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Two-egg diet cracks cholesterol issue

jeenie1940

Well-Known Member
i read this in a Wetherspoons Mag, thought it was an interesting read


Two-egg diet cracks cholesterol issue
28 August 2008

Research published in The European Journal of Nutrition this week has finally cracked the myths surrounding eggs and cholesterol. The new study showed that people who ate two eggs per day, while on a calorie-restricted diet, not only lost weight but also reduced their blood cholesterol levels.

A research team from the University of Surrey headed by Dr Bruce Griffin fed two eggs per day to overweight but otherwise healthy volunteers for 12 weeks while they simultaneously followed a reduced calorie diet prescribed by the British Heart Foundation (BHF) – who normally restrict egg intake to 3-4 per week. A control group followed the same BHF diet but cut out eggs altogether.

Both groups lost between 3 to 4kg (7- 9lbs) in weight and saw a fall in the average level of blood cholesterol.

Research leader Dr Bruce Griffin stated: "When blood cholesterol was measured at both six weeks and twelve weeks, both groups showed either no change or a reduction, particularly in their LDL (bad) cholesterol levels, despite the egg group increasing their dietary cholesterol intake to around four times that of the control."

This research provides further evidence to support the now established scientific understanding that saturated fat in the diet (most often found in pastry, processed meats, biscuits and cakes) is more responsible for raising blood cholesterol than cholesterol-rich foods, such as eggs.

As a nation, we currently eat 28 million eggs a day; between two and three per person per week – one of the lowest intakes in the world. Neither the Food Standards Agency nor the British Dietetic Association places any recommendation on the number of eggs we should eat in a week but many health care professionals are still giving out-of-date advice to cut back on eggs.

Nutritionists are now calling for health care professionals to revise their recommendations to mirror the findings of the most recently published research.

Dr Griffin continued: "There is no convincing evidence to link an increased intake of dietary cholesterol or eggs with coronary heart disease through raised blood cholesterol. Indeed, eggs make a nutritional contribution to a healthy, calorie-restricted diet. We have shown that when two eggs a day are eaten by people who are actively losing weight on a calorie-restricted diet, blood cholesterol can still be reduced."

Media Enquiries
Peter La, Press Office at the University of Surrey, Tel: 01483 689191, or Email [email protected]



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Jeenie
 
just copied and pasted from a carb counter chart
Meat, Poultry And Fish
6 oz
0

Eggs
1
0.6

Beef Salami
3 oz
2.4

Calf Liver
6 oz
10.4
 
jeenie said:
This research provides further evidence to support the now established scientific understanding that saturated fat in the diet (most often found in pastry, processed meats, biscuits and cakes) is more responsible for raising blood cholesterol than cholesterol-rich foods, such as eggs.

Only partly correct, carbs are converted to triglycerides and excess trigs adversely bias the cholesterol towards LDL and especially VLDL.

It's true that dietary cholesterol bears little relationship to blood cholesterol but the same is true of dietary fats (anyone who thinks they can sum up metabolism in sound bytes is onto a loser)
 
jeenie said:
This research provides further evidence to support the now established scientific understanding that saturated fat in the diet (most often found in pastry, processed meats, biscuits and cakes) is more responsible for raising blood cholesterol than cholesterol-rich foods, such as eggs.
Jeenie

Good news fo us egg lovers, although you have got to laugh at the huge leap of logic here. Because eggs appear to be ok it MUST be saturated fat elsewhere that raises cholestral. LMAO, how does the study of the effect of egg consumption prove that? Where exactly is the connection here? Eggs contain saturated fats too, don't they?. Shock horror, maybe it's the refined carbs in these products rather than the saturated fat that raises blood cholesteral.

No, no what was I thinking, that's just insane! :lol:
 
C'mon Doczoc, when it comes to dietetics you've got to try and make bigger leaps in logic than that.
Surely if the egg eaters are lowering their cholesterol, it's the wholemeal toasty soldiers that must be doing it? :wink:

All the best,

fergus
 
fergus said:
C'mon Doczoc, when it comes to dietetics you've got to try and make bigger leaps in logic than that.
Surely if the egg eaters are lowering their cholesterol, it's the wholemeal toasty soldiers that must be doing it? :wink:

All the best,

fergus

LOL, it's been so enlightening hanging around here, I've completely changed my approach to reading scientific studies. Rather than focus on what they've studied I always look for the factors they haven't covered, when you do that you can draw completely different conclusions to what they are trying to tell you. With this approach you tend to find most studies that make the popular press don't tell you a great deal at all!
 
Doczoc said:
LOL, it's been so enlightening hanging around here, I've completely changed my approach to reading scientific studies. Rather than focus on what they've studied I always look for the factors they haven't covered, when you do that you can draw completely different conclusions to what they are trying to tell you. With this approach you tend to find most studies that make the popular press don't tell you a great deal at all!

Zing!

Yes often you will find the studies say a completely different thing from what the meeja report.

If you keep your wits about you sometimes you will see that the data says different things from the summary (the summary is to please the accountants in order to get more research grants)
 
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