Tag Archives: paleo diet

Amanda Torres Turns Her Life Around With Paleo/Primal Lifestyle

This is the old Amanda:

In December 2009, I was 25 years old and weighed 210 lbs. I was obese for my 5’5″ frame, never felt well, and was popping handfuls of pills every day just to get by. I was taking 2 anti-depressants, anxiolytics, prescription sleeping pills, courses of Prilosec once or twice a month, acid-blocking pills or antacid tablets 1-3 times a day, anti-diarrhea pills several days a week, and I was constantly catching respiratory infections and frequently took courses of antibiotics. In fact, I was put on chronic antibiotics by a dermatologist to treat rosacea, acne, and a truly horrible condition known as hidradenitis suppurativa (acne inversa). I would take them for several weeks at a time, until everything calmed down, but inevitably within a few weeks more I would end up with another debilitatingly painful HS boil and would need to start up the antibiotics again. I also got either a yeast infection or a urinary tract infection almost once a month. In the summer of 2008 I was diagnosed as pre-diabetic with metabolic syndrome and hypertension, so by the end of 2009 I was quite probably a full-fledged type II diabetic, I just never got an official diagnosis. I was falling apart mentally and physically, and scared to death of a miserable future full of multiple chronic illness and scary prescription medications, so I decided to make some drastic changes in my lifestyle. I resolved to do  my research over the holidays, and begin in 2010 with my new way of life.

She ran across Mark Sisson’s website and the rest is history.

Read about her transformation.

 

h/t Julianne Taylor

Paleo Diet May Be Better for Our Teeth

NIce teeth!

I just ran across this NPR story from February, 2013. Audrey Carlsen wrote it. An excerpt:

“Hunter-gatherers had really good teeth,” says Alan Cooper, director of the Australian Centre for Ancient DNA. “[But] as soon as you get to farming populations, you see this massive change. Huge amounts of gum disease. And cavities start cropping up.”

And thousands of years later, we’re still waging, and often losing, our war against oral disease.

Our changing diets are largely to blame.

In a study published in the latest Nature Genetics, Cooper and his research team looked at calcified plaque on ancient teeth from 34 prehistoric human skeletons. What they found was that as our diets changed over time — shifting from meat, vegetables and nuts to carbohydrates and sugar — so too did the composition of bacteria in our mouths.

Not all oral bacteria are bad. In fact, many of these microbes help us by protecting against more dangerous pathogens.

That makes me wonder if antibacterial mouthwashes are a good thing for otherwise healthy people. Do they kill good bacteria, too?

Read the whole enchilada.

I’ve Never Had Much Interest in the Kitavans…

…but maybe you have.

If so, click over to Science-Based Medicine for Dr. Harriet Hall’s thoughts on them and Staffan Lindeberg’s seminal nutrition study. This is her second recent post on ancestral diets (aka paleo). A snippet:

I am always suspicious of initial reports of unusually healthy or long-lived groups in remote areas, because I have so often seen such reports disconfirmed by subsequent investigations. Lindeberg’s studies were done in the early 90’s and have not been confirmed by other studies in the ensuing two decades. In the Kitava study, the ages of subjects were not objectively verifiable, but were estimated from whether or not they remembered significant historical events. The absence of heart disease and stroke was deduced by asking islanders if they had never known anyone who had the symptoms of either condition. This was reinforced by anecdotal reports from doctors who said that they didn’t see those diseases in islanders. EKGs were done on the Kitavans, but a normal EKG does not rule out atherosclerosis or cardiovascular disease. I’m not convinced that we have enough solid data to rule out the presence of cardiovascular disease or other so-called “diseases of civilization” in that population.

You can guess where this is going.

Dr. Stephan Guyenet chimes in with cogent comments.

Read the whole thing.

Food Psychologist Mary Pritchard, Ph.D., Has Mixed Views on Paleo Diet

Overall, she doesn’t care much for it. Details are in her column at Psychology Today. A snippet:

Should you do the Paleo Diet? If it gets you off of processed foods, you might give it a try in the short term. It’s probably not worth doing over the long haul, though, as it has too much fat and protein and too little carbohydrates (especially whole grains) to be practical or healthy for most people.

Trust me, I’m a doctor: Nearly everybody can live a long healthy life without whole grains.

If you have kidney impairment, follow your doctor’s and dietitian’s advice on protein intake; they may or may not advise limitations. Otherwise, higher-than-average protein isn’t a problem. Fat contents of paleo diets are all over the map, and it turns out saturated fat isn’t a significant cause of heart disease anyway.

I suspect Dr. Pritchard didn’t spend quite enough time researching for her article. The commenters (11 thus far) do a fair job rebutting her inaccuracies.

Read the whole thing.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Is the Paleo Diet a Reliable Treatment for Ulcerative Colitis?

It’s not generally recognized as such, but it seemed to put a New Zealand nutritionist’s case into remission. Julianne Taylor provides the details in a guest post by Jess Fisk.

A search of the Internet will reveal many cases of apparent cure or remission of ulcerative colitis after a great variety of non-obvious interventions. I’m happy for all those folks, whether the intervention was responsible or the disease coincidentally went into “spontaneous” remission when the intervention began.

One of my go-to sources for current disease information is UpToDate.com. Most of the articles there are written by medical school professors. A quick scan of ulcerative colitis treatments reveals an overwhelming focus on surgery and drugs. Little in terms of diet except for this tidbit on elimination diets:

An elimination diet involves removing a food from the diet for a period of time and seeing whether symptoms resolve during that time. In patients receiving enteral nutrition, it involves introducing one new food at a time to identify foods that precipitate [inflammatory bowel disease] symptoms. Many patients can identify foods that they believe may precipitate or worsen their disease and it is reasonable for them to avoid such foods. Using an elimination diet to identify at-risk foods may decrease the possibility of a “flare” of [inflammatory bowel disease].

(Inflammatory bowel disease refers to both ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease.)

Foods that precipitate symptoms commonly included cereals, lactose, and yeast products.

Studies were contradictory or inconsistent regarding the benefits of other dietary interventions such as low carbohydrate diets, fiber, fish oil supplements, and antioxidants.

In case you’ve heard of the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, the UpToDate authors say that randomized trials are required before it can be recommended for ulcerative colitis.

I didn’t see anything about the FODMAPs diet.

With regards to dietary causes of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), I found this at UpToDate:

Food antigens are thought to trigger an immunologic response resulting in the development of IBD. However, specific pathogenic antigens have not been identified. While studies attempting to associate specific diets with the development of IBD have had inconsistent results, the data suggest that a “Western” style diet (processed, fried, and sugary foods) is associated with an increased risk of developing Crohn’s disease, and possibly ulcerative colitis.

The next paragraph talks about implicated dietary risk factors, including hypersensitivity to cow milk protein in infancy, refined sugar, decreased vegetable and fiber intake. Also, “increased dietary intake of total fat, animal fat, polyunsaturated fatty acids, and milk protein has been correlated with an increased incidence of ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease and relapse in patients with ulcerative colitis. In addition, a higher intake of omega-3 fatty acids and a lower intake of omega-6 fatty acids have been associated with a lower risk of developing Crohn’s disease.”

Since the paleo diet eliminates several major food groups, it’s entirely possible it could put ulcerative colitis into remission or even cure it.

Academically oriented paleo diet gurus should get together and decide what the paleo diet is, so clinicians can start testing it scientifically.  They’re the guys who can snag the funding for studies.

Steve Parker, M.D.

 

“Rich the Diabetic” Is Sold On the Paleo Lifestyle

Click for his testimonial from 2012. Rich is a type 1 diabetic (he uses “diabetic” rather than “person with diabetes”). Rich was influenced by Tom Naughton, Robb Wolf, and Mark Sisson. He dropped his hemoglobin A1c by 2.5 over his first six months of paleo eating. This snippet explains some of his lifestyle changes:

The only thing I changed back in March, was starting to live paleo.  I’ve always worked out regularly, so I’m not really accounting my exercise in this improvement.  I’m probably about 70% paleo overall, but at home I’m 100% paleo.  My home no longer has any processed foods that come in a box, can, or sack.  I buy whole foods (fruits and lots of veggies), a little frozen veggies for convenience and storage time, lots of meat, no dairy, and lots of olive and coconut oil.  I cook a lot now, which means I do a lot more dishes than I want to, but it’s been worth it.

Read the rest.

Dr. Richard Bernstein on the Paleo Diet for Diabetes

DiabetesHealth has a brief article on Dr. Bernstein’s view of the Paleolithic diet. They quote him thusly:

There’s no way the ADA [American Diabetes Association] diet or any high-carbohydrate and low-fat diet will enable you to control blood sugars. It turns out that the kind of diet I recommend is essentially a Paleolithic diet, which is what humanity evolved on. Our ancestors did not have bread, wheat, sweet fruits, and all of the delicious things that we have today. These have been specially manufactured for us nowadays. For food, our ancestors had a paucity of roots, some leaves, and principally meat to eat. If they lived near the shore, they had fish.

Read the rest.

Dr. Deans on the Care and Feeding of Zoo Humans

When I explain to my patients why paleo-style eating may be the healthiest diet, I use a thought experiment. It goes like this. You find an injured or weak bird in your yard and you hope to nurse it back to health. First you need to identify the bird’s species since that will tell you what to offer as food. Most birds specialize in what they’re able to eat in order to survive and thrive. Some eat only seeds, leaves, or other plant matter. Others eat only specific insects, grubs, or worms. You get the idea. Get the food choice wrong, and you’ve got a dead bird on your hands.

Emily Deans gives a similar rationale for the paleo diet at her Psychology Today blog. She writes:

At the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo in 2005, a gorilla died of heart disease at the age of 21. Heart disease is the leading killer of captive gorillas, who also seem to be vulnerable to developing ulcerative colitis, and autoimmune disease of the gut. That led researchers to consider changing the gorilla diets, which at typical zoos had been filled with processed animal chows, meat, yogurt, milk, eggs, bread, and cereal grains along with large amounts of various fruits and vegetables. Free ranging wild gorillas, on the other hand, eat mostly immature leaves, stems, some bark, saplings, wild fruits, insects, and some small animals. The diet of the gorillas in the wild has an incredibly high fiber content, which is used as food by the may trillions of bacteria in the gorilla’s extremely long gut. The fiber is transformed into a short chain fatty acid called butyrate that is important for colonic health and may be the reason (along with the cereal grains and other unusual foods) the captive gorillas developed ulcerative colitis.

Read the rest.

 

Maybe We Don’t Need as Much Calcium As We Think

I’ve worried about the relatively low calcium amounts provided by most paleo diets.  Maybe I shouldn’t. Fanatic Cook Bix has a new post about various calcium absorption mechanisms in our bodies. If intake is low, certain mechanisms kick in, allowing us to absorb more than is usual. I quote:

So, someone who is eating less than 400 mg – which is half the recommended amount (the DRIs are 800-1000 mg/day, some groups recommend up to 1300 mg) – may, all else being equal, end up with a similar calcium status as someone eating 1000 mg or more because an active transport mechanism kicks in at lower intakes. As well, more calcium may be absorbed from the colon.

Calcium is not unusual in this regard. Absorption of nutrients is often higher when intake is low, and vice versa. Zooming in on one nutrient, in this case calcium, and fretting over whether we’re “getting enough” has a downside if it leads to taking supplements. Many nutrients compete for intestinal absorption, e.g. zinc supplements have been shown to substantially reduce calcium absorption. And, it should be said, what the body doesn’t absorb goes out with the feces.

It may be better to focus on eating a variety of minimally processed foods than to focus on discrete nutrients, and let the body take care of itself.

Read the rest.

At any given time, I usually have at least one little old lady on my hospital service who has fallen and fractured her hip, wrist, pelvis, or humerus (arm bone that’s part of the shoulder). Nearly always she has the bone-thinning disease called osteoporosis, which may be related to calcium consumption. If we can prevent osteoporosis with diet and exercise, that’s much preferable to dealing with the fractures.

Ryberg et al: Effects of Paleolithic Diet on Obese Postmenopausal Women

Sweden's Flag. Most of the researchers involved with this study are in Sweden

Sweden’s Flag

After menopause, body fat in women tends to accumulate more centrally than peripherally. This is reflected in a higher incidence of fatty liver disease, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. A multinational group of researchers wondered if a modified paleo-style diet would have metabolic effects on healthy overweight and obese (BMI 28–35) postmenopausal women in Sweden, with particular attention to fat levels in liver and muscle. I’ll call this the Ryberg study because that’s the first named author.

Study Details

Curiously, they never give the age range of the 10 study participants. Were they closer to 52 or 82?

tuna, fishing, Steve Parker MD, paleo diet, tuna salad

Has anyone even bothered to ask why the tuna are eating mercury? —Jim Gaffigan

The five-week intervention diet seems to have been mostly prepared and provided by the investigators, but they allowed for home cooking by providing menus, recipes, and a food list. No limit on consumption. The goal was to obtain 30% of calories from protein, 40% from fat (mostly unsaturated), and 30% from carbohydrate “…together with 40 g nuts (walnuts and sweet almonds) on a daily basis….”

The diet included lean meat, fish, fruit, vegetables (including root vegetables), eggs and nuts. Dairy products, cereals, beans, refined fats and sugar, added salt, bakery products and soft drinks were excluded.

“They were also advised to use only rapeseed [i.e., canola] or olive oil in food preparation.”

A diet like this should reduce average saturated fat consumption, which was a stated goal, while substituting monounsaturated  and polyunsaturated fat for saturated.

These women were sedentary before and during the intervention.

Results

The ladies indeed made some major changes in their diet. Total calories consumed fell by 22% (2,400 to 1,900 cals). The average weight of participants dropped from 190 lb (86.4 kg) to 180 lb (81.8 kg).

Carbohydrates consumption as a percentage of total calories fell from 49% to 25%. Total carb  grams dropped from 281 to 118, with fiber grams unchanged. To replace some of the carbs, the women increased their protein and fat calorie percentages by about a third. The authors don’t make it clear whether the total carb grams included total fiber grams. (I could probably figure it out if I had the time and inclination, but don’t.) “Before” and “after” fiber grams were 25 and 27, respectively.

In other words, “…the ratio between energy intake from the macronutrients protein, total fat and carbohydrates expressed as E% [calorie percentages] changed significantly from 16:33:50 at baseline to 28:44:25 after five weeks.” Total daily fat grams didn’t change, but the contribution of saturated fat grams fell.

Elevated blood pressure is one component of metabolic syndrome

Elevated blood pressure is one component of metabolic syndrome

A 10-point drop in systolic blood pressure over the five weeks didn’t quite reach statistical significance (p=0.057), but the 9% drop in diastolic pressure did.

“Fasting serum levels of glucose, leptin, cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL, LDL, ApoB and apolipoprotein A1 (ApoA1) and percentage HDL also decreased significantly.”

Fat (or lipid) content of the liver dropped by half. It was measured by magnetic resonance spectroscopy. Peripheral muscle fat content didn’t change, measured in the soleus and  tibialis anterior muscles of the leg.

Urinary C-peptide excretion and HOMA indices [HOMA1-IR formula] decreased significantly, whereas whole-body insulin sensitivity, measured using the hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp technique, was not significantly changed.” See footnote labelled PPS at bottom page for confusing details.

My Comments

The intervention diet was a reasonable version of the Paleolithic diet, with one exception. From what I’ve seen from Eaton, Konner, and Cordain, I think they’d agree. Except for the rapeseed oil. It’s fallen out of favor, hasn’t it?

Here’s what the Jaminet’s wrote about canola:

Canola oil…is rapeseed oil bred and processed to remove erucic acid and glucosinolates. During processing, the oil is treated with the solvent hexane and very high temperatures; it may also be subject to caustic refinement, bleaching, and degumming. [Perfect Health Diet, p.225.]

I can’t quite see Grok doing that.

My fantasy about extra virgin olive oil is that it simply oozes out of the olives when pressure is applied. So easy a caveman could do it.

Eaton and Konner have argued that our ancestral diet would have had at least two or three times the fiber as was provided by this diet. But that would have been at a total daily calorie consumption level of at least 3,000 or 3,5oo back in the day. So this diet isn’t so far off.

10-lb Weight Loss Without Calorie Restriction? I'll Take That.

10-lb weight loss In five weeks without conscious calorie restriction? I’ll take that.

The 10 lb (4.6 kg) weight loss is impressive for an eat-all-you-want diet. Calorie intake dropped spontaneously by 500/day, assuming the numbers are accurate. The satiation from higher protein consumption may explain that. The authors admit that the women lost more weight than would be predicted by the energy balance equation (i.e., a pound of fat = 3,500 calories). They wonder about over-estimations of food intake, thermogenic effects of protein versus other macronutrients,  and loss of glycogen (and associated body water). You can’t argue with those scales, though.

While serum C-peptide didn’t fall, urinary levels did. (My sense from reviewing other literature is that 24-hr urine levels of C-peptide are more accurate indicators of insulin production, compared to a single fasting C-peptide level.) The authors interpret this as increased insulin sensitivity in the liver in combination with decreased insulin secretion by the pancreas. Fasting serum insulin levels fell from 8.35 to 6.75 mIU/l (p<0.05).

Regarding the non-significant change in overall insulin sensitivity as judged by hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp technique, remember that insulin sensitivity of the liver may be different from sensitivity in peripheral tissues such as muscle. These investigators think that liver insulin sensitivity was clearly improved with their diet.

Blood lipid changes were in the right direction in terms of cardiovascular disease risk, except for the drops in HDL (from 1.35 to 1.17 mmol/l) and ApoA1.

This study may or may not apply to men. Also note the small sample size. Will these results be reproducible in a larger population? In different ethnicities?

I like the reduction in blood pressure. That could help you avoid the risk, expense, and hassle of drug therapy.

From 97 to 90 mg/dl

Serum glucose fell from 96  to 90 mg/dl

I like the drop in fasting blood sugar from 96 to 90 mg/dl (5.35 to 5 mmol/l). It’s modest, but statistically significant. Was it caused by the weight loss, reduced total carb consumption, paucity of sugar and refined starches, lower total calories, higher consumption of protein and mono- and polyunsaturated fats, or a combination of factors? As with most nutritional studies, there’s a lot going on here. A small fasting blood sugar drop like this wouldn’t matter to most type 2 diabetics, but could diabetics see an even greater reduction than these non-diabetics? Only one way to tell: do the study.

I can well imagine this diet curing some cases of metabolic syndrome, prediabetes, mild type 2 diabetes, and fatty liver disease.

Most type 2 diabetics (and prediabetics, for that matter) are overweight or obese.  If a diet like this helps them lose weight, it could improve blood sugar levels. Nearly all authorities recommend that overweight and obese diabetics and prediabetics get their weight down to normal. (I admit that weight loss and improved blood sugar levels are not always in sync.) Weight loss by any standard method tends to improve insulin sensitivity.

Furthermore, the elevated fasting blood sugars that characterize so many cases of diabetes and prediabetes are usually linked to, if not caused by, insulin resistance in the liver. According to these investigators, the diet at hand improves insulin sensitivity in the liver, and even lowers fasting blood sugars in non-diabetic older women.

This modified Paleolithic-style diet doesn’t include table sugar or refined grain starches. That would help control blood sugar levels in both type 1 and type 2 diabetics and prediabetics. The authors didn’t say so, but this must be a relatively low-glcemic-index diet.

The investigators don’t mention ramifications of their diet for folks with diabetes. Their focus is on ectopic fat accumulation (in liver and muscle) and its linkage with insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease. They’ve put together a promising program to try on diabetics or prediabetics. They just need the will and funding to git’r done.

I agree with the authors that the lower calorie consumption, rather than the paleo diet per se, may have caused or contributed to the reduction in liver fat.

Stockholm Palace

Stockholm Palace

The investigators wonder if a Paleolithic-style diet like this would be beneficial over the long-term in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NALFD) and associated metabolic disturbance (e.g., impaired sensitivity sensitivity in the liver). NAFLD tends to predict the development of diabetes and cardiovascular disease. If we can prevent or reverse fatty liver, we may prevent or reverse type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, to an extent. You’ll be waiting many years for those clinical study results.

But you have to decide what to eat today.

A significant number of American women (20%?) need to lose weight, lower their blood pressures, lower their blood sugars, and decrease their liver fat. This Ryberg Paleolithic-style diet would probably do it.

A very-low-carb diet is another way to reduce liver fat, and it’s more effective than simple calorie restriction.

Steve Parker, M.D.

Reference: Ryberg, M., et al. A Palaeolithic-type diet causes strong tissue-specific effects on ectopic fat deposition in obese postmenopausal women. Journal of Internal Medicine, 2013, vol. 274(1), pp: 67-76.  doi: 10.1111/joim.12048

PS: See Carbsane Evelyn for her take on this study here and here.

PPS: Urinary C-peptide secretion reflects insulin production. HOMA is a gauge of insulin resistance, much cheaper and quicker than the purported “gold-standard” hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp technique. Why HOMA and the clamp technique in this study didn’t move together is unclear to me, and the authors didn’t explain it. School me in the comment section if you can. Click this HOMA link and you’ll find this statement: “HOMA and clamps yield steady-state measures of insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity in the basal and maximally stimulated states, respectively. HOMA measures basal function at the nadir of the dose-response curve, whereas clamps are an assessment of the stimulated extreme.” Maybe that means HOMA is applicable to the fasted state (no food for 8 hours), whereas the clamp technique is more applicable to the hour or two after you ate half a dozen donuts.