
Did You Try the Carnivore Diet?
Did you try the carnivore in January? A month of red meat, eggs, and butter? If you did, you probably lost weight. If you lost weight, you felt better. The Carnivore crowd will point to weight loss as proof of superiority.
But did you worry that this might not be the healthiest diet for you long-term? Is it healthy? In short, the answer is no.
Perhaps you remember on a previous podcast, we talked about the beer and sausage diet. On that diet, Evo, the pod god who distributes this podcast, lost weight every month he was on the diet. In addition, his weekly lab work -sorry for all the jabs Evo - improved every week he was on the diet.
Could you argue that drinking beer and eating sausage is a good diet? You could, and that same logic is what the carnivore crowd uses to convince people the carnivore diet has merit.
Simplicity, is Thy Name Carnivore?
What could be simpler than eating a diet of just red meat? Who doesn't like a good steak? If you just eat steak or red meat, you will lose weight. When you lose weight, you will feel better. And your labs might improve. You might think it is paradoxical that your cholesterol level went down - it isn't; that is just a result of giving up junk food and weight loss.
Every diet has a honeymoon phase, where people think they can do the diet "forever."
Then reality comes home:
- The diet becomes boring, and one note
- There is an undeniable increased risk of heart disease and cancer
- Maybe you got hemorrhoids or developed diverticulitis
- Finally, in social situations, you become that person - the one who could only eat red meat - the reverse vegan
FORK U
Today, on Fork U, we will discuss the latest low-carb fad: the Carnivore diet, the denial that goes into those who make up the diet, and the risks of an all-meat diet.
I'm Dr. Terry Simpson, and this is Fork U.
Fork University
Where we make sense of the madness, bust a few myths, and teach you a little about food as medicine.
Carnivore Diet
The carnivore diet, which primarily consists of animal products like meat, fish, and eggs, has become the latest low-carb fad. It is a controversial and extreme dietary approach. Proponents of the carnivore diet claim numerous health benefits. To be clear, the scientific evidence supporting these benefits is limited, and that long-term studies on the effects of the carnivore diet are lacking.
Paul Saladino, Ken Berry, and Shawn Baker are a few doctors who advocate for this diet. And oddly, none of them see private patients, although Saladino and Baker love showing their abs, and spend a lot of time in the gym.
The Biotruth of Evolution
Some claim the natural diet of humans is meat. This is a biotruth.
When someone tells you that “man was meant to eat” this or that – it is part of a logical fallacy known as a biotruth. A biotruth is an argument presented by someone with misunderstood notions of human biology and/or evolution but uses those false arguments to justify their views. In this case, how they eat.
You can extend that logical fallacy out: man was not meant to fly, so we shouldn’t be in airplanes. Primitive man did not have laboratories, so we should not have antibiotics.
You will see biotruth arguments from people who practice carnivore diets, as well as those who practice vegetarian (and vegan) diets. Often with photographs of our jaws and those of our ancestors – or they will say how we have a long or short intestine, and on that basis, we “were meant” to eat in whatever their view is.
As we evolved, were we better as plant eaters or meat eaters? Does it matter? It is an argument based in biotruth.
Paleolithic Man and Biotruth
The carnivore diet is based on the premise that man had evolved during the Paleolithic era by eating meat. Furthermore, they state that when agriculture and domestication of animals came (10,000 years ago), man’s metabolism was unable to adapt to these new foods. They assert that the maladies of modern man come from foods such as grains and dairy products. That non-meat diets lead to heart disease, obesity, and diabetes – all from our evolutionary dysfunction.
Archeology has about 6000 fossils to make these assumptions. From those 6000 fossils, we find that early man:
- Probably was more of a scavenger than a hunter - taking whatever meat something else killed and left behind
- Gathering, especially roots and beans, kept humans alive
- The most common things hunted were frogs and rabbits
- Neanderthals and Homo Erectus, our cousins but not direct ancestors, did organized hunting; the Neanderthals, and homo sapiens began organization until perhaps 20,000 years ago.
- Man ate grains even 30,000 years ago.
The view of man as a large game hunter is not from the evidence unless you count comic strips and movies.
Modern Hunter Gather Societies Eat Meat
Often, they refer to the Inuit, whose lifespan is about 50 (excluding infant mortality). They eat mostly sea creatures but have mummified evidence of atherosclerotic disease. The Hazda eat honey, fruit, and meat, and their average age of death is 50. Over half of their people don't make the age of 15.
The use of early man, or hunter societies, to state that we should be eating meat is factually incorrect.
Humans evolved not by eating meat. Humans evolved by eating anything they could, mostly plants. Early man did not evolve to live into the 90's.
Vegetables are poison: Lectins, Oxylates, and anti-nutrients
The other comments go something like the "defense of vegetables against humans." This ignores the long-lived populations, who eat mostly plants and little meat.
Kidney stones are found more commonly among meat eaters than vegetarians. (ref).
Despite their protestations, Kale, spinach, beans, and broccoli are healthy for people.
The Most Bioavailable Food
The other argument is that meat contains the richest nutrients, and the most bioavailable food. Meat is a rich source of protein, the liver has a lot of vitamin D, and heme-iron is generally better adapted for iron deficiency. Meat is far from having all the nutrients a person requires. Red meat is rich in iron, zinc, B vitamins, and iron.
There is minimal fiber in meat. The carnivore crowd waives this off, stating that fiber isn't something humans need. In spite of the clear evidence that fiber decreases colon and rectal cancer, that fiber helps regulate blood sugar and cholesterol. Fiber is important to a healthy gut microbiome, and fiber prevents hemorrhoids as well as diverticulitis. Their assertion is false and painfully so - especially if you've had hemorrhoids.
Vitamin C is not abundant in meat. This lesson led to the discovery of citrus as a means of avoiding scurvy in sailors during the era of Discovery. A finding attributed to another surgeon, Dr. James Lind. Modern-day isn't without scurvy found among carnivore aficionados, such as musician James Blunt, who went on the carnivore diet.
Calcium is more abundant in dairy products and some vegetables, as is Folate. and omega-3 fatty acids. They tend to forget that farm-raised salmon has ten times the amount of omega-3 fatty acids as does the cow raised on and fed with high-quality grass all their life.
Weight Loss and the Carnivore Diet
Weight loss occurs in a calorie deficit. There is no diet that cannot produce a calorie deficit. This has been demonstrated in great studies showing the equivalent of low-carb diets, and the Mediterranean diet are equal over time.
It has also been demonstrated in those showing the McDonald's diet, the cookie diet, the Twinkie diet, and our own - Beer and Sausage diet.
One simply gets tired of eating red meat, and you eat less of it. So instead of eating three thousand calories of multiple foods, you eat 2200 calories of meat, and you lose weight. Nothing to see here, folks, just another diet.
But there is a dark side to red meat. Just because you can lose weight and show all the physiological benefits of weight loss doesn't mean that a lot of red meat is good for a human. In fact, there is every evidence to state one should limit red meat.
Is Red Meat Consumption like Smoking?
There is always some headline grabber who states that eating red meat has the same risk as smoking. While red meat, as we shall see, has an increased risk of cancer, heart disease, and diabetes, it is not as risky as smoking cigarettes. As much as some anti-meat activists might like to frighten you, we assume you came here for the facts.
So, where did our studies begin?
Meat, the Seven Countries Study
Heart disease was an epidemic in the 1950s in the United States, primarily affecting white-collar men. However, when Ancel Keys heard that certain populations had almost no heart disease, he began a quest that resulted in the Seven Countries Study.
Briefly, people in some villages in the Mediterranean region ate less red meat. Some because they couldn't afford it, and it wasn't a traditional part of their cuisine.
Keys group studied 14,000 men from 16 villages in seven countries. Some of those cohorts, like in the United States and Finland, had high levels of red meat and saturated fat...
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