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Fat to blame for insulin resistance, not sugar

Mushroom

Well-Known Member
Messages
179
Article on this website today. I know this is about development of diabetes but where does it leave a diabetic on a Low Carb/High Fat diet? Any thoughts?
 
Mushroomwrote
where does it leave a diabetic on a Low Carb/High Fat diet? Any thoughts?

http://www.diabetes.co.uk/news/2012/Sep ... 04896.html

If you read carefully, they blame free fatty acids, and not saturated fats. They use 'common knowledge' that saturated fat will be responsible for fat in the blood and clogging up your arteries. Since this has never been proven, an erroneous link is therefore possibly made.
Carbohydrates are said by some to be responsible for higher triglycerides (a type of fatty acid)

Until I can find out more about this study (which isn't linked by DCUK's article) I'm carrying on low carbing, and eating as much saturated fat as before.
The study is always the best place to go. Not the sensationalist headline.

Geoff
 
Hi Geoff, thanks for the two replies. Will have a look at the references. (Those lab mice have a lot to answer for). Yes, the original study would be better to read. I am determined to keep on eating my rare steaks plus the yummy fat!
Mary
 
Hi again. Oh my word, that study is a tough one to decipher. Perhaps, I will photocopy it and get my DSN to explain it to me. Ha, ha!
Mary
 
When I discovered saturated fat was good for me, I also found out that polyunsaturated fats (PUFAs) were possibly bad for me.
I now avoid them.
The article referred to inflammation. Another article I found links PUFAs to inflammation.

These results showed that specific unsaturated dietary fatty acids, such as linoleic acid and to a lesser extent
linolenic acid, can stimulate the development of proinflammatory environments within the vascular endothelium.

http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/75/1/119.full.pdf

Geoff
 
This reports my correspondence with the presenter of a lecture at the Hounslow group last October 2011, which reported the dangers of sat fats, & the protective effect of linolenic acid - fed to rats suffering from palmitic acid as linseeds.

As I see it, looking at the components of fats in isoolation & in unnatural combinations is not good research, especially when the problems don't occur in natural foods.

 
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