Pages

Showing posts with label Diet - Meat Based. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diet - Meat Based. Show all posts

Wednesday, 20 December 2017

Curious Cook: Vegetarianism and other dietary tales, Part 4

On the surface, it would appear that a vegetarian diet can lead to a longer life and a reduced incidence of certain diseases – at least, it seems that plant fibre plays a significant part in promoting a smoothly functioning intestinal system which is critical for good health.
Curious Cook: Vegetarianism and other dietary tales, Part 4
However, the definition of vegetarian used is as per most scientific dietary studies – it includes the occasional consumption of animal and/or fish proteins.
The total exclusion of meat from the diet can be regarded as mildly nutrition-deficient – but it is also generally not life-threatening.
The main risk of excluding meat is a lower intake of certain compounds found in meat – including Vitamin B12 (cobalamin), creatine, carnosine, Vitamin D3 (cholecalciferol), certain Omega-3 fatty acids (eg. docosahexaenoic acid, or DHA), heme-iron, taurine, et cetera.
It is feasible to replace or augment some of these nutrients from plant-based foods; for example, Vitamin B12 is also present in seaweed and fermented soy beans, and DHA can be synthesised by the body from alpha-linolenic acid (ALA) found in some seeds.
But some meat nutrients are not present in any plants – they include creatine, carnosine, heme-iron, taurine, et cetera, which are compounds that can affect health, stamina and general well-being in subtle ways.
Despite the meat industry’s constant insinuations about how much everyone needs animal protein, the fact is that growing children require rather more meat protein than adults.
Severe protein deficiency is manifested by diseases such as marasmus and kwashiorkor, normally found only in countries prone to famines, and these diseases tend to affect children rather more than adults.
In modern societies, practically any ordinary adult diet, vegetarian or meat-based, will normally include adequate protein. As such, protein-deficiency diseases are really rare even if meat is wholly excluded from the diet and protein deficiency in civilised countries is usually linked to eating disorders rather than food itself.
Anyway, there are now very good reasons to consider eating more vegetables and less meat – in fact, perhaps restricting meat to only a few portions a week. These reasons are not necessarily wholly to do with nutritional considerations but also relate to evolutionary, environmental, ecological and perhaps humane reasons.

meat
Are we eating too much meat? The answer, emphatically, is yes.

Are We Eating Too Much Meat?

A question posed earlier is whether modern humans are eating too much meat. The answer, emphatically, is YES.
By comparison, the consumption of meat by our Palaeolithic ancestors would have been highly irregular and probably restricted to smaller quantities.
There were several reasons for this: it is not usual to hunt and kill large animals every day, so meat would be generally be sourced from small animals and birds which needed to be shared between many people.
Hunting was not always successful every day either. There was no refrigeration so meat would spoil quickly. Even after humans took to animal husbandry, it was still not feasible to eat meat every day because breeding animals was a slow process due to gestation and animal growth rates.
Feeding livestock was also very resource-intensive – all this meant that animals were usually consumed only at special occasions, with plant-based foods eaten at other times.
Human digestive systems have evolved to cope with this irregular meat environment – our intestines may well evolve further in the future, but at present, the length and configuration of our intestines indicate that human digestive systems are attuned to extracting as much nutrients as possible from both plants and meat.
In modern societies, none of the above limitations about the availability of meat apply, mainly because people nowadays do not raise their own animals but rely on huge industrial producers to provide meat, trucked in vast quantities via refrigerated containers to food factories, supermarkets and butchers.
This means that ordinary people can now eat meat at every meal, every day – and very often many people do exactly that. This additional intake of meat has already affected the development of modern humans who are generally bigger than earlier generations – but it also very likely contributed to modern syndromes such as obesity, diabetes and gastrointestinal problems.
The global consumption of meat is still growing every year – as countries prosper, citizens can afford to eat more meat, and that is precisely what they do.

Distressing Statistics

In 2014, the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) estimated that Americans ate 90kg of meat each on average while the rest of the world averaged 34kg each. By 2024, Americans are projected to eat 94.1kg of meat a year and the rest of the world 35.5kg each.
Producing such prodigious quantities of meat means that at any point in time there are around 20 billion chickens, 1.5 billion cows, 1 billion pigs and 1 billion sheep being farmed on Earth – and the numbers are increasing by over 25 million animals per year.
The problem is not only that we have so many animals, but we have to feed, house and care for all these animals to ensure the continued supply of meat at current volumes.
This leads to an even greater problem. An example, using statistics from the USDA Census of Agriculture for 2012, shows that the USA has 915 million acres of farmland, where over 45% (415+ million acres) is used for grazing pasture or livestock facilities, leaving just below 43% (390 million ac


Growing vegetables is more energy efficient than growing meat. Filephoto
res) for croplands – though only 315 million acres of croplands are actually harvested.
Of the crops produced, the top three most commonly grown crops are corn, soybeans and forage for animals (accounting for over 67% of all harvested croplands) – and 36% of the corn, 70% of the soybeans and 100% of the forage are used to feed animals, with the remaining used to produce biofuels or for human consumption.
The USDA statistics indicate that the overwhelming use of US farmland is for the production of meat (including providing feed for meat production), and this pattern of land usage for meat production is more or less repeated globally across other agricultural countries.
If meat production is as energy efficient as growing crops, then there probably would not be a problem, or at least it would be less of a problem.
However, meat is notoriously inefficient to produce as a food. According to the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation in Australia, it takes over 2kg of feed to produce a kilo of chicken or pork, 4-6kg for a kilo of lamb and 5-20kg for a kilo of beef (depending on the method used to raise cattle).
Translated into calories, it works out that for every 1,000 calories we feed livestock, we get back only 120 calories of meat from chickens, 100 calories from pork and only 30 calories from beef.
What is even gloomier are the statistics about the greenhouse gases produced by livestock: 3.7kg of gases for each kilo of chicken, 24kg of gases for a kilo of pork and up to a staggering 1,000kg of greenhouse gases per kilo of beef.
In calorific terms, producing meat like beef is like having 33 people do the job of one person with everyone simultaneously farting non-stop.
The reason for the huge production of gases by cattle is because they are ruminants with multiple stomachs that digest the cellulose in their plant feed via various kinds of bacteria – and a by-product of this bacterial digestion process is prodigious amounts of methane and other noxious gases.
There are also curious, somewhat arbitrary assessments of the amount of water needed for meat production.
It is estimated that each kilo of pork requires around 6,000 litres of water, a kilo of lamb needs over 10,000 litres and a kilo of beef uses over 15,000 litres.
However, these amounts of water often appear to refer mainly to rain water, probably used to irrigate pastures, so the environmental impact may be limited unless it is water extracted from underground sources such as wells and aquifers. Also run-offs from cleaning animal compounds are known to contribute to contamination of land, rivers and underground water resources.


Many people still generally prefer to eat meat even though other nourishing non-meat options are now available. Filephoto

Why We Love Meat

The high desirability of meat is linked to our evolutionary roots – meat is a very efficient way of acquiring proteins, fats, calories and other nutrients, some of which are not available from plants.
Also, without meat, humans would not be able to discuss topics like vegetarianism today because the evolution of human brains depended enormously on the energy and nutrients derived from cooked meat.
Therefore, throughout our entire evolutionary history, humans had expended a lot of resources to ensure a supply of meat – and our digestive tract is clear evidence of our ability to digest meat efficiently along with other foods.
This past dependence on meat nutrition is probably a significant factor why many humans still generally prefer to eat meat even though other nourishing non-meat options are now available.
One factor may also be the versatility of meat in terms of cooking and preparation. There are countless ways to enhance the taste of meat – a piece of pork can be grilled, fried, boiled, roasted, slow-cooked, usually while infused with spices, mixed with other foods, drenched in sauces, et cetera.
By comparison, the range of options for cooking vegetables is usually much more restricted – as such, becoming fully vegetarian will probably never be an option for me, especially as it is also very difficult to find a red wine to match a plate of boiled vegetables.
Additionally, there is also overwhelming evidence that our preference of meat is actively encouraged by a food industry which seem intent on keeping everyone eating as much meat as possible – while at the same time keeping disturbing facts about the production, slaughtering and nutritional quality of meat far away from the public.

A Depressing Pause

A prosaic but somewhat unsettling event some years ago made me pause for thought. I was on my way home after work and had stopped at a little supermarket near the station – in there I came across a pack of six raw chicken drumsticks for sale for £1 (RM5.5). It was not a special offer, it was not a discounted deal – it was just the normal price of battery-farmed chickens and it was simply horrifying to realise that three chickens were killed and their meat offered for so little.
Even more sickening was that the producer had sold the meat to the supermarket for just pennies. It made me consider the conditions in which chickens must have been raised and killed to justify the economics of supplying meat at such low prices.
It was not a happy thought, subsequently confirmed by some rather depressing research.

battery chicken farm
Being crowded in such confined spaces and in close proximity to so many other chickens mean that diseases can spread very quickly in a battery farm. Photo: Bloomberg
If you are squeamish, you might want to skip over the next bits for they are about broiler chicken farming in Britain. Broiler chickens are raised in cramped conditions, where it is common to have over 20,000 chickens in relatively small warehouses – space is at a premium so each chicken has less space than a sheet of A4 paper in which to live, and it is true that they will have more space in a kitchen oven than they would have had all their lives.
Selective breeding over many years means that these chickens grow very quickly in terms of flesh and weight which results in their puny legs being unable to support their bloated bodies – this leads to frightful injuries and deformities.
Being crowded in such confined spaces and in close proximity to so many other chickens mean that diseases can spread very quickly – and this is handled by the wholesale use of antibiotics which are mixed in with their food, and this is a root cause why certain human bacterial diseases can now no longer be treated by antibiotics.
If they live long enough, chickens in such a hostile environment would probably develop severe psychological issues but at least they are usually killed by the time they are less than seven weeks old, even though the slaughtering methods are disturbingly barbaric.
I can continue with other deeply troubling facts about industrial chicken farming – and also about how the public is often duped by glossy advertising and pictures of chickens running around on grass.
The truth is that most broiler chickens in the UK never see a blade of grass in all their sad, appalling lives – and great efforts are made by the industry to prevent people from knowing such facts.
The plight of other livestock raised for wholesale meat production is not better at all – this is simply because meat production is a business and when money is involved, efficiencies of scale are important to maximise profits and therefore animal welfare is a very low consideration, if it is considered at all.
The miseries do not stop at the farms – just very recently, in September 2017, the EU revised their regulations for the transportation of animals for slaughter when it was found that cattle, pigs, poultry and lambs were routinely dying during long-distance trips between EU countries. The animals were dying because of the lack of food and water, and stress due to the severely cramped transport conditions and inadequate ventilation.
If you are now feeling a little sombre, the final part discusses whether modern food is even real food, and what can be done which might help everyone and perhaps our planet too.

https://www.star2.com/food/food-news/2017/12/20/vegetarianism-dietary-tales/



Monday, 13 November 2017

Curious Cook: Vegetarianism and other dietary tales, Part 2

Although most are comfortable with their vegetarian diets, there are some facts which are not always commonly known – and most vegetarian media do not even mention them, especially the “raw” or “paleo” diet media.
People on raw and paleo diets may be depriving themselves of 
mineral nutrients, simply by eating too many raw beans, seeds, 
nuts and wholegrains. – VisualHunt

Read PART 1

And it is not the usual stuff about how vegetarian diets are deficient in nutrients which can only be found in meat and fish – many people simply may not know that several highly popular components of a vegetarian diet can actually result in a significant loss of nutrition, primarily by a chemical process called chelation (pronounced “key-lay-shun”).
Chelation prevents nutrients from being absorbed by the body because a chelating agent tightly binds its own molecules with metal ions, rendering the metals insoluble, inert and indigestible.
Not all chelating agents are bad; for example, sodium calcium edetate is used medically to treat lead and mercury poisoning.
A bit of bad news about beans, grains and nuts
The main dietary compound involved with chelation in humans is phosphorous-based phytic acid (also known as myo-inositol hexakisphosphate) – and salts of phytic acid are known as phytates.
Seeds use phytates as energy stores of phosphates to assist in germination and hence phytates are present in various concentrations in all seeds, grains and legumes used for human consumption.
Due to its undoubted ubiquity, chelation by phytates is generally not a major issue for most humans eating food based on plant seeds, though there are some possible exceptions.
By this I mean that there are significant differences in the levels of phytates in food and these levels are very dependent on the way the food has been prepared.
As an example, lentils which are cooked straight from the packet will have high concentrations of phytates whereas lentils soaked overnight before cooking will have much lower levels of phytates.
In short, wherever possible, always make sure that seeds are pre-soaked and on its way to germination before using them – the germination process greatly depletes phytates in seeds.
As such, people who need enhanced minerals should not eat excessive amounts of seeds which have not been pre-soaked or germinated – this applies to pregnant women, for example.
The chemical summary is that phytates are plant seed-based complex phosphorous compounds which have six sub-groups which bond fiercely with calcium, iron, manganese and zinc molecules, rendering these important metals insoluble and unavailable for digestion.
These minerals would probably be from foods ingested at the same time as phytates – plants do not tend to have them in large quantities. Minerals bound by phytates are excreted by the body as waste material.
It should be noted that phytates are not destroyed by cooking – and people on raw and paleo diets may inadvertently be depriving themselves of mineral nutrients, simply by eating too many raw beans, seeds and nuts. This may also apply to people eating a lot of wholegrain foods in general, such as wholemeal baked goods, oats, granola, muesli, et cetera.
Eating plants means more fibre
On the plus side, eating more plants and plant-based foods can increase the amount of dietary fibre, both soluble and insoluble. Fibre may be a significant contribution to the AHS-2 and EPIC-Oxford findings that vegetarian diets generally lead to lower rates of coronary heart disease (CHD).
A review of several studies by the BMJ in 2013 also concluded that the incidence of CHD is inversely related with the consumption of fibre – basically, eating more fibre reduces the likelihood of CHD while eating less fibre increases the chances of CHD.
The amplitude of this inverse correlation varies depending on which research papers are used but the overall relationship remains true across several large scale studies.
While this is good news, we might like to understand why this inverse relationship exists in the first place. Even if everybody has heard about how good fibre is for health, some may still not know the reasons WHY fibre is actually beneficial – and that may be because the two types of fibre work in different ways.
Soluble fibre and cholesterol
Soluble fibre is termed soluble because it can combine with water to form a gel. A common example is pectin in apples (which is also used to make jams). Soluble fibre appears to help reduce the amount of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol circulating in the body by intervening in the intestines before the cholesterol is released into the bloodstream – this intervention is done by soluble fibre binding with cholesterol from digestive bile juices and ingested food and rendering such cholesterol into waste matter.
It seems that between 5 to 10g of soluble fibre can reduce LDL cholesterol by around 5%, though increasing the consumption of soluble fibre does not mean a corresponding decrease in LDL cholesterol as the relationship is not linear – therefore, perhaps an optimal level of soluble fibre consumption for people should be between 5 to 25g a day.
It should be added that LDL is not necessarily the prime cause of CHD but a stressful lifestyle which introduces arterial wall damage combined with LDL is definitely a significant risk factor for CHD. To understand this better, you may choose to read http://www.star2.com/food/food-news/2016/04/24/a-fat-lot-of-good-part-1/
Insoluble fibre and the one-eyed Irishman
Insoluble fibre is plant material which is impervious to water, such as cellulose or the bits of vegetables that you find a little stringy in the mouth.
To understand the function of insoluble fibre, we have to delve into the toilet habits of 20th century British sailors and African tribesmen and recount the work of an interesting one-eyed Irishman called Dr Denis Parsons Burkit.
While in Africa between 1966 and 1972, Burkit conducted curious experiments which noted that African tribesmen were producing between 2.5 to 4.5 times more faeces than British sailors on a regular basis.
This study was done initially to support his hypothesis that the health of people (as measured by the number of visits to hospitals) could be predicted by the frequency and quantity of their bowel movements – the less they pooped, the more sick they were likely to be.
His suspicions were also augmented by the introduction of refined flour (a food containing only a fifth of the fibre of unrefined flour) into the diets of British sailors – this helped to make the naval deposits hard and puny compared to the large soft poops from the Africans.
kale, vegetarian, vegetables, fibre
Eating more plant-based foods means a higher fibre intake, 
which in turn has shown to reduce incidences of coronary heart disease. – AP

An examination of the diets found that Africans ate much more fibre than British sailors and in general had notably healthier intestines.
Later it was established that much of the Africans’ diet was based on plants high in insoluble fibre. Analysing the ailments suffered by British sailors found that issues common with the sailors such as Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), diverticulosis, haemorrhoids, colorectal cancers, et cetera, were absent from the Africans – and from his observations, Burkit proposed that insoluble fibre plays a significant part in maintaining the health of the human gastrointestinal system.
To this day, nobody has been able to challenge this assertion, though there have been disputes about Burkit’s original hypothesis about the numbers of hospital visits in relation to amounts of poop.
As for reasons why insoluble fibre has this beneficial effect, it may be the human digestive system had evolved to expect and handle the fibre load involved in digesting plant material. The human digestive system functions autonomously (ie. without conscious effort) and gut motility (stretching and contraction in the gut) is affected by the type and content of ingested food.
As such, the reduced amount of insoluble fibre in many modern diets would be alien, might not be tolerated so well intestinally and may therefore be a cause of at least some modern gastrointestinal issues.
Insoluble fibre is also high in plant oligosaccharides and these oligosaccharides are very often retained by the gut as food for intestinal microbiota – therefore insoluble fibre can also promote health of gut bacteria. Intestinal flora is very important for human health; as an example, much of the body’s defences against infection are based on the outputs from such flora. More recent research has indicated that gut microbiota may also be related to moods and mental health – this is a complex subject probably suited by another dedicated review.
There appears to be no upper limit to the amount of insoluble fibre which humans can consume – perhaps 30-50g a day should be adequate for most people. Any more may cause exuberant flatulence and require some people to always remain within a 10 metre range of a toilet facility. Nevertheless, it is quite plausible that insoluble fibre can also play a part in the reduction of gastrointestinal cancers (especially in women) as noted by the AHS-2 study.
At this point, it should be noted that both the AHS-2 and EPIC-Oxford dietary studies can also be regarded as proxies for research in dietary fibre, though they both actually did not initially record dietary fibre content in detail.
Subsequent analysis of both studies found that the US-based AHS-2 subjects ingested much more fibre as well as more antioxidants (as measured by Vitamin C content) than the UK EPIC-Oxford subjects.

oats
Oats and bran are a good source of soluble fibre. – Marcoverch/VisualHunt
Fibre and/or antioxidants may therefore explain the major difference in mortality between vegetarian subjects compared to regular meat-eaters: AHS-2 found a 12% lower mortality rate for US vegetarians. However, EPIC-Oxford detected no significant differences across all categories for the UK, possibly due to the difference in dietary fibre.
Although one can think that “non-meat eaters” are automatically “vegetarians”, it is quite important to understand that the “vegetarians” in both studies included people who ate meat, dairy and/or fish occasionally – they are not studies of vegans or people who fastidiously avoid all non-plant proteins compared to meat-eaters.
If you take this view, then both studies can also be taken as proxy studies into the impact of eating less meat, simply by comparing the regular meat-eaters against the other categories which ate meat and/or dairy or fish only occasionally.
Viewed in this context, the AHS-2 research is particularly interesting as the irregular meat eaters seem to be more protected against early mortality and various diseases, especially CHD. But – why is this mortality pattern not observed in EPIC-Oxford?
An analysis of AHS-2 against EPIC-Oxford of ONLY the general meat eaters might help explain the difference in mortality rates (bearing in mind that correlation does not necessarily mean causation).
One striking difference is that Americans eat around 50% more meat per person compared to the United Kingdom, according to the FAO statistics for 2013.
There are many reasons why Americans eat so much more meat – partly it is a cultural issue, partly it is an economic issue as meat is comparatively cheap there due to generous subsidies (which can make various vegetables more expensive than meat).
Also, the US food industry appears to emphasise the nutritional importance of meat and downplays the fact that meat is not required every day. By this simple (and admittedly crudely inferential) analysis, the joint results do appear to indicate that a reduction in meat consumption does reduce mortality – people who ate around 50% more meat die 12% more often compared to people who ate less meat, even if they are all general meat eaters.
The next part will cover intestinal flora, how human mothers nourish the guts of their babies and why certain dietary issues may be attributed to the wrong sources.
http://www.star2.com/food/2017/11/13/vegetarian/

Wednesday, 11 January 2017

How Much Protein Is Too Much?

Precision Matters When It Comes to Protein

Many people aren't aware of the serious drawbacks of eating this way, yet they flock to it in droves because it does help reduce appetite and may slow the digestion of carbs. But you must know about its caveat: it stimulates a pathway in your body that plays a crucial role in the aging process and cancer formation.

December 19, 2016 


excess protein in the diet

Story at-a-glance

  • Low-carb, high-protein diets may help you lose weight while sparing muscle, but excessive protein also has significant drawbacks that may outweigh this benefit
  • Eating more protein than your body actually needs stimulates the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) — a pathway involved in the aging process and cancer formation
  • Protein also affects your insulin and leptin. As a result, a low-carb, high-protein diet may still be troublesome if you’re struggling with obesity, insulin resistance or diabetes
By Dr. Mercola
The low-carb diet made its initial appearance as a weight loss aid some 25 years ago. At the time, most people recommended replacing non-vegetable carbohydrates with high amounts of protein, and these low-carb, high-protein diets (such as Atkins) worked quite well for the purpose of shedding weight.
Indeed, eating more protein is still frequently recommended for weight loss as it does help reduce appetite,1 and may slow down digestion of carbohydrates, thereby preventing harmful blood sugar spikes.2 The problem with this recommendation is that eating too much protein also has significant drawbacks.
One of the most significant problems you may encounter when eating excess protein is that it stimulates the most important nutrient signaling pathway in your body: mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin). 
MTOR plays a crucial role in the aging process and cancer formation. Unfortunately, to this day, few people are fully aware of and understand this influence.
When the mTOR pathway is stimulated, it promotes growth — including cancer cell growth — rather than regeneration. MTOR activation also inhibits cellular and mitochondrial authophagy, or the destruction of damaged cells and mitochondria.
When you limit protein to just what your body needs, mTOR remains largely inhibited, which helps minimize your chances of cancer growth.
A far healthier strategy is to replace unnecessary net carbs with healthy fats, as fats do not have the adverse metabolic effects associated with both carbs and protein. Unfortunately, dietary fat has been wrongly demonized as promoting obesity and heart disease.
I've discussed the benefits of diets high in healthy fats and the dangers of excess protein for a number of years now, and the notion that restricting protein and increasing fat are important factors can affect health is finally starting to gain recognition.  

Too Much of a Good Thing Can Be Bad

Protein loading has been touted as a great way to improve muscle building and facilitate weight loss, resulting in a wide array of protein-rich foods and supplements, from shakes to snack bars that provide hefty amounts.
Granted, your body certainly requires protein. Amino acids from protein are the primary building blocks for muscles, bones and enzymes. As you age, and during pregnancy, consuming sufficient amounts of high-quality protein is especially important.
That said, there IS an upper limit to how much protein your body can actually use, and anything exceeding that requirement will simply activate mTOR, thereby speeding up the aging process and related health problems, including your risk for cancer and neurodegenerative diseases.
The recommended daily intake (RDI) is 46 grams of protein for women and 56 grams for men — an amount easily achieved by eating a moderate amount of meat, fish, dairy, beans or nuts every day. For example, 1 cup of chopped chicken will provide you with 44 grams of protein.
Meanwhile, American men consume close to 100 grams of protein each day.3 Eating nearly double the protein most need for optimal health can have significant adverse health consequences. As reported by The New York Times:4
"'People think carbs are the enemy, protein is your friend,' said Eleanor Dwyer, a research analyst … and 'that any health concerns are overblown.' Experts note, however, that there is only so much protein the body can use.
'The body only digests and absorbs a certain amount of protein at every meal,' about 20 to 40 grams, said Jim White, a registered dietitian and exercise physiologist who spoke on behalf of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics.
'People think that if they fill up with protein, it will be a magic bullet, whether for weight loss or to get in better shape and build muscle — but that's not proving to be true. You can eat 300 grams of protein a day, but that doesn't mean you'll put on more muscle than someone who takes in 120 grams a day' … "

High Protein Adversely Affects Your Insulin and Leptin

In addition to stimulating mTOR, protein also affects your insulin, and leptin. Dietary fats do not affect any of these. As a result, a low-carb, high-protein diet may still be troublesome if you're struggling with obesity, insulin resistance or diabetes.
Indeed, many studies have found an association between chronic high protein intake and an elevated risk of diabetes.
This was recently demonstrated in a short-term trial5 published in Cell Reports, in which older women who lost weight on a high-protein diet failed to reap the benefits typically associated with weight loss, such as improved insulin sensitivity. As noted by the authors:
"High-protein intake during weight loss therapy is often recommended because it reduces the loss of lean tissue mass. However, high-protein intake could have adverse effects on metabolic function, because protein ingestion reduces postprandial insulin sensitivity."

High Protein Improves Fat Loss, but Not Insulin Resistance

In this study, the researchers compared the effects of 0.8 grams of protein per kilo (kg) per day versus 1.2 grams of protein/kg/day on muscle insulin action in obese postmenopausal women.
"We found that high-protein intake reduced the weight loss-induced decline in lean tissue mass by ∼45 percent," the researchers noteIn other words, while both groups lost the same amount of weight overall, the high protein group lost more body fat than muscle mass.
"However, high-protein intake also prevented the weight loss-induced improvements in muscle insulin signaling and insulin-stimulated glucose uptake, as well as the weight loss-induced adaptations in oxidative stress and cell structural biology pathways.
Our data demonstrate that the protein content of a weight loss diet can have profound effects on metabolic function and underscore the importance of considering dietary macronutrient composition during weight loss therapy for people with obesity."
Dan Pardi published a long analysis6 of the Cell Reports study, dissecting the reasons why women on a high-protein diet would lose higher amounts of body fat yet experience worsening insulin sensitivity.


Pardi is a proponent of high-protein diets, and while he manages to make a case to still support high protein while acknowledging that the study clearly showed worse insulin resistance in those who consumed higher protein levels, he completely fails to address protein's impact on mTOR.
This should be a serious consideration for anyone interested in optimizing their health. After all, why trade weight loss for an increased risk of cancer when you can lose weight without taking such risks?

Chronic High-Protein Diets May Raise Your Risk for Cancer

It may not be entirely intuitive, but eating more protein than your body actually requires will convert most of the excess into sugar, and then body fat. This is very similar to what happens when you eat a high-carb diet.
Increased blood sugar levels can also feed pathogenic bacteria and yeast, such as Candida albicans (candidiasis). It can also serve as fuel for cancer cell growth. As noted by Dr. Walter Willett, chairman of the department of nutrition at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health:7
"One of the benefits and concerns about high protein intake, especially animal protein, is that it tends to make cells multiply faster. That's good in early life, when you're a growing child. But in later life, this is one of the fundamental processes that increase the risk of cancer."
In one 2014 study8 involving more than 6,380 American adults over the age of 50, those who ate a diet high in animal protein:
  • Had a 75 percent increase in overall mortality over the course of 18 years
  • Were 400 percent more likely to die of cancer than those who restricted their animal protein. (According to the authors, this association vanished when the protein was derived from plants)
  • Had a 500 percent increase in diabetes across all ages
The only people who benefited from a high-protein diet were seniors over the age of 65. In this age group, high amounts of animal protein were associated with reduced cancer and overall mortality risk. According to the authors:
"These results suggest that low protein intake during middle age followed by moderate- to high-protein consumption in old adults may optimize healthspan and longevity."
Again, while none of the media articles reporting these findings delve into the actual mechanism behind this phenomenon, the cancer connection to excess protein is directly related to the stimulation of mTOR. This is partially related to the fact that the mTOR pathway has only recently been discovered and is not widely appreciated by clinicians or the media.

Why Protein Cycling May Be Helpful

Other studies have shown that high-protein diets fail to preserve muscle mass over the long term. It can also put your health at risk by stressing your kidneys,9 thereby raising your risk for kidney disease. Dehydration10 and leaching of important bone minerals are also risks associated with chronic excessive protein intake.
Newer studies have also shed light on how protein restriction impacts longevity. While animal studies have established that calorie restriction promotes longevity, the latest science suggests this phenomenon may actually be the result of reduced protein intake — specifically, reduced intake of the amino acid methionine, which is high in meats.11 In fact, animal research12,13 has revealed protein restriction alone may increase lifespan by as much as 20 percent.
Other studies suggest it may be the balance of amino acids that is the key, especially with other amino acids like glycine that may actually help lower methionine levels.
How can you use this information to your advantage? One helpful strategy would be to implement protein cycling, where you intermittently cycle through periods of low protein and higher protein intake. Replicating the ancestral pattern of going through feasts and famines can help normalize your amino acid levels. That is one of the benefits of intermittent fastingBone broth may be particularly useful as it is especially high in glycine that helps lower your methionine.

How Much Protein Is Too Much?

According to the Institute of Medicine, you need at least 10 percent of your daily calories from protein, but not more than 35 percent.
However, research14 by Valter Longo, Ph.D., professor of gerontology and biological sciences at the University of Southern California, shows that people who get 20 percent or more of their daily calories from protein have a 400 percent higher cancer rate compared to those who get only 10 percent of daily calories from protein. The general recommendations for protein are:15,16
Babies: 10 grams/day
School-aged children: 19 to 34 grams/day
Teenage boys: up to 52 grams/day
Teenage girls: 46 grams/day
Adult men: 56 grams/day
Adult women: 46 grams/day (pregnant and breastfeeding women: 71 grams/day)
However, research suggests specificity and precision are really key when it comes to protein, and since the majority of Americans are overweight, I prefer using a more precise formula that calculates your protein requirement based on LEAN bodyweight (i.e. muscle weight) only. This is far more relevant to your biological needs than age and gender.17
This formula calls for about 0.5 gram of protein per pound of lean body mass (or for the Europeans: 1 gram per kg of lean body mass). Pregnant women and those who are aggressively exercising or competing should have about 25 percent more.
To determine your lean body mass, simply subtract your percent body fat from 100. For example, if you have 20 percent body fat, then you have 80 percent lean body mass. Just multiply that percentage (in this case, 0.8) by your current weight to get your lean body mass in pounds or kilos. In the above example, if you weighed 160 pounds, 0.8 multiplied by 160 equals 128 pounds of lean body mass. Using the "0.5 gram of protein" rule, you would need about 64 grams of protein per day.

Translating Ideal Protein Requirements into Foods

Substantial amounts of protein can be found in meat, fish, eggs, dairy products, legumes, nuts and seeds. Some vegetables, such as broccoli, also contain generous amounts of protein.18 To determine whether or not you're getting too much protein, simply calculate your body's requirement based on your lean body mass, as described above, and write down everything you eat for a few days. Then, calculate the amount of daily protein you've consumed from all sources.
If you're currently averaging a lot more than the optimal 0.5 gram of protein per pound of lean body mass, adjust downward accordingly. You could use the chart below or simply Google the food you want to know and you will quickly find the grams of protein in that food.
Red meat, pork, poultry and seafood average 6 to 9 grams of protein per ounce.
An ideal amount for most people would be a 3-ounce serving of meat or seafood (not 9- or 12- ounce steaks!), which will provide about 18 to 27 grams of protein
Eggs contain about 6 to 8 grams of protein per egg. An omelet made from two eggs would give you about 12 to 16 grams of protein.
If you add cheese, you need to calculate that protein in as well (check the label of your cheese)
Seeds and nuts contain on average 4 to 8 grams of protein per quarter cup
Cooked beans average about 7 to 8 grams per half cup
Cooked grains average 5 to 7 grams per cup
Most vegetables contain about 1 to 2 grams of protein per ounce
Beware that many nuts, while high in healthy fats, are also high in protein. Macadamia nuts have the highest fat and lowest protein and carb content of any nut, making them an ideal choice for snacking. Pecans and pine nuts are also high in healthy fats while being lower in protein.

Be Mindful of Quality When Selecting Meats

The quality of the meat you eat is as important as the quantity. As a general rule, the only meat I recommend eating is organically raised grass-fed and grass-finished meats.
The same goes for dairy and eggs. Meat from pastured or grass-fed animals is far superior to that from animals raised in confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs), which is frequently contaminated with herbicides, pesticides, hormones, antibiotics and other drugs, as well as GMOs from the genetically engineered (GE) grains these animals typically consume.
Researchers are even suggesting that CAFO beef may be spreading slow-acting prion infection causing Alzheimer's disease. The damage is identical to that seen in Mad Cow disease, except for the rate of speed with which the infection destroys your brain and causes death.
In 2009, a joint research project between the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and Clemson University determined a total of 10 key areas where grass-fed is better for human health than grain-fed beef. In a side-by-side comparison, they determined that grass-fed beef was superior in the following ways:19
Higher in total omega-3s
A healthier ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 fatty acids (1.65 vs 4.84)
Higher in CLA (cis-9 trans-11), a potential cancer fighter
Higher in vaccenic acid (which can be transformed into CLA)
Higher in the B-vitamins thiamin and riboflavin
Higher in the minerals calcium, magnesium and potassium
Higher in vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol)
Higher in beta-carotene

The Type of Fats You Eat Influence Your Mortality Risk

As mentioned, another part of the healthy diet equation is replacing net carbs with healthy fats rather than protein. Fats will not stimulate mTOR or raise your insulin or leptin levels. However, all fats are not made equal, and as recently revealed by Harvard researchers, replacing bad fats with healthy ones can reduce your risk of dying by more than 25 percent.20 As reported by CNN:21
"… [A] new study from Harvard … analyzed the eating habits of more than 126,000 men and women over a 32-year period. And some fats were better than others from [sic] protecting against specific diseases … Omega-3 fatty acids (those found in fish and some nuts and seeds) can help strengthen your heart and possibly your mental well-being, too. And the monounsaturated fats in olive oil (as well as nuts and avocados) can also cut your risk of heart disease …
Previous thinking also cautioned against foods high in cholesterol … but that's no longer the case. Dietary cholesterol doesn't necessarily raise the 'bad' cholesterol levels in your body … Instead, it can elevate HDL or the 'good' kind. One caveat: Trans fats and linoleic acid (found in vegetable oils) can harm your health.
So steer clear of partially hydrogenated and hydrogenated oils, like canola, as well as packaged foods like cream-filled candies, frozen pizza and margarine. Sometimes, the nutrition label doesn't show trans fat, so look for hydrogenated oils on the ingredients list."

Normalize Your Protein Intake to Optimize Your Health

Pinning down the ideal amount of protein can be tricky business, with plenty of variables adding to the confusion. Still, I believe calculating your need based on lean body weight is a good start, and 0.5 grams of protein per pound of lean body mass is likely sufficient for most. Athletes, pregnant or breastfeeding women and possibly the elderly may need around 25 percent more.
I strongly encourage you to do a careful analysis of precisely how much protein you are eating every day. The results may surprise you, as I'm sure many are consuming more than 100 grams per day, and very few people would need that much. You would have to be a 6 foot 4 inch, 225-pound athlete with 10 percent body fat to need that much. If you are a competitive athlete, higher protein levels may help you achieve your athletic goals but will likely have a negative impact on your long-term health.  
And remember, while higher protein may aid weight loss, the drawbacks are manifold, and can easily outweigh this benefit. A ketogenic diet is likely a far safer alternative if you need to lose weight. Shifting over to higher quality protein sources is also important, as factory farmed animal foods come with drawbacks that go beyond the issue of protein.
Optimizing protein intake is a crucial part in getting your body to burn fat as your primary fuel, but I go into far greater detail on how to do this in my new book, "Fat for Fuel," which comes out in May 2017.
http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2016/12/19/excess-protein-danger.aspx