L7Death
L7Death t1_ixmtwcz wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Researchers have found that lab mice are more likely to survive a flu infection if they are fed grain-based foods rather than processed food: after being infected with influenza, all of those fed the highly processed diet died, all the other have recovered by giuliomagnifico
There was just a post about global bacteria infections leading to death.
People die from colds and flus all the time, especially people with compromised immune systems.
L7Death t1_ixmtbyf wrote
Reply to comment by Darkhorseman81 in Researchers have found that lab mice are more likely to survive a flu infection if they are fed grain-based foods rather than processed food: after being infected with influenza, all of those fed the highly processed diet died, all the other have recovered by giuliomagnifico
Got any DOIs handy?
L7Death t1_ix20mq0 wrote
L7Death t1_iwxnk19 wrote
Reply to comment by DeadNeko in Dark Matter as an Intergalactic Heat Source. Spectra from quasars suggest that intergalactic gas may have been heated by a form of dark matter called dark photons. by MistWeaver80
That's not pure science. That's a lot of math.
The funny thing about math is that various forms can be remarkably similar. The same math can explain completely different things. The equations for gravitational lensing are equivalent to basic refraction, for instance. Perhaps there's no gravitational lensing. Perhaps it's just particles acting as a lense, for instance. Though, that's really besides the point. The point is the same math can describe very different physical phenomenon.
RelMOND is basically as good as LCDM in many ways. Very different approaches with similar results in many cases.
We know we have a dark gravity problem. Gravity is just not very well understood across vast (cosmic to subatomic) scales.
The interesting bit is that by 'fixing gravity' both dark matter and dark energy may become entirely unneeded, or at least significantly reduced in magnitude. That's appealing as it's simpler, ya know, ol occums razor.
Yet our best models (regardless) still fail too frequently. So we still haven't got it right.
L7Death t1_iwetmpk wrote
Reply to comment by Cleistheknees in Aerobic exercise can reduce the risk of metastatic cancer by 72%. According to the researchers, intensity aerobic exercise increases the glucose (sugar) consumption of internal organs, thereby reducing the availability of energy to the tumor. by Wagamaga
Sure.
> For example, 10 of the 24 (42%) clinical studies included in a recent review [1] provide evidence for the anti-tumor effect of KDs, whereas seven (29%) showed no effect and only one study reported a pro-tumor effect of the KD.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5842847/
42 percent sounds better than 1 out of 24.
L7Death t1_ivtua2n wrote
Reply to comment by Faking_Life in The Nazca lines depict people, birds, and even the rare "pampas cat." Get a birds-eye view of these geoglyphs. by novapbs
Building towers of wood would let you get a pretty decent view. Just a few stories up and you can easily overlook a city.
L7Death t1_ivttp5b wrote
Reply to The Nazca lines depict people, birds, and even the rare "pampas cat." Get a birds-eye view of these geoglyphs. by novapbs
I remember learning about these from Illusion Of Gaia for the SNES.
L7Death t1_ivhsrmc wrote
Reply to comment by DecentChanceOfLousy in Private Interests and the Start of Fluoride-Supplemented High-Carbohydrate Nutritional Guidelines — Internal documents show that private interests motivated the events which led these expert panels to engage in pivotal scientific reversals. by Meatrition
So it's not just "dental associations".
Cool.
L7Death t1_ivdxhb4 wrote
Reply to comment by B0risTheManskinner in Private Interests and the Start of Fluoride-Supplemented High-Carbohydrate Nutritional Guidelines — Internal documents show that private interests motivated the events which led these expert panels to engage in pivotal scientific reversals. by Meatrition
I would still use fluoride toothpaste, regardless.
However, we should probably keep it out of the water supply.
L7Death t1_ivdwy2r wrote
Reply to comment by DecentChanceOfLousy in Private Interests and the Start of Fluoride-Supplemented High-Carbohydrate Nutritional Guidelines — Internal documents show that private interests motivated the events which led these expert panels to engage in pivotal scientific reversals. by Meatrition
Maybe you should actually read the full article or at least the second section.
Because it really seems like you didn't.
L7Death t1_iv8thd4 wrote
Reply to comment by buck54321 in Plant-Based Foods May Reduce HF Mortality, Study Suggests by BoundariesAreFun
Heart failure. The article talks about heart failure, repeatedly.
> "[I]nclusion of some ALA-rich foods, such as walnuts, in the diet of any individual, whether they have HF or not, might translate into [cardiovascular] benefits, besides the putative effect on [heart failure]," Sala-Vila said, according to Medscape.
It's also found in the article.
L7Death t1_iszfd8b wrote
Reply to comment by GladstoneBrookes in Protein quality of soy and the effect of processing: A quantitative review. This quantitative review confirms that the majority of soy products have high protein quality scores. by grandlewis
That's a lot of protein!
Various studies have shown high-quality protein like whey maxes out MPS at a mere 20g in healthy young men. That's equivalent to about 3 large whole chicken eggs, including the yolk as it contains half of the aminos.
Whole eggs beat egg whites: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30133322/
Soy takes nearly twice that amount in some studies. Although if you mix plant proteins to get a better complete (aminos) protein then 30g of blended (one study used wheat, corn and pea protein isolates) isolated plant proteins can match 20g of isolated whey.
Whey also promotes prolonged post-exercise phosphorylation vs soy (4 vs 2 hours): https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4324640/
You're link is looking at a fairly high protein intake(like 25 percent). So MPS is going to be maxed either way. With only high-quality animal proteins we can likely get the same results with 10 percent protein, and avoid the extra oxidation and urea production from excessive protein consumption.
L7Death t1_isr7nao wrote
Reply to comment by dvdmaven in Dietary Essential Amino Acid Intake Is Associated with High Muscle Strength in Korean Older Adults — High muscle strength was significantly enhanced with increased total EAA intake from animal sources by Meatrition
Well, if you look at the amounts of protein needed from various sources to maximize MPS, animal sources of proteins have huge advantages over plant sources of proteins. This is true even when those proteins are isolated.
L7Death t1_is4ycqk wrote
Reply to comment by BruiseHound in Meat, vegetables and health — interpreting the evidence: Although questions remain about several diet and disease associations, current evidence supports dietary guidelines to limit red meat and increase vegetable intake. by Meatrition
The problem isn't saturated fat.
Beef fat is predominantly monounsaturated, and maybe 40 percent saturated. Chicken fat is like 30 percent saturated, even fish fat is 20 percent saturated. Our bodies make saturated fats constantly, and cholesterol too.
Ancel Keys was a quack. Minnesota and Sydney RCTs proved replacing saturated fats with PUFA increased all-cause mortality. The official stance of the AHA and other orgs are pushing advice that's known to be harmful, and they've been doing it for decades. Animal fats are healthy in moderation. Ultraprocessed foods (like seed oils or sugar or white whatever) aren't -- especially not at the ubiquitous levels found in western diets. Processed foods cause metabolic disorders, especially when they become staples.
Too many examples of peoples all around the world that have thrived on very high meat consumption with extreme amounts of saturated animal fats and yet didn't have metabolic disorders or CHD. Read some of Dr. Mary Enig's work if you want examples.
L7Death t1_is4vmrq wrote
Reply to comment by matt_the_hat in Methane Emissions From Oil and Gas Wells Are Much Higher Than Thought, Study Shows by raulbloodwurth
Methane is measured in parts per billion though. While CO2 is measured in parts per million. Orders of magnitude and all that.... Methane simply doesn't accumulate like CO2, since methane becomes CO2 and water by hydroxyl reactions in the atmosphere within a decade.
L7Death t1_iy8uvtv wrote
Reply to comment by Krogsly in "Green Mediterranean diet” high in polyphenols and fiber can reduce that visceral fat. After 18 months, those subjected to the diet saw a visceral fat reduction of 14 percent; eaters of the Mediterranean Diet saw a 7 percent drop. Visceral fat among “healthy eaters” was reduced by 4.5 percent by Wagamaga
People aren't all the same. Metabolism differs between genotypes. Some people are terrible at fat absorption, it's kind of a super power according to some lipidologists. They can eat a high fat, low carb diet and have perfectly healthy cholesterol and triglycerides and so on. Others hyper absorb fat. Low fat, high carb diets are probably best in that case.
Then 'normal' people have metabolic flexibility. In healthy people the gut lining expunges excessive fats and they're excreted. In low absorbers the gut lining often doesn't even uptake it, and it's excreted. In high absorbers the gut uptakes fat readily but 'doesn't get the signal' to release fat back into the lumen, so excessive fats move into the lymphatic system or directly into the bloodstream, possibly wreaking havoc.