Low and behold - the hearty truth about blood fats Once again, there's scientific evidence that the fat-phobic mainstream's got it all backward when it comes to your heart health. Some new research reveals the strong likelihood of an INVERSE relationship between a low-fat diet and blood-borne levels of the "good" cholesterol thought to actually prevent heart disease. What, a low fat diet BAD for your heart? Where have you heard THAT before? According to Reuters Health, researchers at Buffalo's State University of New York tracked a group of healthy, sedentary adults who ate a low-fat (less than 20 percent of calories from fat) diet for three weeks and discovered that levels of HDL (good) cholesterol in their blood plummeted by more than 14% as compared to a similar group that chowed down on a high-fat (50% or more of calories from fat) eating plan. Further, the high-fat group increased their HDL count to 63 mg/dl - well above the 60 mg/dl many experts feel is the base HDL cut- off point for boosting heart health. For those of you who are a little sketchy about the difference between "good" and "bad" cholesterol, here's a primer: Low- Density Lipoproteins are the kind of "bad" cholesterol complexes that cling to and accumulate in microscopic scratches on arterial walls (these micro-injuries are likely put there by chlorine in the blood - but don't get me started on this) and lead to blockages which can cause heart attacks. High-Density Lipoproteins, on the other hand, are complexes that tend to whisk cholesterol away to the liver, where your body can safely process it. In simpler terms, HDLs are good for your heart, LDLs are bad. Interestingly, the same research team that authored this recent study of healthy, non-athletic adults also conducted similar research previously on endurance runners - with identical findings! The bottom line is this: Low fat diets are good for no one, athlete or not - and the true relationship between dietary fat intake and blood LDL levels is exactly the opposite of what the mainstream's telling you. ********************************************** Chuck joint leaves couple wondering: "Where's the beef?" What does "buffet-style" dining mean to you? To most, it means "all-you-can-eat." But it seemingly means "all you can eat of what WE want you to eat" to one buffet chain. According to CBS News, CNN and other national sources, a Utah couple was recently asked to leave - under threat of police escort - a Salt Lake City location of the Chuck-A-Rama restaurant
Their crime: Eating too much roast beef! The couple was in the early stages of the Atkins low-carb diet, a pivotal period in the dietary plan when virtually no carbohydrate intake is allowed - and had been twice-a-week customers since starting the diet. Apparently, these facts held little sway with the restaurant's manager, who no doubt became concerned that the couple's return trips to the roast beef block (instead of the macaroni and cheese trough) might be cutting into his profits
But what does he expect at a restaurant name CHUCK-A-RAMA!? Vegetarians? A district manager for the restaurant chain claims that "buffet" means simply a style of dining, not any promise of unlimited portions. Of course, I've got to believe that this hapless couple wouldn't have been given the bum's rush for loading up on cheap, high-calorie junk like cheese sticks. Naturally, all the negative press has prompted the chain to issue a formal invitation to the couple to come back in whenever they please. Maybe they'll just claim to be out of the very food their buffet is named for if they show up
Raising a "beef" against the meat-hating mainstream,
William Campbell Douglass II, MD |