New and Noteworthy: What I Read This Week—Edition 244

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Research of the Week

Lower EPA/AA ratio, higher risk of coronary plaque rupture.

Linoleic acid increases pediatric asthma.

Psychosis patients have lower brain creatine and choline.

Seaweed intake protects against metabolic syndrome in genetically vulnerable Koreans.

Obese kids need more omega-3s and antioxidants.

New Primal Kitchen Podcasts

Primal Kitchen Podcast: The Benefits of Medical Marijuana and Psychedelics

Primal Health Coach Radio: Brian Gryn

Media, Schmedia

Ozempic’s effect on food sales.

Layoffs at Beyond Meat.

Interesting Blog Posts

Golfers are using psychedelics.

Social Notes

Should you look at the scale every day?

Everything Else

Genetic profile of the Medieval Rus.

Insulin resistance increases all-cause mortality.

Things I’m Up to and Interested In

Reminder: Malnutrition can be over or undernutrition.

Not surprised: Teens with knee pain who switch to barefoot shoes experience less pain.

Where have I heard this before?: Two meals a day for type 2 diabetics.

Surprising: Blue light reactivates wound healing.

Every time: Elevated glucose and triglycerides linked to depression.

Question I’m Asking

How has minimalist footwear helped (or hindered) your lower body pain?

Recipe Corner

Chinese garlic green beans.
Basic sauteed mushrooms.

Time Capsule

One year ago (Oct 28 – Nov 3)

The Past, Present, and Future of the Primal Mission—What we’re doing.
Active Recovery Workouts—Stay active to recover.

Comment of the Week

Mark is 100% correct.
I’m a doctor and I can assure anyone who might be concerned:

Acquired diabetes (as opposed to being born with Type 1 diabetes), does NOT happen secretly or suddenly like cancer might. (Cancer of the pancreas – the insulin producing organ, might suddenly cause diabetes, but that is cancer).

Acquired type 2 diabetes is very definitely something one can look at day by day and know if one is heading towards it or away from it.
Weight loss, lowered blood sugar levels, lower triglycerides, better exercise tolerance and fitness, are all easy, everyday indications that one is reducing the chances of diabetes, not increasing it.

A glucometer purchased cheaply at a drugstore can give great everyday data re our blood sugar response to food and meals, if it’s a real concern. (Just be sure to read about the normals and parameters so the results can be interpreted correctly).

If one is heading towards diabetes, as evidenced by higher blood sugars, significant weight gain, higher triglycerides, etc, then stopping all red meat is NOT going to help that situation.
Increasing exercise, eliminating all sweeteners and simple carbs, and decreasing caloric intake, WILL improve one’s situation and reverse the trend. It really is that simple for acquired type 2 diabetes.

It is a travesty the way the “survey” studies are taken and discussed the same as real, original, double blind experiments with actual measurements and data.

The problem is the average person doesn’t know the difference and can’t really be expected to sit down and learn that while raising a family and working two jobs.

I would expect more of journalists though, because it’s their job and responsibility to report accurately.
It’s so irresponsible what they are doing here.

And I suspect the vegan mega-industries know that and are taking full advantage. I wouldn’t put it past them to even be paying journalists to report the way they do.
These corporations can’t wait to eliminate real meat and take the markets and profits from substituting fake, manufactured, chemical-filled, proteins.
Grrrrr :^{.”

-Nice message.

The post New and Noteworthy: What I Read This Week—Edition 244 appeared first on Mark’s Daily Apple.

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