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From the BBC.com website

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From the BBC.com website

Postby simply_h » September 10th, 2012, 2:11 pm

Hello All,

Just something I found on the BBC.com website, may be worth a read ect.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-19517219

CHeers
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby Squire Fulwood » September 10th, 2012, 3:03 pm

http://vimeo.com/33549663

15 all. New balls please.
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby Squire Fulwood » September 10th, 2012, 3:34 pm

This topic would be funny if it wasn't so serious. It is not the statin question again since no-one seems in any doubt that for people who can take statins they lower cholesterol.

The speakers on the vimeo site agree but what they can't seem to find is any research/evidence that high cholesterol is a bad thing. In fact France who eat large amounts of fat have similar cholesterol levels to the Lithuanians who only small amounts of fat and yet have a much greater incidence of heart disease.

The BBC article now sounds a little thin when "a charity" says that if we don't all take our statins we are all going to die. Perhaps they can provide the missing evidence about low cholesterol being good for you.

It's all very perplexing.
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby phoenix » September 10th, 2012, 4:42 pm

I can't watch the video as it crashed my computer. But re French paradox ,some French researchers deny a French Paradox
Returning to the question raised in the introduction of this review, we can now say that CHD rates are not so low in France, animal fat intake not so high, and the diet-heart concept not so unique that the existence of a “French paradox” may be
sustained any longer, except as cultural fantasy or a marketing ploy

http://www.dialogues-cvm.com/document/DCVM49.pdf
Incidently the French are (or were in 2002) prescribed far more statins (in terms of dosage) than the UK (2nd out of 14, UK was 10th .
http://www.bmj.com/content/328/7436/385?tab=responses
I live in the area of the apparent French Paradox, though don't have local 'genes', my doctor still wants my LDL cholesterol to be less than 80mg/dl ( 2.07mmol/l) ,the UK guideline is 3 mmol/l ;the rest of Europe 2mmol/ l.
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby Daibell » September 10th, 2012, 5:15 pm

Hi. Does anyone know why Type 2s are supposed to have a higher incidence of heart disease? Is it merely because many T2s are overweight hence at higher risk due to their weight not their diabetes? What a pity DUK don't focus more on controlling Hba1c levels and good diet i.e. low-carb rather than putting out articles about cholesterol based on very weak research
Type 1.5'ish. Metformin SR 2000mg, Gliclazide 320mg, Sitagliptin 100mg. Last HBA1c was up to 8.3 hence Levemir added. Gym 3 times a week. BMI = 21. Carbs <150g and low GI. Diagnosed 2004. Age 68
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby AMBrennan » September 10th, 2012, 6:42 pm

The NHS pays for the cost of complications; the other guy is selling books. Use some common sense. If he had the evidence to support his claims, he'd have published in a journal and not written a book targeting the general public who, no offence, will not be able to tell if he's right or not.
"Living in a sad statistical world"
Alternative medicine that works is called "medicine".
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby izzzi » September 10th, 2012, 6:54 pm

The french drink red wine moderately, ( is it the resveratrol from the grape that removes fat ). French people seem to have better control on their health.

I do not know where experts get there statistics from, how come there all different.

Got to admit it is all very interesting.

Surely there must be a simple test device out there that can monitor our daily requirements as to keep us healthy.

For example in the good old days a car had few faults, yet easily repaired if a fault occurred. Nowadays got to plug the car into a lap top at a price just to find out if everything is ok.

Are we being treated as mushrooms, Kept in the dark and fed a lot of Bul***t (processed foods and fat).

Roy. :)
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby librarising » September 10th, 2012, 7:12 pm

AMBrennan wrote
The NHS pays for the cost of complications; the other guy is selling books. Use some common sense. If he had the evidence to support his claims, he'd have published in a journal and not written a book targeting the general public who, no offence, will not be able to tell if he's right or not.


We don't want a repetition about received wisdom 'good', content of a book 'bad.'

Quite a few of us T2Ds are scandalised by the complication-enhancing, healthy carbs-promoting NHS diet.
This for me destroys any argument backing the NHS line. Perhaps the NHS is creating complications to pay for.
Much research points in another direction. I certainly wouldn't suggest reading one rogue book, and making a decision on that.
If you can get it to work for you then brilliant. I keep reading about T2Ds who amaze doctors with their control, not following NHS guidelines.

Never forget the diet-heart hypothesis or lipid hypothesis are just that. Unproven ideas about how atherosclerosis occurs.
There's more than a French paradox to worry about. For those who look there are too many unanswered questions about the currently followed hypotheses.

And how you can insult the intelligence of the general public is beyond me. Do they lack your common sense ?

The writer of the book is an author, not a medical man. Which won't get him into journals, but equally won't stop him using medical evidence and opinion.

Geoff
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby Cowboyjim » September 10th, 2012, 7:25 pm

What a poor piece that was BBC.... talk about sloppy and under-researched hyperbole.

Shocking state of affairs that they keep peddling this dubious "advice"... I suspect quite a few people follow it more or less and I would love to know what happens next.... "Keep eating like you said doc but why doesn't my HbA1C come down?" Better up your dose.... repeat ad nauseum or until the patient figures out the advice is off the mark... I wonder how many complications have resulted and we are not told about...
I try to explain to general folk I meet about all this and they often think I must be wrong... or paranoid... I despair. 8)
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby Daibell » September 10th, 2012, 9:24 pm

The real villain here is not the BBC, merely the messenger, but DUK who are 'experts' on diabetes aren't they??
Type 1.5'ish. Metformin SR 2000mg, Gliclazide 320mg, Sitagliptin 100mg. Last HBA1c was up to 8.3 hence Levemir added. Gym 3 times a week. BMI = 21. Carbs <150g and low GI. Diagnosed 2004. Age 68
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby librarising » September 10th, 2012, 9:47 pm

As I said earlier there's more than a French paradox to sweep out of the way :

Image

and Dr Malcolm Kendrick's article about it (notice the missing <<graph>> which I've supplied )

http://www.disease-treatment.com/archiv ... 45401.html

Enjoy

Geoff
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby librarising » September 10th, 2012, 9:56 pm

More about the correlation or lack of it between high cholesterol and heart disease :

Interestingly, the following measures are not even on the radar screen, as far as arterial stiffness is concerned: systolic blood pressure, LDL cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and fasting insulin levels.

What about the lipid hypothesis, and the “bad” LDL cholesterol!? This study is telling us that these are not very relevant for arterial stiffness when we control for the effect of blood glucose measures. Not even fasting insulin levels matters much! Wait, not even HDL!!! A high HDL has been definitely shown to be protective, but when we look at the relative magnitude of various effects, the story is a bit different. A high HDL’s protective effect exists, but it is dwarfed by the negative effect of high blood glucose levels, especially after meals, in the context of cardiovascular disease.


http://healthcorrelator.blogspot.co.uk/ ... c-and.html

This article links it largely to postprandial levels

Geoff (trusting the general public with intelligence)
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby noblehead » September 11th, 2012, 11:13 am

Thanks for posting Simply :) It is all about raising awareness and reducing the risks.
''The Pessimist sees difficulty in every opportunity. The Optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty.''

Winston Churchill
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby Squire Fulwood » September 11th, 2012, 11:28 am

I have been staring at that graph and it gives remarkable information but there are two things I don't quite understand.


1. Why has someone joined up all the dots?

2. Would it be clearer as a table re-sortable so that either of the axes could be in the left hand column?

Just a thought.
It's not my fault your Honour, they made me do it.

People with type 2 deserve the chance to test
Support the petition - http://diabetes.co.uk/petition

Hba1c 42 on 3/9/12 BMI 31.98

Hba1c 46 on 9/4/13 BMI 32.34
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Re: From the BBC.com website

Postby borofergie » September 11th, 2012, 7:00 pm

AMBrennan wrote
The NHS pays for the cost of complications; the other guy is selling books. Use some common sense. If he had the evidence to support his claims, he'd have published in a journal and not written a book targeting the general public who, no offence, will not be able to tell if he's right or not.


What? A bit like Charles Darwin didn't do when he published "On the Origin of Species"? :shock:

How about Isaac Newton when he published "Principia"? :shock: Nicolaus Copernicus "De Revolutionibus"? :shock:

Ever read Richard Dawkins' "the Selfish Gene"? :shock: How about Stephen Jay Gould's "Wonderful Life"? :shock: Stephen Hawkings' "A Brief History of Time"? :shock:

Bibliophobia isn't cool kids.
Not all authors are motivated by money.
Not all controversial books turn out to be wrong.
Can we all agree to stop the book bashing?
Please?
Last edited by borofergie on September 11th, 2012, 7:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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