Showing posts with label Fibre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fibre. Show all posts

Saturday, 26 July 2014

Some thoughts on the essentiality of dietary carbohydrates.

I didn't know that there's a watch strap called Essentiality. I do, now.
From http://svpply.com/item/3229602/Swatch_Skin_Collection_Silver_Essentiality


This is a book-marking post for thoughts I had in https://www.facebook.com/TheFatEmperor/posts/1442430506020812.

"The human body does not need carbohydrates from an external food source, because it is capable of very precisely and correctly assembling its own amounts of glucose that is needed in very small amounts for auxiliary and specialized functions." - Igor Butorski.

1) It's not precise. See How eating sugar & starch can lower your insulin needs.

2) It's not enough to fuel sustained medium-intensity exercise for everybody EDIT: if there's insufficient protein intake. See "Funny turns": What they aren't and what they might be and Everyone is Different.

From Blood Sugar is Stable:-


After liver glycogen has been depleted in starvation or on Nutritional Ketosis (Ketogenic Diets with less than 14% of total energy from Protein), total glucose production from liver & kidneys is ~100g/day.

From It's all in a day's work (as measured in Joules), the body oxidises carbohydrate at a rate exceeding ~4g/hour at exercise intensities exceeding ~25%, on a LCHF diet. This is unsustainable.

EDIT: If protein is consumed, total glucose production increases, up to a maximum of ~400g/day.

3) It's wasteful. Glucose production from protein converts ~50% of the most expensive macronutrient (protein) into the cheapest macronutrient (carbohydrate). It creates expensive urine, as the nitrogen part of amino acids is detoxified by being converted into urea by the liver and then wee'ed out by the kidneys.

4) Using the above argument, the human body does not need saturated fats & monounsaturated fats from an external food source, because it is capable of very precisely and correctly assembling its own amounts of saturated fats & monounsaturated fats (out of carbohydrate) that are needed in very small amounts for auxiliary and specialized functions.

If we consume only Essential Fatty Acids, Essential Amino Acids, Vitamins, Minerals, Fibre/Fiber, Water & Anutrients, there won't be much to eat. Also, there won't be a source of chemical energy to generate heat energy & mechanical energy. That's what dietary carbohydrates & fats are for!

Respiratory Exchange Ratio/Respiratory Quotient (RER/RQ) varies with carbohydrate & fat intake, as the body preferentially oxidises the fuel that's most readily available, when it's working properly. If it's not working properly, due to Insulin Resistance (IR), fix the IR rather than kludge the diet (by eating LCHF) to compensate for it. See Insulin Resistance: Solutions to problems for how to do this.

RER/RQ varies with Exercise Intensity.
Low-intensity exercise results in mostly fats being oxidised.
High-intensity exercise results in mostly carbohydrates being oxidised.
Medium-intensity exercise results in a mixture of fats & carbohydrates being oxidised.

Friday, 29 March 2013

The Comfy Chair?

Because nobody expects...


I'm writing this post lounging like a lounge-lizard on a comfy three-seater sofa. When I'm driving from A to B, I'm sitting in a comfy chair. Basically, I have a cushy life. I go for a walk in the evenings and I go to many music events, but as I'm (a bit of) an information junkie, I spend many happy hours on-line, lounging on my sofa. My bad.

Thanks to technology and energy, many of us have labour-saving devices and horseless carriages. Therefore, many of us don't burn much energy from doing hard physical work and from having to walk everywhere.

Therefore, to maintain energy balance, many of us have to eat little food energy to maintain a reasonable weight and body composition. To get all of the vitamins*, minerals, fibre/fiber etc required for good health from little food energy requires the consumption of foods with high nutrient densities. You know where this is going, don't you?

*Except for Vitamin D, which requires sensible sun exposure between the end of March and the end of September when your shadow is shorter than you are.

If you enjoy irony, see What Did You Expect? Coca-Cola's Newest Anti-Obesity Ad Blames Chairs, Not Coke.

P.S. According to the BBC TV series "QI", the Spanish Inquisition gave thirty days notice of their arrival. Therefore, according to "QI", everybody expected the Spanish Inquisition!

P.P.S. As a cushy life results in muscles burning carbohydrate at a low rate, sedentary people are better-off eating less carbohydrates. See 10 Rules New Low-Carb Dieters Should Follow.

Wednesday, 30 May 2012

PPP - another bijou rant-ette.

Blame it on the hot weather and screaming kids! :-D
From http://www.thamesvalleytango.co.uk/images/Rant.jpg

PPP stands for Piss Poor Parenting.

Why, oh why, oh why do some feckless parents allow children to dictate what they eat? As if children know what's good for them! At an event I attended recently, "Johnny*" was given a plate of chicken drummers (mechanically-recovered chicken formed into the rough shape of chicken drumsticks and coated with breadcrumbs) and oven chips. I asked Johnny if he would like a beefburger, sausage or pork steak. He replied. "I don't like them". He only wanted manufactured crap. Seriously, WTH?

When I was a lad, I was given the same food as my parents. If I didn't eat it, I went without. I ate it!
Nowadays, "children's menus" in restaurants (I'm being quite generous in the use of the word restaurant) consist of lots of manufactured crap that children like. Unlike veggies & fruit, this crap contains very little fibre/fiber or Magnesium.

Is it any wonder that childhood constipation is a problem? Why are children being given PEG or even Lactulose, when there's a much better solution - Epsom Salts (which contains 10% Magnesium by weight). The brain needs Magnesium to remain cool, calm and collected i.e. function properly. The brain also needs EPA, DHA and Vitamin D3 to function properly. Many kids don't like oily fish, so they won't eat it. It's not rocket science to purée some sardines or wild red salmon with some Bolognese/Sweet chilli/w.h.y. sauce so that they won't notice it. Many kids play indoors or are smothered in sunblock when they do go outdoors, so they get little or no Vitamin D3. Is it any wonder that childhood ADD & ADHD is much more common? Medication and psychotherapy? Seriously, WTH?

See Effect of MAGNE-B6 on the clinical and biochemical manifestations of the syndrome of attention deficit and hyperactivity in children.

Supplementation of polyunsaturated fatty acids, magnesium and zinc in children seeking medical advice for attention-deficit/hyperactivity problems - an observational cohort study.

Moderators of treatment response in adults with ADHD treated with a vitamin-mineral supplement.


When I was a lad, there were a couple of show-offs in my class at school, but nobody behaved like "Jimmy*" (physically and mentally hyperactive with bad behaviour, screaming and shouting). Johnny was also badly behaved, but not as bad as Jimmy. The parents at the event seemed perfectly happy that, every day, their children had to be given "uppers" (e.g. Ritalin) to help them concentrate during the day and "downers" to help them sleep at night. Seriously, WTH?

I will now take a deep breath and count to twenty. There, that's better!

*Names changed.

Friday, 20 April 2012

How eating sugar & starch can lower your insulin needs.

This is a bookmarking post. Jason Sandeman is a chef who had a couple of web-sites at Well Done Chef! and Jason Sandeman — Real Food For Your Life. He has Latent Autoimmune Diabetes of Adulthood (LADA), which has resulted in a total loss of his pancreatic beta cells which means that he has to inject insulin.

Now, it's generally believed in low-carb circles (and by myself) that people with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM) should minimise their intake of sugary & starchy carbohydrates as these promote wild fluctuations in blood glucose. See The problem with Diabetes.

Jason wrote the following comment on Richard Nikoley's blog. The relevant part is as follows:-
"Even more weird – now that I have introduced the starches into the diet – I have actually got better control now. I thought my insulin needs would go up – but they haven’t. They’ve gone down."

To which I replied:-"How about this for an explanation? You now have a well-controlled glucose input to your circulation via diet, which has suppressed the poorly-controlled glucose input to your circulation via hepatic glucose production."

Hepatic glucose production (HGP) is increased by Glucagon, Cortisol & Adrenaline/Epinephrine. These are secreted as blood glucose level falls below certain values in order to keep our brains alive. See Blood Glucose, Insulin & Diabetes.

As keeping our brains alive is rather important (!), the mechanism is fairly crude in operation and blood glucose can overshoot in a positive direction, as a bit of glycation is less harmful than brain death. See "Funny turns": What they aren't and what they might be. Hyperglycaemia requires insulin to lower blood glucose back to the normal range.

Therefore, eating some (but not too much) sugar & starch can result in lower blood glucose level and lower insulin secretion. Eating fibre/fiber (a carbohydrate) is also good for keeping blood glucose low, as only just mentioned in Fiber and Insulin Sensitivity. Ain't the human body weird?"

Fiber and Insulin Sensitivity.

Bluddy Americans. It's Fibre! But anyway....

Stabby the Raccoon posted the following study in a comment on CarbSane's blog. I thought that it was so interesting that I am linking to it here.

Fiber and Insulin Sensitivity.

This study has built-in cognitive dissonance.

The first Fig. suggests that cereal fibre is associated with a much lower RR for Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) and that fruit & veggie fibre aren't.

Schulze et al. 2007: Cereal Fiber RR = 0.6 - 0.7. Fruit Fiber RR = 0.9 - 1.05. Vegetable Fiber RR = 0.95 - 1.15 approx.

The next table suggests otherwise.

Andersson et al., 2007: Whole grain diet contained 112 g/d of whole grain, 18 g fiber. No effect of whole grains on insulin sensitivity.

Ebeling et al., 1988: 5 g/d granulated guar. No effect on insulin sensitivity.

Johnston et al., 2010: Resistant starch supplement -40g/d. Improved insulin sensitivity with resistant starch.

Landin et al., 1992: 30 g/d granulated guar, given in 3-10 g doses. Improved insulin sensitivity with guar diet.

Maki et al., 2011: High-resistant starch diet- 30 g/d, Low-resistant starch diet- 15 g/d. Improved insulin sensitivity with both resistant starch diets, but effect only reached statistical significance for men.

Nilsson et al., 2008: White bread enriched with barley fiber and 8g resistant starch, Barley kernel based bread. Improved glucose tolerance with resistant starch.

Pouteau et al., 2010: 28 g/d acetogenic fibers (acacia gum and pectin). No effect on insulin sensitivity.

Robertson et al., 2003: High-resistant starch diet- 60 g/d. Improved insulin sensitivity with resistant starch.

Weickert et al., 2006: Fiber-enriched with 31.2 g insoluble fiber. Improved insulin sensitivity with increased insoluble fiber.

In conclusion, the resistant starches found in high-amylose rices such as Basmati, refrigerated boiled rice & boiled potatoes, also rye & barley breads are beneficial in terms of reducing your RR for T2DM. Watch out, though. Too much dietary resistant starch can cause colic, flatulence & diarrhoea if your intestinal bacteria are knackered. You want fermentation to short-chain fatty acids to occur, not osmotic laxation! See Genetics of Food Intolerance.

Saturday, 23 January 2010

Ghrelin, the other "in"

Having just written about Leptin, it's Ghrelin's turn now. When your stomach is empty, serum ghrelin level is high and when your stomach is full, serum ghrelin level is low. Interestingly, high serum ghrelin has a beneficial effect on the hippocampus (responsible for learning stuff) so do your studying when you're hungry!

As a full stomach reduces serum ghrelin and thus reduces appetite, anything that keeps the stomach full for longer reduces appetite for longer. This is where enterogastrones come in. The most useful one in terms of appetite control is cholecystokinin, the secretion of which is stimulated by proteins & fats. This is one reason why diets high in proteins & fats keep you full for longer. Another useful filler is fibre/fiber, of course. As shown on the BBC programme "The Truth about Food", blending a meal with water or some other low-calorie liquid like soup also slows stomach emptying.

Finally, sleep deprivation raises ghrelin so I must try harder to spend less time on my computer and get some shut-eye.

Friday, 15 January 2010

An apple a day...

Once upon a time, there were Crab Apples. They were extremely sour (except perhaps for the Chestnut Crabapple) and contained a lot of Pectin, a soluble fibre/fiber. Then, we clever humans selectively bred apple trees over a large number of years and voila! We have the modern-day apple. Note that this contains on average 10.4g of sugar/100g of apple and only 2.4g of fibre/100g of apple. The British Dental Association claims that the Pink Lady, Braeburn and Fuji contain so much sugar that they cause tooth decay.

Different types of fruit vary hugely in their sugar content. Some fruits (blueberries & cranberries) also contain mannose. Bananas also contain starch, which turns into sugars as the banana changes colour from green to yellow to black.

Don't eat/drink too much fructose, as that goes straight to your liver where it tops-up liver glycogen and, once your liver glycogen stores are full, overspills as triglycerides a.k.a. fats into your liver & blood.

For more on fructose, see Sugar: The Bitter Truth by Robert H. Lustig, M.D.

As glucose and fructose have very different effects on the body, this is a situation where "a calorie isn't a calorie".

Thursday, 29 January 2009

So, when & where did it all go wrong?

No, I'm not talking about Demand Five! I'm talking about us, modern man & woman. We have improved hygiene, clean water & food, modern medicine, antibiotics, antivirals etc. We should be enjoying good health and vitality into our nineties. We're not, though. Degenerative diseases like Type 2 Diabetes, Coronary Heart Disease, Cancer, Dementia, IBS etc are afflicting increasing numbers of people (including youngsters) and are even starting to reduce our longevity statistics. Why?

On one side of the fence are the anti-animal fat brigade who claim that animal fats are the cause of all our health problems and that we should all be eating more vegetable fats and reducing our cholesterol.

On the other side of the fence are the anti-carb brigade who claim that carbohydrates are the cause of all our health problems and that we should all be eating less carbohydrates and increasing our fat consumption.

I'm sure you can guess where I am. I have the splinters to prove it!

In 1911, hydrogenated vegetable oil (Crisco) entered the marketplace. So, in 1911, fat turned bad! See The rise and fall of Crisco.

Interestingly, rates of Coronary Heart Disease started to rise from 1920, 9 years later. Co-incidence?

Our genes may have not changed much in the last few hundred thousand years, but our lifestyles certainly have. We now live mostly sedentary lives (which makes our muscles less sensitive to insulin). We now live and work mostly indoors (which makes us deficient in Vitamin D).

We now don't eat much oily fish. Our vegetables contain much less omega-3 fat than they used to (to make them stay fresh for longer). Our meat now contains much more omega-6 and much less omega-3 fat than it used to (due to feeding animals on grains). These changes make us deficient in omega-3 fat (which makes our muscles less sensitive to insulin).

We now eat loads of refined carbohydrate (which causes unstable blood glucose & insulin levels) and loads of processed foods (which makes us deficient in Magnesium and fibre/fiber).

As a result of all of the above changes, we have many modern diseases.

Sunday, 21 December 2008

Carbohydrates: Dogs' Doodads or Spawn of Satan?

Depending on which side of the fence you're on, Carbohydrates are either the Dogs' Doodads or the Spawn of Satan. As I get older, I prefer to sit on the fence. Let's start with the basics.


What are Carbohydrates?

Carbohydrates are so named because they have the generic formula (CH2O)n. C is carbon and H2O is water hence Carbo-Hydrate. There are several different types.

1) Sugars. There are monosaccharides, the most common being Glucose (a.k.a. Dextrose), Fructose and Galactose. There are disaccharides, the most common being Sucrose, Lactose and Maltose. Disaccharides are 2 monosaccharides linked by a glycosidic bond formed by a condensation reaction (removal of a water molecule, usually by an enzyme). Disaccharides have to be hydrolysed (have a water molecule added back in, usually by an enzyme) into monosaccharides before they can be absorbed in the gut.
Sugars are simple carbohydrates.

2) Starches. These are chains of glucose molecules linked by glycosidic bonds. Starches have to be hydrolysed into glucose molecules before they can be absorbed. There are unbranched chains like amylose which is also known as resistant starch. There are branched chains like amylopectin and maltodextrin. Glycogen is a branched chain "animal starch" that is synthesised inside muscle and liver cells and which can be rapidly converted back into glucose inside cells.

3) Non-Starch Polysaccharides (NSPs). These are also known as fibre/fiber and there are 2 types: soluble (e.g. pectin, beta-glucan & cellulose) and insoluble (e.g. bran). These aren't absorbed, but gut bacteria can feed on soluble fibre/fiber. Starches and NSPs are complex carbohydrates.

For more information, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carbohydrate

The amount of carbohydrate that someone needs varies from person to person and increases with the intensity and volume of exercise done. See Everyone is Different. What are the best carbs to eat? "Complex" ones from "wholegrain" cereals? Not necessarily.


Simple vs Complex

TV ads for breakfast cereals bang on about the wholegrain goodness of complex carbohydrates releasing energy slowly. The terms "Simple" and "Complex" actually refer purely to the chemical structure of a carbohydrate and have nothing to do with how quickly they turn into blood glucose in the body. The Glycaemic Index (GI) (or Glycemic Index if you're American) relates to how quickly carbohydrates turn into blood glucose in the body. See http://www.mendosa.com/gilists.htm for a list of 750 foods and their GI & GL (GL = Glycaemic LoadGI/100 x carb content per serving). Here are a few extracts. Note: a GI of 55 is low; a GL of 10 is low.

The last three items in the list are all simple carbohydrates. As you can see, some wholegrain complex carbohydrates turn into blood sugar faster than simple carbs. This is because the wholegrains have been ground into powder which is rapidly digested and absorbed, despite the presence of fibre/fiber.

As fructose has such a low GI, does this mean that we can eat as much of it as we like? No! When we eat fructose, it passes from the small intestine into the portal vein and goes straight to the liver. As liver cells contain an enzyme called fructokinase (which has a high affinity for fructose), all dietary fructose is absorbed by the liver where it tops-up liver glycogen. Liver glycogen is also topped-up by glucose (obtained from the digestion of starchy carbohydrates). Once liver glycogen stores are full, any further fructose is converted into fats, which are stored as ectopic liver fat and also exported as triglycerides. High serum triglycerides are heart-unhealthy. See Cholesterol And Coronary Heart Disease.

Why is GI important? When we eat carbohydrates
, they raise blood glucose levels. Pancreatic beta cells secrete a hormone called insulin, which allows more glucose to pass into cells (by moving Glu-T4 transporters inside the cells). When more glucose enters cells, glucose levels in the blood fall. It's a negative feedback loop. For millions of years, we lived on a diet of natural, unrefined carbohydrates and so the secretion of insulin never had to change blood glucose levels very rapidly.

When unnatural, refined, high-GI carbs are eaten, blood glucose levels rise much faster. This results in over-secretion of insulin (hyperinsulinaemia). This shuttles too much glucose into cells and results in.......low blood glucose, followed by low blood insulin. Rapidly-falling and low blood insulin levels cause feelings of severe hunger and cravings to eat more carbs. It's a vicious circle. Hyperinsulinaemia also has other bad effects on the body. See http://www.mercola.com/2001/jul/14/insulin.htm to learn about Insulin and its Metabolic Effects.

GI has a weakness because adding fats and some proteins to high-GI foods lowers the GI but can increase the insulin response. Saturated fats, monounsaturates and omega-6 polyunsaturates raise the insulin response to carbs.

There is another index called the Insulin Index (II). See http://www.mendosa.com/insulin_index.htm.
The II contains a few surprises. Some proteins (e.g. the whey in milk & yoghurt) produce a large insulin response.
Insulinogenic proteins are also glucogenic, so they don't cause low blood glucose.

On the other hand, refrigerating some foods lowers their GI & II by changing the starch in them into resistant starch, even if the food is subsequently re-heated. Rice & potatoes are two such foods.

As the terms "simple" and "complex" are meaningless in terms of carbohydrates' effects in the body, I prefer to use the terms "slow" and "fast". In a nutshell, slow carbs are good and fast carbs are bad. These terms can be applied to proteins, too. Egg is slow and whey is fast. Sticking to mostly slow foods keeps blood glucose and insulin levels stable, which results in better appetite control and better health, too.

It was soaring serum insulin levels that were sending me to sleep after carby meals years ago. Postprandial hyperinsulinaemia results in amino acids from digested foods being shuttled into cells. However, L-tryptophan isn't shuttled into cells, so the level of this amino acid
in the blood rises relative to others. As L-tryptophan competes with other amino acids to cross the blood-brain barrier, now that the competition has been removed, more L-tryptophan enters the brain. It's converted into 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), then serotonin & melatonin. High melatonin levels in the brain cause sleepiness.

So remember, "Right carbs, right amounts, right times."