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View Full Version : Fast-food binge harms liver, but boosts good cholesterol


Trazalca
02-13-2008, 07:09 PM
Fast-food binge harms liver, but boosts good cholesterol: study by Marlowe Hood
2 hours, 19 minutes ago



A month-long diet of fast food and no exercise led to dangerously high levels of enzymes linked to liver damage, in an unusual experiment inspired by the docu-movie "Supersize Me."

But investigators, reporting their findings on Thursday, were also stunned to find that a relentless regimen of burgers, fries and soda also boosted so-called good cholesterol, seen as a key measure of cardiovascular health.

Researchers in Sweden asked 12 men and six women in their twenties, all slim and in good health, to eat two meals per day at McDonalds, Burger King or other fast-food restaurants over four weeks.

The volunteers were also told to refrain from exercising. The goal was to increase body weight by 10 to 15 percent to measure the impact of an abrupt surge in calorie intake.

Blood samples were taken before, during and after the experiment to monitor levels of an enzyme called alanine aminotransferase, or ALT, a potential marker for liver damage often seen among heavy drinkers and patients with hepatitis C.

Levels of ALT increased sharply after only one week, and quadrupled on average over the entire period, said lead researcher Frederik Nystrom, a doctor at the University Hospital of Linkoping.

"The results scared me," he told AFP. "One of the subjects had to be withdrawn from the study because he had 10 times the normal ALT levels."

For 11 of the 18 subjects, ALT rose to levels that would normally reflect liver damage, even among individuals who did not drink any alcohol, although no such damage occurred, he said.

Two of the individuals had liver steatosis, or fatty liver, in which fat cells build up dangerously in the liver, he said. Steatosis is associated with the risk of developing Type 2 diabetes, which has taken on epidemic proportions, especially in industrialised countries.

Published in the British Medical Association's journal Gut, the study "proves that high ALT levels can be caused by food alone," said Nystrom.

That signs of liver damage were linked to carbohydrates was another key finding, he said.

"It was not the fat in the hamburgers, it was rather the sugar in the coke," he said.

But the most startling result implies that an intensive fast food diet might have some health benefits too, apparently from fat.

"We found that healthy HDL cholesterol actually increased over the four-week period -- this was very counter-intuitive," Nystrom said.

HDL, sometimes called "good cholesterol," seems to clean the walls of blood vessels, removing excess "bad cholesterol" that can cause coronary artery disease and transporting it to the liver for processing.

Nystrom has yet to publish the cholesterol findings, but said they were consistent with the so-called "French Paradox."

For nearly two decades, scientists have wrestled to explain how the French can consume a diet rich in fats -- from abundant butter, cream, cheese and meat -- yet have generally low levels of heart disease and hypertension.

"The study showed that the increase in saturated fat correlated with the increase in healthy cholesterol," he said.

The young Swedish guinea pigs ate at least two fast-food meals a day, and terminated the study once they had gained a maximum of 15 percent in weight.

On average, they tipped the scales 6.5 kilos (14.3 pounds) more, but one ballooned by 12 kilos (26.4 pounds).

Nystrom got the idea for his study from the 2004 Oscar-nominated documentary "Supersize Me," in which filmmaker Morgan Spurlock asked doctors to monitor him over a 30-day period in which he ate at McDonalds morning, noon and night.

Doctors were so alarmed by changes in his blood chemistry -- including skyrocketing levels of ALT -- that they begged him to halt his experiment.

"I wasn't just inspired by the movie, I copied it to the best of my ability," said Nystrom.

The movie helped spur a change of tack by fast-food corporations to include healthier options on their menus.

On their websites, McDonald's and Burger King highlight salads and low-fat products -- alongside the classic burgers and colas -- and offer guidance on balanced diets and a healthy lifestyle.



So, if you cut out the sugar drinks, you can eat whatever you want???

:confused:

Bill_the_Pony
02-13-2008, 08:10 PM
I stopped drinking ANY type of soda several months ago and don't regret it at all. :)
It has got to be one of the smartest things for anyone can do for their health.

I recently bought some bottles green tea, only to read the ingredients AFTER the fact, and found that it was sweetened with High Fructose Corn Syrup. :mad:

I just bought Fat Free Yoplait today only to find out that it's sweetened with High Fructose Corn Syrup. :mad:

That garbage, along with "partially hydrogenated vegetable oil" is the scourge of packaged food today, and all the slimy ways it's packaged and marketed to appeal to "fat free" and "sugar free" diets. There's a laundry list of shit the FDA lets the food industry get away with. :mad:

neglet
02-14-2008, 06:30 AM
It's really hard to find low-sugar things that aren't actually artificially sweetened. Yogurt, for instance; I find most regular brands too sweet to tolerate. I end up getting Yoplait Light 'n' Fit, which is nonfat and only has 60 calories, but has sucralose. I have similar problem with sports drinks. Gatorade is way too sweet; even the new G2 is a bit syrupy for my taste. Propel has sucralose and tastes weird. I prefer Glaceau Fruit Water, which uses corn syrup but only a little, with 50 calories per 20 oz bottle. Actually, their Fruit Water used to use no sweeteners at all, but they changed it a couple years back. Since Coke bought out Glaceau, I'm having trouble finding Fruit Water. So I tried something new called O water, which has no calories or sweeteners, but has a weird aftertaste like it's lightly carbonated. And forget getting bottled tea that doesn't have 200 calories of corn syrup.

Don't get me wrong, I like sugar, but it would be nice to have the option to consume less.

kah
02-14-2008, 07:13 AM
My main concerns when I shop are high fructose corn syrup and sodium. I will flat out not buy things if they have HFC and if the sodium is too high and I really want that item, I'll use it in something where it gets spread out, like a casserole, instead of eating it by itself. I have been seeing a lot more things made with Splenda, but they are very sweet. We even switched our strawberry jam to the most backwoods generic brand because it was the only one without HFC.

You could buy a yogurt maker.
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/419aUFhLKjL._AA280_.jpg (http://www.amazon.com/Euro-Cuisine-YM100-Automatic-Yogurt/dp/B000NJC0KG/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=home-garden&qid=1203005535&sr=8-2)

tstone
02-14-2008, 07:34 AM
Arizona's Diet Green Tea Energy Drink. Bennies of green T, lots of vitamins and minerals used to enrich it, NO corn syrup and only 1/10 the calories of the non diet version, just twenty per can.

And tastes better, too.

Try it!

Trazalca
02-14-2008, 09:19 AM
Crap.

Outside of the Arizona Diet Green Tea (which is good, btw), or a glass of water,
what else is there to drink? I even read that juices are only good in moderate
servings. And with milk, I can't even make up my mind on that one.

I daily make 16 oz. of green tea at work, adding ice and a packet of Splenda.
It's good. But darnit, why does HFC have to taste so good? :(

kah
02-14-2008, 10:24 AM
Black coffee has zero calories and gads of useful side effects. The trick is not to overindulge, because then the coffee starts working against you.

omicron
02-14-2008, 10:29 AM
Beer. It does a body good. :)

Trazalca
02-14-2008, 11:51 AM
Beer. It does a body good. :)

Took you long enough. :wink:

omicron
02-14-2008, 12:00 PM
Sorry, I was at the bar, ordering another one of God's magical elixirs of life.

In the immortal words of Ben Franklin: "Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to prosper"

Nostromo
02-14-2008, 03:57 PM
Ready ... set .... let's get healthy! :) N

http://www.cheese-burger.net/images/big-bobs-texas-belt-buster.jpg

Bill_the_Pony
02-14-2008, 08:27 PM
You can tell it's a fine establishment, by ALL of the arresting details in the picture, from the Print of the dogs playing poker to ...


uh...


:puke:

spammityspam
02-15-2008, 09:06 AM
There's a vitamin water we sell at work from Glaceau or something that's naturally sweetened, I think... and Sweet Leaf tea is sweetened with Splenda, which isn't as bad as other artificial sweeteners. And it's delicious.