SunnyExpat
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 2,230
- Type of diabetes
- Prefer not to say
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
You are safe from me. This is the purpose of my OP, to find out what lurks within.....
The Google search I did ran out of steam after page 1, and most of the listings were referencing the same MIT report. Most of the 'reputable' reviews of the report (NHS, FORBES, Medical News Today, The Independant, et al) were making the same observation from the report that the mice were fed fat, became obese, and suffered in the same way as previously shown in studies, that obesity increases the risk of certain cancers. The consensus was that if you use a high fat diet in order to become obese, then there are consequences. the study did not replicate the conditions where the intake of fat is used to maintain a good body weight, but not to excess. I.E intake remains in control. I think anyone on LCHF is choosing the recommended oils and fats, and not bingeing out.
There was another study listed, and this was the link between breast cancer and a high fat diet. Again, the link to obesity and other factors could not be isolated from the result, and the result was inconclusive.
Having just lost a friend to colorectal cancer at a young age (48) //i am aware of the danger, but in his case he was a large man, not diabetic or obese, and eating 'Eatwell plate' type of diet as far as I could tell. But he drank alcohol regularly.
I think a single study is too early to cause a panic, but if you find other reports, then please post them here. There is of course the other study that seems to show a link between red meat consumption and cancer, and also the study that appears to link processed meat with cancer. My grandparents and boarding schools bought me up on bread and dripping, bacon sarnies, and Sunday Roasts. My Dad has just passed away aged 94. and he had a high fat diet too. My mother died from T1D, but she used fat like there was no tomorrow. So I personally think it is modern life, modern processing, and transfats that are just as reponsible.
You haven't put me off LCHF yet.
This is another (badly written) article out yesterday, that does make a reference to the effects of what is presumably ketosis and the PPAR-δ protein, it's worth a read, and maybe some further reading on the protein itself.
http://arstechnica.co.uk/science/20...-cancer-by-activating-tumor-prone-stem-cells/
The articles are written with the premise that 'fat makes you fat', hence the fat and obesity seemingly going hand in hand, but the protein appears to be the result of the high amounts of fat causing ketosis, so maybe a bit more digging is needed.