertility, PMS, endometriosis, fibrocystic breasts, miscarriages, problems breastfeeding, and increased risk of estrogen-related cancers.

Besides the health issues listed above, other signs and symptoms of excess estrogen include:

  • Salt and fluid retention
  • Impaired thyroid function
  • Increased cortisol (belly fat!)
  • Increased permeability of the gut (food allergies/sensitivities)
  • Migraines
  • Anxiety/depression

The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the American Society for Reproductive Medicine (ASRM) released an opinion paper on the topic in October 2013 (1). They concluded that the evidence that links exposure to xenoestrogens and adverse reproductive and developmental health outcomes is sufficiently robust, and that reducing exposure is a critical area of intervention for obstetricians, gynecologists, and other reproductive health care professionals.

My doctor never brought it up when I was pregnant or in the years before – did yours?

There are two main ways to address this issue, reduce exposure, and support good estrogen metabolism and detoxification. Here are my top evidence-based tips I give to clients to address both of these.

Reduce exposure:

  1. Buy organic fruits and vegetables on the “Dirty Dozen” list, and organic meat and dairy products.
  2. Lose weight. Excess estrogen is stored in fat tissue and excess fat can actually produce estrogen on its own.
  3. Avoid canned food, or choose BPA-free cans.
  4. Limit packaged, processed foods. Certain food additives are estrogenic (2).
  5. Limit soy, the most potent estrogenic food, and a known fertility inhibitor (3). Think you don’t eat soy? Yes you do. The average American, who is definitely not a tofu-eating vegetarian, gets up to 9% of their total calories from soybean oil alone (4). What about the Japanese, you say? Some experts believe their large tea intake protects them from the detrimental effects of soy. Plus, soy is only a small part of their diet. What about meat and dairy and their hormones? Both have a small fraction of the estrogenic compounds of soy, especially when you buy organic/grass-fed/pasture-raised meat and dairy. This deserves a blog post of its own. One day, I promise!
  6. Limit vegetable and seed oils. The accumulation of these oils in the tissues promotes the action of estrogen in a variety of ways, and this effect of this tends to be cumulative and self-accelerating. Use olive oil, butter, or coconut oil.
  7. Avoid fish with high mercury levels like swordfish, shark, tilefish, and king mackerel.
  8. Use natural cleaning products or make your own.
  9. Check your personal care products for ingredients like parabens and phthalates, or check them in the EWG Skin Deep database for endocrine safety.
  10. Consider alternatives to hormonal birth control.

Support good estrogen metabolism and detoxification:

  1. Adequate protein intake. Estrogen is mainly metabolized in the liver, where it’s made more water-soluble for excretion via urine and stool. Estrogen receptors in the liver are under the control of dietary protein. Government recommendations for protein are for surviving, not thriving. I tend to recommend a moderate protein intake of 25% of your daily calories – that usually equals 80-100g for most women, depending on weight and activity level. An easy way to make sure you’re getting enough without food logging? Include a concentrated protein source (at least 15g) at all of your meals and snacks – don’t skimp out at breakfast and lunch!
  2. One serving of cooked cruciferous vegetables a day, such as cabbage, cauliflower, broccoli, kale, collards, bok choy, etc. These contain indole-3-carbinol (I3C), which promotes estrogen metabolism. Cooking makes these vegetables easier to digest and better for the thyroid. Raw carrots also have anti-estrogenic properties.
  3. Have a bowel movement at least once a day. Regular bowel movements rid the body of excess estrogen. Letting stool sit in the colon allows excess estrogen to be reabsorbed into the bloodstream. You should not require the use of laxatives, fiber supplements, magnesium, or vitamin C overdosing, or other bowel-moving crutches. See me if this is an issue for you.
  4. Get enough fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K). The American diet is notoriously low in these as I’ve written about in previous posts (5, 6). That’s a shame because all 4 have direct anti-estrogen action. Vitamins A, D and K are potent inhibitors of aromatase (the enzyme converting testosterone into estrogen) – so they will directly lower synthesis of new estrogen. Vitamin E will help counteract the effects of the already existing estrogen.

For a more specific, individualized plan, make an appointment with me.

“All of the unpleasant consequences of estrogen excess happen to resemble some of the events of aging.” – Dr. Raymond Peat

  1. https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/committee-opinion/articles/2013/10/exposure-to-toxic-environmental-agents#:~:text=The%20evidence%20that%20links%20exposure,and%20other%20clinical%20practitioners%20in
  2. http://www.scientificamerican.com/article/food-additives-mimic-hormones/
  3. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3074428/
  4. http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/93/5/950.short
  5. https://wholehealthrd.com/facts-and-myths-regarding-vitamin-a/
  6. https://wholehealthrd.com/killer-calcium/

 

 

I often look at other cultures for inspiration on how to live a long, healthful life. I think there are some common practices that healthy people around the world have in common. I commented on Facebook recently about how I must come across as a Francophile – someone obsessed with French culture. My last two posts had me praising cheese and liver as health foods. Now I’m writing about gelatin, a staple in French cuisine. But the truth is, all these foods are more common all over the world, not just France. And they used to be common in the U.S. too. Look at cookbooks from the 50’s, 60’s, and 70’s and you’ll find lots of recipes that include gelatin and liver!

I’ve written in the past about how our food supply in the U.S. has changed drastically over the years. It’s not just the amount of packaged, processed foods that we now have available to us, our supply of whole foods and their quality has changed as well. Let’s look at meat. Americans used to go to the butcher and have access to various parts of the whole animal. Now, in the average supermarket, we have access to this:

IMG_1526.jpg (2592×1936)

Rows of skinless muscle meat. Unfortunately, there was a big push to avoid certain types of fat for many decades and lean, skinless, muscle meat became what American consumers wanted. Think skinless chicken breast, flank steak, ground turkey, etc.

These cuts are brimming with methionine, tryptophan, and cysteine, amino acids which are inflammatory, inhibit thyroid function, depress immunity, decrease the body’s ability to withstand stress, and are associated with many problems of degeneration and aging (1). No wonder there are many research studies on meat that are negative!

Calorie restriction made a splash in the news a few years ago as a potential way to live longer (2). It’s speculated that the same life-extending benefits of calorie restriction could be attained with methionine restriction, without the hunger, and lowered metabolism and fertility. But here is the twist:

“A fascinating but woefully little-known study in 2011 showed that in mice, supplementing with glycine—an amino acid found abundantly in connective tissue and gelatin and bone broth—had the exact same life-extending effect as restricting methionine. Without reducing calories or other amino acids, glycine supplementation increased the rodents’ lifespan, reduced fasting glucose and insulin, decreased IGF-1 levels, and nearly halved their triglycerides—the very perks that’ve variously been attributed to calorie restriction, protein restriction, and methionine restriction.” (3)

Many experts think this research translates into humans, meaning that if you eat more gelatin, connective tissue, and bone broth – all brimming with glycine – you potentially get all the PROs of meat consumption (fat-soluble vitamins, micronutrients, bioavailable iron, complete protein, digestible protein), while minimizing the CONs.

Another reason this is a good idea besides health? Gelatin makes up about 50% of the protein in an animal. We’re literally throwing away 50% of the animal when we eat only muscle meat. From an environmental standpoint, this really sucks! Nose-to-tail eating – eating the whole animal – is more respectful to the animal and the planet, and healthier for the humans consuming it.

Potential benefits of eating more gelatin:

  • Anti-inflammatory.
  • Helps balance blood sugar by working with insulin to help the body use glucose properly.
  • Supports healthy hair and nail growth.
  • Good for joints and can help injury recovery.
  • Can help tighten loose skin (Gelatin is a great source of dietary collagen. Collagen is too large to be absorbed by the skin, so don’t waste your money on fancy skin creams).
  • Can improve digestion.
  • Heals damaged intestinal lining (a.k.a. “leaky gut” and allergies).
  • Improves stomach acid insufficiency.
  • Helps improve cellulite.
  • Glycine helps balance estrogen and progesterone.
  • Can suppress appetite.
  • Improves sleep.

Adding gelatin to the diet is easy:

  • If you eat meat, eat more on-the-bone cuts of meat like shanks, short ribs, and ox tails.
  • Make your own bone broth (ever wonder why homemade chicken soup is so good at curing colds?!). No time to watch a pot on the stove? It’s easy to throw chicken bones and water in a slow cooker overnight.
  • Snack on homemade Jello, homemade fruit snacks, panna cotta, and other gelatin-based desserts.
  • Use a supplement. Vital Proteins and Great Lakes are great brands from grass-fed cows. Gelatin can can be used to make gelatin-based desserts and thicken sauces. Collagen peptides and collagen hydrolysate both dissolve in cold liquids and can be added to juice, coffee, tea, or smoothies like a protein powder.
  • When you do eat muscle meat, supplement with gelatin, either in a sauce or as a side.

1. http://raypeat.com/articles/articles/gelatin.shtml

2. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/10/11/magazine/11Calories-t.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0

3. http://rawfoodsos.com/2014/03/09/new-animal-protein-study/

I’ve been thinking a lot about calcium lately. Our bodies need this mineral to build and maintain bones and teeth. Calcium also helps with blood clotting, muscle function, and regulation of the heart’s rhythm.

We’ve had it hammered home since we were in grade school that increasing calcium intake will prevent osteoporosis, the weakening of bones. We’ve been told to take calcium supplements if we don’t get enough calcium in our diet.

Yet, we have a very high calcium intake in the U.S. and also high osteoporosis rates, plus, calcium supplements are linked to heart disease (1). What gives?

It has to do with calcification, calcium buildup in the body’s tissues. Along with reduced metabolic rate, calcification is a hallmark sign of aging.

Examples of calcification:

  • Atherosclerosis: calcification of blood vessels
  • Osteoarthritis: calcification of joints
  • Tartar: calcification on the teeth
  • Gallstones/kidney stones: caused by calcium deposits
  • Infertility: sometimes caused by endometrial calcification
  • Alzheimer’s: evidence is mounting brain calcification contributes
  • And so many more!

When you consume calcium, regardless of if through food or supplements, you hope it will be deposited in the bones and teeth, right? Well without a critical vitamin in your diet to direct calcium, it often winds up in the body’s tissues instead. So you could conceivably have a high dietary calcium intake or take calcium supplements, and still wind up with osteoporosis and heart disease to boot. Sucks, right?

So what’s this critical vitamin? Vitamin K2, not to be confused with the Vitamin K1 that is found in dark leafy greens. K1’s main role is in blood clotting, while K2’s main role is calcium metabolism. K2 activates certain proteins that guide calcium into bones and teeth where it belongs. And even cooler? K2 will activate other proteins that sweep calcium OUT of other tissues where it is potentially harmful. So you could potentially REVERSE heart disease just by getting enough of this crucial vitamin (2).

Other potential benefits? Better teeth. Weston A. Price (3) was a dentist who embarked on an medical anthropology trip around the world in the 1930’s to study how diet and lifestyle affected dental health. He found cultures with straight, beautiful, healthy teeth and deduced what they had in common. He has been called the “Charles Darwin of Nutrition,” since much of what he discovered looks at how food and food quality affect health in general. If you haven’t read his 1939 book, “Nutrition and Physical Degeneration,” a nutrition classic in my opinion, pick it up for the photos alone! Anyways, Price is credited with discovering Vitamin K2, although at the time, he had no idea what it was. He called it Activator X.

He realized that humans are capable of thriving on very diverse diets. However, he did find one thing in common: they all ate some amount of animal-derived fat-soluble vitamins. Even the near-vegetarian groups ate insects or small animals that were rich in pre-formed Vitamin A, Vitamin D, and what we now know is Vitamin K2. And here’s the kicker for my fertility clients: many of the foods high in these nutrients were fed preferentially to pregnant or reproductive-age women in the groups he studied.

Depending upon your current understanding of fats and the causes of heart disease (see here and here), you either will be pleasantly surprised or horrified by the list of foods high in Vitamin K2:

  • Butter from grass-fed cows
  • Organ meats
  • Shellfish
  • Fish eggs
  • Cheese from grass-fed cows
  • Natto (a fermented soybean popular in Japan)
Butter from grass-fed cows vs butter from the grocery store

Butter from grass-fed cows vs butter from the grocery store

Now, think about the French Diet and the above list of foods. Health experts have been talking about the “French Paradox” for years – the confusion over France’s rich, fatty diet and their low heart disease rates. What if the French Paradox isn’t such a paradox after all? What if it’s not the red wine that’s protecting them, but all the foie gras, quality cheese, and butter?

Now think about the Japanese diet. What if it’s not the green tea that’s protecting them from cancer and heart disease, but all the fish eggs and natto?

Previous thinking on Vitamin K2 was that our gut bacteria can make what we need from Vitamin K1. Does the typical American’s damaged gut do this? Who knows. I’ve seen evidence for and against the claim that we get enough from eating dark leafy greens.

But logically, when I think about the modern American diet, our current rate of disease, and compare it to someplace like France that has loads of K2 in their diet, it makes sense to me to eat more foods with K2.

As a side note, my latest obsession in my nutrition practice is mineral analysis. I find it most useful for determining tissue calcification. I would say that about 80 percent of my clients have high calcium levels in their tissues and would benefit from more K2 in their diet, either from foods or supplements, to help “sweep” it out of tissues. For those few who actually do need more calcium, K2 would also be beneficial in guiding that extra calcium into bones and teeth.

I see lots of potential in Vitamin K2 and I think you’re going to be hearing a lot more about it in the future. Vitamin K2 has potential benefits for nearly every major health concern of our time. K2 might be the ‘missing link’ that explains many of our modern health woes.

So eat your pastured dairy, organs, fish eggs, and shellfish! And if you have arterial calcification, as determined by a heart scan, or tissue calcification as determined by mineral analysis, you may want to consider supplementing with additional K2 (also called menaquinone-4 and menatetrenone).

For more information on Vitamin K2, “Vitamin K2 and the Calcium Paradox,” by Kate Rheaume-Bleue, is a great place to start.

1. https://well.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/08/thinking-twice-about-calcium-supplements-2/

2. http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2008/11/can-vitamin-k2-reverse-arterial.html

3. Trolls: I am not a lacky for the Weston A. Price Foundation. Stop trying to label me. I’m anti-dogma and support many different types of diets.

Note: I wrote this post for pasta company Jovial’s “Win a trip to Italy” competition. That was before I realized nearly every submission dealt with gluten intolerance or Celiac Disease. Oops! In my defense, they do sell non gluten-free pasta and flour! Anyways, I think it’s one of the best things I’ve ever written and I’m very proud of it.

I want to tell you about a common scenario I encounter every day as a registered dietitian. After introductions, when I ask about their typical diet, many of my clients declare that they’ve recently “given up bread and pasta” in their quest to be healthy and lose weight. They obviously feel virtuous. Apparently bread and pasta are the dietary villains du jour? I can’t keep up anymore with what’s considered “good food” and “bad food” these days.

That’s partly because I don’t believe there are good foods and bad foods. I believe in food neutrality. There is no perfect food; each comes with give and take <- Remember this line! It’s life changing when you really let it sink in.ch~

It’s taken me fifteen years to get to this point. Yes, fifteen. When I first started studying nutrition in 1999, my professor would say, “there are no good foods and bad foods,” and talk about the importance of moderation, blah blah blah. I would roll my eyes and think, “of course there are good foods and bad foods!”

I saw all sorts of bad foods in the world around me: fast food, soda, cakes, French fries, sugary cereal…they’re all definitely bad foods, right?

I got older and I became a registered dietitian and a voracious reader. I read every nutrition best-seller and health blog I could find in my spare time. I seemed to get caught up in every dietary theory. I was vegetarian for a year. I gave up gluten for a year. I went low-carb for a few months. While some of these practices may have given me short-term health gains, in the long-run, simple practices like, ahem, moderation and intuitive eating have served me more.

It’s not that I don’t care about food quality. I do. In fact, I own a farm and produce much of my own food because I believe so strongly that eating mostly whole foods grown close to home will better anyone’s health.

However, it’s the constant media attention on dietary villains that’s gets me riled up. The term food neutrality is sometimes used in eating disorder treatment and that’s what I think we have in the U.S. – disordered eating! People hear differing nutrition messages from the media, bloggers, doctors, and alternative health care providers:

  • “Sugar is a toxin!”
  • “Carbs are what’s fueling the obesity epidemic!”
  • “No one can digest gluten or lactose.”
  • “Humans don’t need animal foods.”
  • “Saturated fat will clog your arteries.”
  • “Kale is a super food!”

These ideas change like the the wind! Remember in the 80’s when cholesterol was the bane of human existence? Now we have a whole generation of people who think Egg Beaters and margarine are healthy, when in reality, butter and whole eggs can be incorporated into a healthy diet. Focusing on one food or nutrient as “THE problem” or “THE solution” has a really poor track record when it comes to actually improving nutrition and health.

Another problem with the good food/bad food dichotomy? Where do you draw the line? You can’t. When is bread or pasta a good food and when is it a bad food? Some people may in fact eat too much bread and pasta or have Celiac disease, a condition that warrants complete elimination. But for my average, busy client, bread and pasta can be incorporated into their diet occasionally, just like any other food. People seem incredulous when I give them meal plans that include these foods. They think that in order to improve their health, they have to give up all their favorite foods.

People often talk about Europeans and their appreciation and enjoyment of food. I doubt most French people sit down to a butter croissant and cafe au lait and worry about the saturated fat and sugar content. But Americans? We obsess. We worry. We don’t enjoy. Sit down with a big group of women at a social event with food and you’re likely to hear worry, guilt, and shame, and obsession over calories, fat, carbs, sugar, or whatever other nutrient is trending at the moment. You probably won’t hear appreciation and enjoyment.

Food should never have morality attached to it. Food is fuel. Food is nourishment. Food is joy. Food is never good or bad.

Another note: please don’t use my previous post against me. People should be able to enjoy fried food occasionally (if they want) and not feel guilty, just like pasta. I’m all about educating people and creating awareness, not fear mongering.

Okay, take a stab at it. What do you think is the biggest dietary change in American history over the last 100 years?

Increase in refined sweeteners?

Increase in refined flour?

Increase in soft drinks? Fast food? Saturated fat? Carbs? Calories?

I think the biggest, and arguably most significant change in the American diet over the last century has been the development and mass adoption of seed and vegetable oils.

Think about your current diet. How many foods did you eat today that contained some sort of seed or vegetable oil? Corn, soybean, cottonseed, safflower, sunflower, grapeseed, canola oil…If you ate anything in a package or box, it likely contained one of these oils. If you ate at a restaurant, it’s likely your food was cooked in one of these oils. These oils have worked their way into nearly everything we eat, often even so-called health foods.

Before 1900, these oils were scarcely used. People used fats that could easily be extracted from food, like tallow, lard, butter, olive oil, and coconut oil. Seed and vegetable oils were used in paints and as furniture polish, until the development of chemical extraction methods made them cheaper and easier to obtain.

Seed and vegetable oils contain mostly polyunsaturated fats, like linoleic acid, a type of omega-6 fatty acid. I’m sure you’ve heard of omega-3 fatty acids? The balance of inflammatory omega-6 fatty acids to anti-inflammatory omega-3’s has changed from about 8:1 to about 20:1 in the past 100 years (1). In those years, saturated fat consumption has remained relatively stable, monounsaturated fat consumption increased by 54 percent, and polyunsaturated fat consumption increased a whopping 300 percent (2)!

And it’s not just from packaged, boxed foods either. These oils, in the form of corn and soy-based feed, are fed to pigs, chickens, and cows to fatten them up quickly. This changes the fatty acid composition of the meat, increasing the omega-6 fatty acids. However, grass-fed and pastured meat has fewer omega-6 fatty acids and more omega-3 than feedlot-raised meat.

As opposed to most other fatty acids, linoleic acid accumulates to a large degree in fat tissue, and over the past 50 years, it’s showing up in increasing quantities, including in breast milk (2,3).

Moreover, seed and vegetable oils are in nearly every store-bought beauty and personal care product you rub into your skin. Some interesting reading on that here.

So what’s the effect of eating all this linoleic acid day in and day out? Inflammation for one. Increased inflammation is associated with just about every disease, from heart disease, to diabetes, to autoimmune disease to cancer. Polyunsaturated fats are not very stable and go rancid (oxidize) easily when exposed to air, light, and warm temperatures. Think of the sticky neck of the vegetable oil bottle that you’ve had in the cupboard for while. Think of that in your body and on your skin.

These oxidative processes can damage enzymes and other parts of cells, and especially their ability to produce energy. The enzymes which break down proteins are inhibited by unsaturated fats, and these enzymes are needed not only for digestion, but also for production of thyroid hormones, clot removal, immunity, and the general adaptability of cells. The risks of abnormal blood clotting, inflammation, immune deficiency, shock, aging, obesity, and cancer are increased. Thyroid and progesterone are decreased. Since the unsaturated oils block protein digestion in the stomach, we can be malnourished even while “eating well.” ”  – Dr. Ray Peat (4)

Why do some experts recommend eating MORE of these fats? Studies show a substitution of saturated fats with polyunsaturated fats like linoleic acid can reduce cholesterol levels, but, this reduction in cholesterol levels does not translate into reduced mortality rates (5). And many experts are now questioning the widespread public health support for a high linoleic acid intake.

In a review paper on dietary fatty acids and heart disease risk that was published earlier this year that reviewed the the effect of dietary fatty acids on heart disease, the authors concluded:

the pattern of findings from this analysis did not yield clearly supportive evidence for current cardiovascular guidelines that encourage high consumption of polyunsaturated fatty acids and low consumption of saturated fats. Nutritional guidelines on fatty acids and cardiovascular guidelines may require reappraisal to reflect the current evidence.” (6)

So, what to do? You don’t have to move to a farm and become a hermit to reduce omega-6 linoleic acid in your diet. Here are some pretty easy, actionable steps you can take to change your health for the rest of your life:

  • Use olive oil, butter, and coconut oil at home, and quit buying and using vegetable oil, margarine, and shortening.
  • Cook more at home and eat out less. Eat fewer fried foods at restaurants.
  • Eat fewer packaged and boxed foods made with seed and vegetable oils. Be a label reader.
  • Don’t buy mayonnaise or commercial salad dressings – make your own.
  • If you eat meat, eat more grass-fed and pastured meats and vary your types. Many Americans OD on chicken, which can have a lot of linoleic acid, depending on how it was raised.

I believe there is enough evidence to reduce linoleic acid in my diet. If you need more convincing, Israelis’ high heart disease, diabetes, and cancer rates may be regarded as a population-based experiment of the effects of a high omega-6 diet (7).

Some food for thought.

1. http://chriskresser.com/how-too-much-omega-6-and-not-enough-omega-3-is-making-us-sick

2. http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2012/02/my-tedx-talk-american-diet-historical.html

3. http://wholehealthsource.blogspot.com/2011/08/seed-oils-and-body-fatness-problematic.html

4. http://raypeat.com/articles/articles/unsaturated-oils.shtml

5. http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/77/2/521.full

6. http://annals.org/article.aspx?articleid=1846638&atab=7

7. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/8960090