Guest guest Posted January 21, 2007 Report Share Posted January 21, 2007 Studies have now been published that turn historical medical recommendations to avoid eggs upside down JoAnn Guest Jan 21, 2007 11:46 PST - Studies have now been published that turn historical medical recommendations to avoid eggs upside down. Although a single egg yolk contains 200 milligrams of cholesterol, recent studies show that eating eggs doesn't necessarily cause cholesterol in the bloodstream to skyrocket. According to the publishers of The New England Journal of Medicine, " these findings have led doctors to give the okay for most healthy Americans to eat up to four eggs a week. " Now in a study published in the April 21 Journal of the American Medical Association, Harvard Medical School researchers categorized the egg-eating habits of almost 38,000 male health professionals and 80,000 female nurses; and found low consumption at one egg per week and high at one or more eggs per day. Researchers also tracked the associated occurrence of heart attacks, stroke, and other types of cardiovascular disease in the male group for eight years and in the female group for fourteen years. They found no connection between egg consumption and heart disease. Even after adjusting for factors such as age, weight, high-fat food intake, smoking, high blood pressure, and family history of heart problems no statistical correlation was identifiable between egg eating and heart disease. Eggs are no longer implicated in problems with LDL (bad cholesterol) and in fact help the body to balance good and bad cholesterol. This balance is important because cholesterol forms part of all our organs, including the heart and brain. All sex hormones are manufactured by the body from cholesterol. Adequate cholesterol is absolutely necessary for maintaining mental and sexual function during aging. Researchers have found that changes in LDL are mainly a result of liver dysfunction caused by the following: Liver dysfunction occurs as part of the aging process. Liver dysfunction occurs from disease, diabetes being the most common. A defect in the receptor protein for LDL in the liver has been found to be a cause for high LDL. This defect is considered to be genetic, although dietary environment and an unhealthy lifestyle could precipitate liver dysfunction, and often does with the aging process and with disease, diabetes being the most common. The LDL receptor from the liver is responsible for removing cholesterol from the blood; and once the LDL is bound to the receptor a signal is sent for the body to cease producing LDL. Damaged receptors do not send the " Stop Production " signal, and result in excessive LDL levels. Also, a diet high in saturated fat decreases the number of LDL receptors, and thereby reduces " Stop Production " feedback. Another association to LDL levels is Low Thyroid Function. Although not as common, individuals with thyroid problems need to realize this association. Proper ranges are important in the prevention of heart attack or stroke. INDICATORS OF POOR LIVER FUNCTION AND COMPROMISED CARDIOVASCULAR FUNCTION 200 mg/dl (Total) and above, AND 130 mg LDL and above, AND 35mg/dl HDL and lower, AND lipoprotein(a) level greater than 30 mg/dl JoAnn Guest mrsjo- www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2007 Report Share Posted January 21, 2007 The " study " cited below fails on two main counts, imo. Firstly: The " study " fails to mention that many Pharmaceutical drugs destroy or in inhibit liver function. Does the AMA warn against pharmaceutical drugs? Nope. Secondly: The " study " talks about reduced liver function from aging. Bad diet, lack of key supplements, and pharmaceutical drugs are what induce age related problems such as liver dysfunction. It is not one's physical age, but what one is doing with one's life that is key. The " study " says it is now OK to eat 4 eggs per week. That is such bullshit. People can eat 2-4 eggs a day for many decades without getting heart problems if they have a good diet, take supplements, and stay away from pharmaceutical drugs. Cholesterol build-up arises not from eating healthy foods like eggs, but from arterial damage from too little vitamin C, from a poor diet, from diabetic drugs which force the pancreas to make far more insulin than is good for arteries, from deficiencies in Co-enzyme Q10 (which are made far worse by taking heart meds), and eating a high carbohydrate diet (the body needs cholesterol & it can make it internally from carbohydrates, if the diet is too low in cholesterol). Alobar On 1/21/07, JoAnn Guest <angelprincessjo wrote: > Studies have now been published that turn historical medical > recommendations to avoid eggs upside down > JoAnn Guest > Jan 21, 2007 11:46 PST > - > Studies have now been published that turn historical medical > recommendations to avoid eggs upside down. > > Although a single egg yolk contains 200 milligrams of cholesterol, > recent studies show that eating eggs doesn't necessarily cause > cholesterol in the bloodstream to skyrocket. According to the > publishers of The New England Journal of Medicine, " these findings > have led doctors to give the okay for most healthy Americans to eat > up to four eggs a week. " > > Now in a study published in the April 21 Journal of the American > Medical Association, Harvard Medical School researchers categorized > the egg-eating habits of almost 38,000 male health professionals and > 80,000 female nurses; and found low consumption at one egg per week > and high at one or more eggs per day. Researchers also tracked the > associated occurrence of heart attacks, stroke, and other types of > cardiovascular disease in the male group for eight years and in the > female group for fourteen years. > > They found no connection between egg consumption and heart disease. > Even after adjusting for factors such as age, weight, high-fat food > intake, smoking, high blood pressure, and family history of heart > problems no statistical correlation was identifiable between egg > eating and heart disease. > > Eggs are no longer implicated in problems with LDL (bad cholesterol) > and > in fact help the body to balance good and bad cholesterol. This > balance > is important because cholesterol forms part of all our organs, > including > the heart and brain. All sex hormones are manufactured by the body > from > cholesterol. Adequate cholesterol is absolutely necessary for > maintaining mental and sexual function during aging. > > > Researchers have found that changes in LDL are mainly a result of > liver > dysfunction caused by the following: > > Liver dysfunction occurs as part of the aging process. > > Liver dysfunction occurs from disease, diabetes being the most > common. > > A defect in the receptor protein for LDL in the liver has been found > to > be a cause for high LDL. This defect is considered to be genetic, > although dietary environment and an unhealthy lifestyle could > precipitate liver dysfunction, and often does with the aging process > and > with disease, diabetes being the most common. > > The LDL receptor from the liver is responsible for removing > cholesterol > from the blood; and once the LDL is bound to the receptor a signal > is > sent for the body to cease producing LDL. > > Damaged receptors do not send the " Stop Production " signal, and > result > in excessive LDL levels. > Also, a diet high in saturated fat decreases the number of LDL > receptors, and thereby reduces " Stop Production " feedback. Another > association to LDL levels is Low Thyroid Function. Although not as > common, individuals with thyroid problems need to realize this > association. > > Proper ranges are important in the prevention of heart attack or > stroke. > > > INDICATORS OF POOR LIVER FUNCTION AND COMPROMISED CARDIOVASCULAR > FUNCTION > > 200 mg/dl (Total) and above, AND > 130 mg LDL and above, AND > 35mg/dl HDL and lower, AND > lipoprotein(a) level greater than 30 mg/dl > > JoAnn Guest > mrsjo- > www.geocities.com/mrsjoguest/Diets > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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