The ACTUAL Cause of Type 2 Diabetes. Carbs?

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 6 ก.ย. 2024

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  • @TheToberman1
    @TheToberman1 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I’ve been trying to research and figure this all out for years - have all the books to prove it. Talk about confusion. You truth seekers need a medal. God bless you.

  • @Davidsmorrill
    @Davidsmorrill ปีที่แล้ว +30

    I'd just like to say thank you. As a graduate student that loves learning I find your videos more engaging than the majority of lectures in the academy, and I feel I am learning a lot.

  • @UncleDiddles
    @UncleDiddles ปีที่แล้ว +183

    I was diagnosed type 2 last november. A1C was 11.4... Major health problems. I immediately began very severe strict keto, basicly no carbs whatsoever and continuous exercise. Ive been doing it since I was dignosed, almost a year. My A1C is now 5.1, I've lost over 90lbs. I am diabetes free. Its about discipline and effort, not pills and diets. It is a lifestyle change. Its weightloss, and carb restriction and exercise to prevent weight gain.

    • @johnnygovroom
      @johnnygovroom ปีที่แล้ว +13

      For all of my clients I lean into this ethos.
      It works :)
      Congrats!!! Youre killing it!!!

    • @LavenderSkyla
      @LavenderSkyla ปีที่แล้ว +20

      I had the same experience. Pre diabetic n pcos. Two years later after keto I'm 100lbs down and am in good levels. No more medications

    • @UncleDiddles
      @UncleDiddles ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@LavenderSkyla hell yeah, well done, stay strong!

    • @UncleDiddles
      @UncleDiddles ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@johnnygovroom thank you sir!

    • @DR-br5gb
      @DR-br5gb ปีที่แล้ว +2

      congrats bro

  • @timclancy871
    @timclancy871 ปีที่แล้ว +39

    I'm not a vego myself but I respect your reliance on soundly analyzed data from well conducted research. More health to you!

  • @BurtDavis
    @BurtDavis ปีที่แล้ว +91

    I went vegan almost three years ago. Lost about 35lbs, and so many things got better over the next couple of years. This year, just after my 60th birthday, my A1c tested at 7.7 (on 7Apr2022). Most of my life, the tests had been in the pre-diabetic range so this was new. I immediately modified my diet to stop eating the processed vegan food and removed ALL added oil. Additionally reducing some of the nuts and avocados that I would eat voraciously. The doctor wanted to test me again on 20April2022 just to make sure the test was not a fluke. In that short time my A1c dropped to 7.4 . I maintained the new healthier diet, and on 6June2022 tested my A1c at 6.7 . My next test was on 26July2022 and it was 6.6
    Having already given up meat and dairy (loaded with saturated fat), the change to make my diet healthier was easier by avoiding the vegan processed foods (Which was hard, because they taste pretty good. I hadn’t realized how much of those foods are loaded with oil. I’ve additionally started walking at least 10k steps a day and am learning about intermittent fasting to help. I’m really excited to see how low I can get that A1c down. I highly recommend the Mastering Diabetes book to anyone that wants to know more.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Congrats on your success, BJ. 👏💪 I did an interview with the Mastering Diabetes guys. Love them: th-cam.com/video/-_nXKpeZZFs/w-d-xo.html

    • @natalietannerblogger-theed9419
      @natalietannerblogger-theed9419 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Good for you! Success! We've read the packages and that stuff isn't necessarily healthy! I think it's a great 'gate way' food to bring over carnivores, though.

    • @larryputra3692
      @larryputra3692 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@natalietannerblogger-theed9419 what type of food do you eat? and how much?

    • @happyapple4269
      @happyapple4269 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      They are wrong about saturated fat. We need it.. Eat as much as you can and enjoy it.

    • @BurtDavis
      @BurtDavis ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@happyapple4269 Who is wrong about saturated fat? Do you have diabetes, and eat as much saturated fat as you want?

  • @TenTempeh
    @TenTempeh ปีที่แล้ว +101

    You're on another level my man. It made me allign so many thoughts on this topic. I feel way more confident right now on this topic. Thank you so much Chris. Not only for being a great plant-based nutrition advocate, but for all the humanity you irradiate.

    • @Recep007
      @Recep007 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Yes, I like to think, you are speaking for a lot of us.

    • @samgreeneggs8101
      @samgreeneggs8101 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I hope he isn’t irradiating humans though 🤭

    • @TenTempeh
      @TenTempeh ปีที่แล้ว

      @@samgreeneggs8101 lmaoo

    • @fullyplantedlife3038
      @fullyplantedlife3038 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      You are absolutely spot on right. Chris is an exceptional human being. Thank goodness we have him. This channel needs to be seen by the millions. If only!

    • @kennethbooe3858
      @kennethbooe3858 ปีที่แล้ว

      07

  • @MrMZaccone
    @MrMZaccone ปีที่แล้ว +49

    My father was a diagnosed, insulin-dependent, type 2 diabetic. After reducing carbohydrates, selecting carbs lower on the glycemic index and engaging in periodic fasting he was removed from insulin and ALL DIABETES MEDICATIONS. He was told by his physician that he was no longer a diabetic. Both his natural insulin levels and glycosylated hemoglobin levels were in the low normal range.

    • @thornados4969
      @thornados4969 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      so keto works.

    • @jazzbaia
      @jazzbaia ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@thornados4969 It does work.
      It also won't work if the person doing it didn't study it well. For example, I've read people advocating a low-carb diet and telling other people canned tuna is fine - the version of canned tuna soaked in processed oils. So, one of the most common questions to ask some folks is how exactly they did keto.

    • @thornados4969
      @thornados4969 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@jazzbaia So avoid processed products as possible. How about lard from thick layer of pork fat.

    • @jazzbaia
      @jazzbaia ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@thornados4969 Good question.
      Since pigs and chickens are monogastric, they are higher in Linoleic acid, especially if they are grain-fed. They just take on all that corn and soy.
      Lard is also used by researchers who want to show that a high-fat diet is not good. When reading research studies, the diet is mainly referred to as high-fat and is found in either the references or the references of the references. I found that frustrating.
      Cows are different having 4 digestive chambers. Although they will show an increase in Linoleic acid, it is not that high. Beef from the supermarket just becomes a better choice when one can't get grass-fed beef. Overall, ruminants are very good choices. The only problem is if they're cooked using processed Seed oils.
      On avoiding processed products, let's just refer to the worse ones as ultra-processed food - just avoid.

    • @thornados4969
      @thornados4969 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@jazzbaia Lard is the best source of high fat for keto dieters because it has low in omega-6 which is considered to cause inflammation and it also contains omega-3 specially for plant feed pigs which balances the omega-6. The lard is high in monosaturated fat and low in saturated fatty acids And it has high smoke point so cooking in high heat with minimal oxidation.

  • @universalsoldier2293
    @universalsoldier2293 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    I consistently come back to this channel and watch these videos, like food for the brain. As much as I appreciate the vegan MDs tackling this stuff, your videos are concise, interesting, and accessible to anyone. Thanks for putting out such great information we can all appreciate!

  • @beatpirate8
    @beatpirate8 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I’m a nurse who works w surgeons who do gallbladder , hernia, and bariatric surgeries. I was in disbelief that a bariatric surgery can prevent diabetes. I asked both doctors what diet they recommend and they said to cut rice and bread. And eat less. Brown rice is rice! Don’t eat it every meal. Maybe cut it out or only once in a while eat it.
    I have had pain in my pancreas area after eating large quantities of food w cheese coconut cream or meat. I cut my intake and increased salad or vegetable intake before eating other things. Also eating two meals only . One is miso soup w vegetables. It’s helping a lot . I no longer have pain and I don’t have diabetes risk

    • @danpan001
      @danpan001 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Like alergic to peanut you should not totally avoid but decrease your sensitivity. You should reduce but not avoid fat because it helps your body to produce bile.

  • @carl13579
    @carl13579 ปีที่แล้ว +86

    My own experience: I've been on the Esselstyn diet - it will be 5 years this Thanksgiving - after having a heart attack. My numbers are great, I've lost weight, etc. But, along with consistent exercise, I keep feeling even better (i.e., younger) each year. That pancreas series at the end shows me how this might be possible.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +46

      Wow, Carl. I honestly believe Dr. Esselstyn is the king of caring for the acutely ill via diet. I should interview him.

    • @AstonAcademia
      @AstonAcademia ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@PlantChompers I think you're one of the best TH-cam channels that is scientifically consistent , open minded and shows impeccability and frankness without being extreme and just being open-minded to learning from all sides. Would be good to see you interview more like minded dr's like Will Bulsiewicz, Matthew Nagra, Christopher Gardner and Dr Justin Sonnenburg.

    • @mariaespiritu9512
      @mariaespiritu9512 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      I placed my mom on a Esselstyn’s diet after a major stroke in October 21 that left her paralyzed on her right side and unable to speak. She had low blood flow to the legs and developed 3 pressure sores on her affected foot, after 6 weeks at a rehab facility . Supposedly they would never heal, due to low blood to the leg, but 2 months ago she was discharged from wound care. She’s been on Esselstyn’s diet since she was discharged to home in December ‘21. She’s also regained movement in her right side. She’s speaking more and her cholesterol dropped from 330 to 182 without statins, and her LDL keeps going down. The doctors think she’s a miracle. I think it’s the diet and some divine intervention.

    • @mariaespiritu9512
      @mariaespiritu9512 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      Also, I stopped taking care of me while taking care of my mom. I was working from home and living on greasy food and wine. I’m 44 yrs old and 5’8” and in 8 months i went from 167 lbs to 209 lbs. 6 weeks ago I adopted a similar diet to my mom’s following Dr. mcdouggal and esselstyn guidelines. My weight is 188 lbs, my blood pressure dropped from 155/80 (always within this rang) to 101/61 and my resting heart rate dropped from 80 beats per minute to 61 beats per minute. I had developed plants fasciitis which is now gone and I’ve always had severe pain during my monthly visitor and that’s gone. I walked 30 minutes a day, for exercise. This coming Tuesday I’ll be back in the gym, lifting and cardio, like in my younger days. I have so much energy that I tired out my 2 year old and 5 year old niece yesterday, lol. Love this lifestyle.

    • @fanniterrette
      @fanniterrette ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@mariaespiritu9512 Most excellent. Very happy for you 🙂

  • @jamescoyle007
    @jamescoyle007 ปีที่แล้ว +27

    I'm a thin guy (now 130lb,5'8") and have had high cholesterol (300+), slightly high triglycerides (180ish) and slightly elevated ALT. I've been vegan for 15+ years but was always a volume eater, eating till I was stuffed and heavy on the pasta / grains (high calorie density). It took me a long time to get that under control so I wasn't overeating calories (started using cronometer which was an eye opener). I now eat a lot more vegetables, a lot less pasta, and keep the oil light. I've dropped from ~140 to my now 130lb and the blood markers are all in a better range now. Thanks for your videos.. it's confusing information to try to sort out but you make it pretty clear. Side note - just got back from Scotland which was amazing, but I found it hard to find vegetables... they love "chips" (aka fries) with everything!

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Wow, James, thanks for posting that. You sound like a fellow congenitally high cholesterol guy like me. 😞 Congrats on getting it under control. I would definitely love to eat more than I do now. Argh.

    • @buckeyeborn65
      @buckeyeborn65 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Technically fries are a vegetable - watch out Scotland...here I come :)

    • @spiral-m
      @spiral-m ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Did you visit Edinburgh or Glasgow? they have lots of healthy options if you look around... But the average diet and healthiness level is still abysmal

    • @jamescoyle007
      @jamescoyle007 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@spiral-m Yes! I was in Edinburgh for two nights and found a good vegan restaurant there (don't recall the name). The hard part was Isle of Sky but the beautiful landscape made up for it!

    • @johnsmith-eq1zc
      @johnsmith-eq1zc ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Picked my curiosity, so just googled "life span in Scotland" and first search states...."On average, they spend a third of their lives in poor health - 24 more years than those in the least deprived areas. Across Scotland, healthy life expectancy was 60.9 years for males and 61.8 years for females. These figures have dropped each year from 2018 to 2022 for females and for the past three years for males.Feb 3, 2022"

  • @njpaddler
    @njpaddler ปีที่แล้ว +51

    Thanks, Chris, for another honest look at all of this. I watched while eating lunch. At 67 my Dr. hates me because I never bring any complaints or problems in with me. I had the pre-diabetic symptoms badly in the '80's/'90's & Mom + her two brothers were insulin-dependent, so I didn't need much convincing to change things. I've never regretted my quitting meat & dairy in '93. I've been an asymptomatic healthy pesco-veg ever since, weight at 180~185 lbs. for decades, rarely ill with anything at all., not a flu or cold in years. Enjoy Scandanavia, it's a joy to see if only a glimpse.

    • @Paul-Weston
      @Paul-Weston ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Strangely enough, I was pre-diabetic and I fixed it by adopting a fully carnivore diet. Bacon and eggs for breakfast, single cream in my coffee, and a 500g ribeye steak for dinner.
      No vegetables whatsoever, as far as I'm concerned my food eats vegetables.

    • @loyal7597
      @loyal7597 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yea it's because you stopped eating trash. You ain't going to be in a carnivore diet for long.

    • @kenpca
      @kenpca ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Paul-WestonGlad you are doing well! hows your A1C?

    • @REDGRIFFIN100
      @REDGRIFFIN100 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Paul-Weston how long have you been on that diet?

    • @myrhev
      @myrhev ปีที่แล้ว

      Aren’t fish made of meat?

  • @marcdenlinger5282
    @marcdenlinger5282 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    Thanks for another great video Chris! I love the variety of backgrounds and weather you film yourself in. Thanks for doing the research, and sharing it with us! Also, thank you for revisiting previous topics and being willing to continue seeking the truth.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Thanks Marc! When I started this episode, I really thought Roy might have overturned some of the things I've said in the past... I have a fear of getting things wrong and needing to fix them.

    • @marcdenlinger5282
      @marcdenlinger5282 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@PlantChompers Well, I appreciate it Chris! I've been on a journey myself that took an exponential turn in 2015 to start getting serious about my nutritional health. I did a ton of research for about 18+ months and my conclusions kept coming to whole foods, plant based. But I like to think I've kept an open mind through all of it. That's why I appreciate your research and references in your videos. And when I see a new "Plant Chompers" video hit my notifications, I get excited to see what you've been up to since the last video.

    • @VeganV5912
      @VeganV5912 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@marcdenlinger5282 ​ Gorilla
      Genus of large African apes
      For other uses, see Gorilla (disambiguation).
      “Blackback” and “Silverback” redirect here. For other uses, see Blackback (disambiguation) and Silverback (disambiguation).
      Not to be confused with Guerrilla.
      Gorillas are herbivorous, predominantly ground-dwelling great apes that inhabit the tropical forests of equatorial Africa. The genus Gorilla is divided into two species: the eastern gorilla and the western gorilla, and either four or five subspecies. The DNA of gorillas is highly similar to that of humans, from 95 to 99% depending on what is included, and they are the next closest living relatives to humans after chimpanzees and bonobos.
      W. ikipedia

    • @VeganV5912
      @VeganV5912 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@marcdenlinger5282 ​ ... Actual photos clogging up the arteries eating animals. th-cam.com/video/LXigmGZk5FU/w-d-xo.html ..
      They are Herbivores, ✅❤️😬|-_|💪🦍< are not “Omnivores” !!!!! They never have plaque !!!!! Only humans have plaque eating animals and their secretions. Heart attack is fat deposits clog in the arteries 🧟‍♂️🦠💩🍖🥓🥩🍣🍳🍗🧀🍦🥛... 🔴.... . We’ve got long long stomachs. Flat teeth 🦷. Little flat teeth 😬. We are herbivores. We act like ‘Omnivores’, get cancer and heart attack and high blood pressure and diabetes and fat deposits clog in the arteries and Alzheimer’s, is eating animals and their secretions, fat deposits !!!!! You can see the fat you eat !!!!! Meat eaters, and 🍗 and 🍖🥓 and fish and cheese et cetera, have 51% death rate, no fibre !!!! Stays in your body and rots !!!! Deodorant mask the symptoms but you still smell 🤮, your feet and shoes and socks and armpits 🤮. Vegans have 4% cancer and that’s it !!!! Lots of fibre if you eat plants and fruit and nuts and berries and tubers and lentils and beans and potatoes et cetera !!!! Peer review science !!!!

    • @trentonharris7676
      @trentonharris7676 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@marcdenlinger5282 Well sir, you should keep researching because you are absolutely on the wrong path.

  • @harbingerbk1
    @harbingerbk1 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Another great episode Chris!! Thank you for consolidating all of this information into an entertaining and digestible format for us 🙌 Also I loved the changing backgrounds and vacation snippets, I hope you all enjoyed the trip 😁

  • @jimgillert20
    @jimgillert20 ปีที่แล้ว +24

    Please keep making these deep digging well thought out videos.

  • @NutritionMadeSimple
    @NutritionMadeSimple ปีที่แล้ว +36

    very interesting. we need an all-inclusive model of IR/diabetes accounting for excess energetic intake + the effects of fat quality we see in intrahepatic triglyceride measurements

    • @ash9259
      @ash9259 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      i'd be interested in this, it seems to me that how far-gone a patient is plays a significant role in what foods someone should be eating in an attempt to reverse t2 diabetes.

    • @VeganV5912
      @VeganV5912 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@ash9259 ​ ... Actual photos clogging up the arteries eating animals. th-cam.com/video/LXigmGZk5FU/w-d-xo.html ..
      They are Herbivores, ✅❤️😬|-_|💪🦍< are not “Omnivores” !!!!! They never have plaque !!!!! Only humans have plaque eating animals and their secretions. Heart attack is fat deposits clog in the arteries 🧟‍♂️🦠💩🍖🥓🥩🍣🍳🍗🧀🍦🥛... 🔴.... . We’ve got long long stomachs. Flat teeth 🦷. Little flat teeth 😬. We are herbivores. We act like ‘Omnivores’, get cancer and heart attack and high blood pressure and diabetes and fat deposits clog in the arteries and Alzheimer’s, is eating animals and their secretions, fat deposits !!!!! You can see the fat you eat !!!!! Meat eaters, and 🍗 and 🍖🥓 and fish and cheese et cetera, have 51% death rate, no fibre !!!! Stays in your body and rots !!!! Deodorant mask the symptoms but you still smell 🤮, your feet and shoes and socks and armpits 🤮. Vegans have 4% cancer and that’s it !!!! Lots of fibre if you eat plants and fruit and nuts and berries and tubers and lentils and beans and potatoes et cetera !!!! Peer review science !!!!

    • @carbrock.2854
      @carbrock.2854 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Maybe we could just accept the simple truth that whole plants (and 'shrooms) are the only health-promoting stuff we can eat, and stop trying to justify eating anything else.

    • @Andrew-ug2cy
      @Andrew-ug2cy ปีที่แล้ว

      @@carbrock.2854 Shrooms are whole plants?

    • @carbrock.2854
      @carbrock.2854 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Andrew-ug2cy Are you asking me or telling me?

  • @klang180
    @klang180 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Brilliant video. I'm extremely impressed you managed to script and film this whilst on holiday. I hope you still had time to enjoy yourself in Europe!

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thanks! It's funny, I kinda scripted it as I went, it was a journey of discovery. And each time I had a little more, I'd drop back from a family for a few minutes and press record. 😁

    • @klang180
      @klang180 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers wow even more impressive in that case as it seems so coherent and structured!

  • @zelbinian
    @zelbinian ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This. This is the episode that made me realize I'd been listening to the wrong people for YEARS. I don't blame myself. As you say many times, nutrition is a tricky subject and most of those who do the best work in it do not have enough time, ability, or inclination to communicate their findings effectively to the public. That's why folks like me rely on people to translate nutrition science into easily-consumable stories (yum yum). It can be *so* hard to figure out who to listen to. And when so many of the doctors I've had over the years seem to also be poor communicators (and sometimes even poor listeners), it's really easy to jump on the Medical Science is Wrong bandwagon. Medical science isn't perfect, and neither are doctors, but it is the profession that contains the people that know what they're talking about. Thank you for providing access to their wisdom.

  • @koobah
    @koobah ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I love your videos. The way you record one episode in 1000 different locations is such a great, almost CGI-like bonus, too.

  • @Robnord1
    @Robnord1 ปีที่แล้ว +21

    I have 5 years of keto alternated with carnivore and intermittent fasting with either, per Dr. Jason Fung's teachings. It's working very well for me. Lost a considerable amount of fat and I control numbers appearing on the scale. Stopped taking 5 meds for various ills. I'm a believer in ultra low sugar, high fat, moderate protein, low carb lifestyle.

    • @sandray7609
      @sandray7609 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What about cholesterol triglycerides? Kidney disease, cancer and heart disease risk?

    • @Robnord1
      @Robnord1 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@sandray7609 90% of the time I'm on keto/OMAD/IF, and it helps me feel better and take no meds except vitamins. Weight control is easy. Being able to skip the occasional meal without feeling hungry is a real freedom. Friends and acquaintances my age(68) are dropping like flies, and doing regular trips to the doctor. I'm happy, and feel rather safe with keto Living.

    • @sandray7609
      @sandray7609 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Robnord1 You do you, but the science doesn't back it up long term. I'd rather eat when I am hungry, a few times a day, with abundant food. I lots the last 10 lbs, healthy weight, great numbers with bad genes based on my siblings and parents.

    • @Moralatheist101
      @Moralatheist101 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sandray7609 The science is still out for low carb if you want to ignore those that have been doing this for 40 + years. You are misleading the truth if you actually believe that science doesn't back up low/no carb long term. The truth is they've been researching the Inuit populations and their TOTAL dependence on ONLY animal products for more than half a century. Don't let your cognitive bias steer you wrong. The facts are out there if you want to find them.
      Our ancestors didn't have "abundant food" to choose from. They lived a very restrictive diet made up of animal products from the entire animal. If you want to take indigenous people's foods out of their mouths because some advertising exec told you that you get the most niacin from Quinoa, fine. That's your choice. You do you, Boo.
      And as far as your questions: "cholesterol triglycerides? Kidney disease, cancer, and heart disease risk?" - Please. We don't live in the 1950s anymore with their propaganda to increase sales of wheat, corn, and sugar products. It has been shown that there is no correlation between animal products and heart disease. In fact, the facts show an increase in diabetes and heart problems at the same time meat and butter consumption decreased and wheat and sugar consumption increased. And, if you can't make the connection on your own: Glucose is VERY high in plant products whether those products are straight sugar or hidden sugar in the case of grains and corn and even "healthy" plant foods.

    • @penultimatename6677
      @penultimatename6677 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@sandray7609 triglycerides is from fructose. That's why it raises when you eat fruit.

  • @weston.weston
    @weston.weston ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Chris, I enjoyed this segment so much that I have watched it three times. The topic was so good, I wanted to make sure I absorbed it all, especially your graphs.
    And, I am so glad you mentioned the Esselsytn, Campbell PCRM, & Mastering Diabetes camp vs Simon Hill and Gil Carvalho camp position on the consumption of oils.
    Per usual, this was such a great segment!

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Thank you so much, Weston. I always fret about whether I'm being preachy or boring...

    • @GlennMarshallnz
      @GlennMarshallnz ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers Hi Chris, you would come across preachy, for those with poor health who want to live in denial.

    • @JohnMoseley
      @JohnMoseley ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@PlantChompers Never!

  • @johnthompson16
    @johnthompson16 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Great video. Having been a diabetic from 2011 to 2018 my eureka moment came when Dr fung explained the importance of intermittent fasting. He said, imagine your stomach as a bowl. Every time you eat you fill it up with sugar. If you keep eating the bowl will overflow. I was already a veggie, but I did not reverse my diabetes until I started 8/16. Suddenly it all fell into place. I have been a non diabetic since 2018. A side effect of stopping meat was that the arthritis in my hands disappeared.

    • @terry2346
      @terry2346 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Interesting! I stopped my arthritic symptoms and also brought my Type 2 diabetes under control by going Keto and

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 ปีที่แล้ว

      Excellent! ✌️

  • @Bob-nu2qo
    @Bob-nu2qo ปีที่แล้ว +18

    I have several blood work results from before and after going vegan. My sugar was slightly too high, now it's below the threshold for concern. My blood fats were too high, now they are below the threshold and the cholesterol is a much better mix with a lot of HDL. And being aware of my diet has made me check certain things.. and I found possibly life-saving knowledge about congenital alterations. Not being able to metabolize normal folate is one of them, with homocysteine being exceeded and already causing several thrombosis events in my 30s that were not life threatening, but still weird at that age.
    The combination of going vegan, getting knowledgable about diet (thanks to your channel too) and nutrients and staying off processed foods has made a big positive impact on my life. I can only recommend it.
    Plus, we are saving the planet and a lot of animal lives.

    • @trentonharris7676
      @trentonharris7676 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Well sir, if you were truly knowledgeable about diet then you would probably not be vegan.

    • @GlennMarshallnz
      @GlennMarshallnz ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@trentonharris7676 Go on a vegan website and waste time posting multiple antivegan comments. Or maybe get a life. Your choice.

    • @Bob-nu2qo
      @Bob-nu2qo ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@trentonharris7676 I've got so extensive knowledge now, about micronutrients, amino acid spectrums, composition of vegetable and animal fats, etc., that I can say that a vegan diet is much better. Please, if you really want to tell me that real men eat a lot of meat because we did that in primordial times: Have you ever eaten venison? Or wild fish? That meat has basically 0% fat, so the saturated fats won't destroy your body. But people who eat an 'all meat' diet or keto diet consume the flesh of farmed animals that are not allowed to move and build up lots and lots of saturated fats. Our diet 10,000 years ago cannot be remotely compared to consuming a lot of farmed animals.

    • @trentonharris7676
      @trentonharris7676 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@GlennMarshallnz Well as a former victim of this anti-scientific nonsense I feel compelled to dispel the lies and myths every time it pops up in my feed.

    • @trentonharris7676
      @trentonharris7676 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@Bob-nu2qo A vegan diet is much better than what and for who exactly? And who said anything about eating factory-farmed animals or that "real men eat meat"? There is no evidence that saturated fat causes any negative health effects whatsoever. How exactly do you propose saturated fats will "destroy your body? Through what mechanism?

  • @stephenwade511
    @stephenwade511 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    Greetings from Bangkok. Your videos are fascinating. Four months ago I had a CT scan that revealed a high calcium score. After much research, I went on a low-carb, high-fat Keto diet. After watching several of your excellent, well-researched videos, I'm now questioning my dietary approach. However, I'm getting bamboozled by all of the research advocating low-carb, high fat and the plant-based- lower fat approaches. Each camp seems to be able to present equally compelling evidence in favour of their diet over the other. I really don't know what to do for the best. I think I'll just go to the pub!

    • @lisamichele4152
      @lisamichele4152 ปีที่แล้ว

      The vegan agenda is being pushed hard. Historically humans have eaten meat and in many parts of the world - mostly meat. Staying away from sugar and seed oils, which are basically in all process food is the most important thing.

    • @yeetghostrat
      @yeetghostrat ปีที่แล้ว +3

      My approach has been whatever makes me feel best and is compatible with my health. My symptoms are closer to type one, and hold hands with candida (yeast) infections. Pretty sure the root cause is autoimmune and high estrogen from endometriosis, combined with being on daily antibiotics for a good chunk of my childhood.
      So my best diet, after much experimentation, is a near sugar free cream based. Heavy cream and butter are my life blood, glutinous rice is a great staple, I've never felt sick after eating high quality glutinous rice and my blood sugar never spikes or drops from it. I do have trouble with all other rice.
      Ketones damage my liver and feed candida- so carb free is very counter productive. I also have IBS and intestinal damage, so fiber/vegetables are incredibly difficult - though I've been able to digest some that I was never able to, since I took a round of anti-fungals, taken preventative measures to stave off the yeast coming back, and started chugging heavy cream.
      No milk though, regular milk is where all the nasty parts of cow juice concentrates. Cream does not cause estrogen spikes and contains no lactose/sugar.
      Basically, listen to your body and figure out what types of food contribute. Everyone's body is different. And if you have any underlying conditions, most diets really are only temporarily effective.
      A keto diet, if you don't have conflicting health problems, is probably the best kick start, but it is not sustainable or long term effective. So I would recommend starting there and pivoting to something more sustainable. Also pump yourself full of high quality pro-biotics. Either from supplements or foods like kifer and kimchi.
      Also, all recent research has proven that non-trans fat intake does not affect your body composition, and you require a good amount of fat to absorb nutrients. Avoid food that otherwise cause estrogen spikes, like soybean oil and skim milk, but fat itself is not the root.

    • @RandomHuTaoSimp
      @RandomHuTaoSimp ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I've tried both approaches. But over years of eating and research, what helped me completely reverse my type 2 was low carb, HIGH protein and somewhat high fat diet way of eating. I've been living and eating this way now for over a decade, im 32 years old and my health is amazing compared to before eating plants and low fat. Watch some of paul salidinos videos. CarnivoreMD on youtube. :)

    • @RandomHuTaoSimp
      @RandomHuTaoSimp ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I haven't really eaten greens or veges in over 10 years. Mostly grass fed, grass finished meats, beef organs, raw milk and fruits occasionally. Need I remind, I've been eating this way for more then 10 years. Longer then a lot of people on youtube who advocate my way of eating. But simply because I tend to live mostly in nature far, far away from major cities.

    • @robertleugemors338
      @robertleugemors338 ปีที่แล้ว

      Stay low carb for just a few months and then retest CT scan. I am guessing it will be lower. If it is stay the course. If not then maybe another option is better for you. Full disclosure I am lower carb biased but it is not for everyone

  • @D.von.N
    @D.von.N ปีที่แล้ว +20

    I have been focusing on metabolic syndrome in my nutrition studies, did a dissertation on that topic, reading and watching documentaries from far and wide, following data, etc. My conclusion is the major cause of type 2 diabetes is a constant positive energy balance, whatever the calories come from. We eat too much and exercise too little. We know hunger no more. We eat too much of processed diet deprived of nutrients and fibre that would slow down glucose release into the blood stream. All these contribute to the inflammation in our body that causes oxidative stress, but the major issue is constantly eating more than we burn and not exercising enough. Some so called health professionals you presented confuse the treatment of diabetes with prevention of diabetes. It is obvious. I am saying this just after watching 6 minutes of this video but I have an impression you are going to come to a similar conclusion at the end. Most of my family perished to diabetes type 2, I am an odd one. But I do exercise, I don't deep fry, I don't bake cakes and I prefer eating fruits fresh and whole, not peeling apples into a pie like I have seen another video just today. Why ruining a perfect health package from nature and hurt our metabolism with pies? If carbs were the issue, how about Asians thriving on rice and other carb rich diets for generations, until the modern times with fat loaded fast food?

    • @teresawhite791
      @teresawhite791 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I have been researching a lot for my prediebetes and I agree with u on this 100%.

    • @futureofmoney3527
      @futureofmoney3527 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Fully agree. I live in Thailand and I think the best diet is a local diet. Thais are used to manual labor up til 40 or so years ago and are now becoming overweight (I generalize of course). We have to move our bodies. The Thai diet is carbs, fried food, salty soups….all of these give you energy when you work in hot weather and you won’t put on a pound if you’re active. Ultimately, exercise can fix so much - it balances so much out. Inactivity is the outlier in human history.

    • @RC-qf3mp
      @RC-qf3mp 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hate to burst your bubble, but fruit is just sugar and water and a tiny amount of actual nutrients that you can get from other food.

    • @D.von.N
      @D.von.N 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@RC-qf3mp so what? Small amount of sugar is not bad for us. We have evolved on eating anything and everything, including naturally occurring sugars. I think you live in a bubble of antisugar bandwagon.

    • @RC-qf3mp
      @RC-qf3mp 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@D.von.N i just stated facts. Fruit is just sugar, water, and some nutrients you can get elsewhere. And most fruits come with a side-item of pesticides. Sure, small amount of sugar is fine, and a small amount of cocaine, and small out of heroine. Knock yourself out.

  • @JaxObsessed
    @JaxObsessed ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Thanks for the disambiguation, Chris!!!! I've been carrying an embarrassing amount of extra weight but was lucky enough to have a high tolerance for said weight. My bloodwork was closing in on diabetes and I changed my diet. I eat mostly whole foods with no red meat and have had wonderful bloodwork for 15 years... Now at 63 my bloodwork is beginning to show signs of deteriorating health, though I'm still not even "pre" diabetic. It has become painfully clear that I need to restrict calories as I age. This has always been my kriptonite... I love big, high calorie meals, and have gotten away with them because of their relative 'cleanness'. Switching to 2 or one a day and intermittent fasting (18/6) has helped some but my weight remains way too high for my age. This segment has steeled my resolve and am going to cut calories.
    Again, you are a gem in my life that I can't get enough of!!!!! Thanks so much.
    Jack

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Thanks Jax! Unfortunately, I don’t get to eat as much as I want either… Sigh.

    • @k8eekatt
      @k8eekatt ปีที่แล้ว

      You may also benefit from increased variety of plant fiber to feed your GI microbes.

  • @johnmeyers8542
    @johnmeyers8542 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    I was all about that keto, but you and Gil have changed my mind. I have to say it wasn't easy to accept this new information, but the good presentation and reliance on science (as well as the way you discuss papers and evidence and what to look at and why) changed my mind. You may not have as many viewers as I think you should have, but you've made a positive change for at least one person.

    • @Hertz2laugh
      @Hertz2laugh ปีที่แล้ว +6

      My experience is the opposite - I feel like sh■t as soon as I start reintroducing vegetables into my diet. Indigestion, bloating, gas, etc.
      And, within days, I experience full relief when I drop carbs.
      Meat, eggs, and a tiny bit of dairy seem to be what makes me feel the best. No gas, no bloat, bags under my eys go away, consistent appetite, etc.
      It's not difficult to get a study to produce results you want. That's why I take all studies with a grain of salt.
      I eat what works for me.

    • @garyloewenthal
      @garyloewenthal ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@Hertz2laugh Just a thought; won’t be offended if you ignore! If there’s insufficient bacteria in the gut to digest the fiber, you may feel awful. The key seems to be to introduce it slowly. Gradually the microbiome bacteria increase, expanding your capacity to handle the fiber, and you can increase accordingly. Then you have a well-functioning system that can reap the benefits of the polyphenols, anthocyanins, and other micronutrients in the plant foods. Just a thought.

    • @Hertz2laugh
      @Hertz2laugh ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@garyloewenthal The problem with this idea is that I was eating vegetables consistently for _decades_ and had bloating, gas, etc. You know?
      How long is it supposed to take for the proper microbiology to develop?..
      Same with my wife. She grew up in a mostly vegetarian family. They ate fish and meat _occasionally_ but it was basically all vegetables and fruits. Almost no processed foods and very little bread.
      She experienced the same thing I did when she dropped all the carbs - almost immediate (within three days) reduction in bloat, water weight, gas, etc.
      It makes more sense to me that humans simply aren't as good at processing plants as we are vegetables.
      For example, my 10 month old son gets gassy and the quality of his poop decreases whenever we try to give him vegetables.It happened from the first time we tried and every time after that.
      But it didn't happen when we fed him meat. Not even *_the very first time._*
      My sister-in-law fed him spinach. Boom, rash. My wife fed him tomatoes. Boom, rash.
      I feed him meat. No rash.
      I feed him eggs. No rash.
      He didn't seem to need any special adapting period to handle meat. He hasn't had any adverse reactions to eating different kinds of meat. It's a night-and-day experience compared to vegetables.
      My point here is that it seems to me that while humans *_might_* be able to adapt to eating vegetables over time and with specific techniques, humans seem to automatically be able to process meat without any issues (assuming they are developed enough to swallow safely).
      Seems like we're better suited to processing the things that are great at processing plants than processing plants directly.

    • @garyloewenthal
      @garyloewenthal ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Hertz2laugh It is interesting how different people respond to foods. I was just going with average observations from people who study the microbiome, and of studies of associations between fiber intake and health outcomes (in general: decreased mortality, decreased inflammation, possible protection against certain diseases). But none of these studies indicate uniform responses.
      For sure, there is variation from person to person. For instance, some substances that have a calming effect on most people have a stimulative effect on me. That said, there do seem to be some characteristics of humans that suggest we're made to eat plants: our high levels of amylase for digesting starch, our inability to produce our own vitamin c, high levels of calcium in pre-dairy ancestors, high requirement for potassium, etc. And studies showing a relationship between fruit/vegetable/whole grain/legume intake and positive health outcomes predominate.
      I'm going a little out on a limb, but another human characteristic is: if we see an injured bird, we tend not to salivate, but to feel empathy for him or her. And I find that most people, if served meat from an animal they're not used to eating, are fairly repulsed, in a way that I don't see if, for example, if they're fed a fruit they've never eaten. Most people are very disturbed by slaughterhouse footage.
      But it may be that certain traits result in some people diverging from the midpoints. Perhaps there are still a lot of causes for this variability that are yet to be discovered.

    • @Hertz2laugh
      @Hertz2laugh ปีที่แล้ว

      @Tobias Guldberg Some cooked. Some raw.

  • @alexwilder8315
    @alexwilder8315 ปีที่แล้ว +77

    I've been thinking about how the veterinarian recommendation is to not give your cat 24/7 access to unlimited food, and to scrupulously weigh their biscuits. This is probably what aliens would do if I were their pet. Maybe I should treat myself a little more like my cat.

    • @tintinlavigne5257
      @tintinlavigne5257 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Just give to your cat his proper food and all your vet problems will magically disappear.
      Or perhaps science will try to convince me that cats are not carnivore? Who know now🙄

    • @VeganV5912
      @VeganV5912 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@tintinlavigne5257 Gorilla
      Genus of large African apes
      For other uses, see Gorilla (disambiguation).
      “Blackback” and “Silverback” redirect here. For other uses, see Blackback (disambiguation) and Silverback (disambiguation).
      Not to be confused with Guerrilla.
      Gorillas are herbivorous, predominantly ground-dwelling great apes that inhabit the tropical forests of equatorial Africa. The genus Gorilla is divided into two species: the eastern gorilla and the western gorilla, and either four or five subspecies. The DNA of gorillas is highly similar to that of humans, from 95 to 99% depending on what is included, and they are the next closest living relatives to humans after chimpanzees and bonobos.
      W. ikipedia

    • @VeganV5912
      @VeganV5912 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@tintinlavigne5257 ... Actual photos clogging up the arteries eating animals. th-cam.com/video/LXigmGZk5FU/w-d-xo.html ..
      They are Herbivores, ✅❤️😬|-_|💪🦍< are not “Omnivores” !!!!! They never have plaque !!!!! Only humans have plaque eating animals and their secretions. Heart attack is fat deposits clog in the arteries 🧟‍♂️🦠💩🍖🥓🥩🍣🍳🍗🧀🍦🥛... 🔴.... . We’ve got long long stomachs. Flat teeth 🦷. Little flat teeth 😬. We are herbivores. We act like ‘Omnivores’, get cancer and heart attack and high blood pressure and diabetes and fat deposits clog in the arteries and Alzheimer’s, is eating animals and their secretions, fat deposits !!!!! You can see the fat you eat !!!!! Meat eaters, and 🍗 and 🍖🥓 and fish and cheese et cetera, have 51% death rate, no fibre !!!! Stays in your body and rots !!!! Deodorant mask the symptoms but you still smell 🤮, your feet and shoes and socks and armpits 🤮. Vegans have 4% cancer and that’s it !!!! Lots of fibre if you eat plants and fruit and nuts and berries and tubers and lentils and beans and potatoes et cetera !!!! Peer review science !!!!

    • @Paul-Weston
      @Paul-Weston ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Biscuits, why are giving your cat Biscuits??. You should be prosecuted for animal cruelty.

    • @tintinlavigne5257
      @tintinlavigne5257 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Paul-Weston by biscuits perhaps it's dry pets food or kibble

  • @wagstaff6135
    @wagstaff6135 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    This is really extraordinarily well done -- sorts out so many seeming contradictions, so many specific questions I had -- between what works short-term and what is actually healthy, between what the "pop" view of particular science is vs. what it really says, and has some good guesses where we're not 100% sure (like a Carvalho vs Esselstyn pov on oils). Earned a sub, for sure.

  • @leonardwl
    @leonardwl ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I am low carb but very much appreciate that you take a balanced unbiased approach to where the research leads us. I believe the best diet is the healthiest diet that one can sustain. The Mayo Clinic Diet now has several options including Keto, Mediterranean and Vegan. Whatever someone can stick with that works!

    • @sandray7609
      @sandray7609 ปีที่แล้ว

      But didn't the result show this diet doesn't work after 1 year? The high protein and fat lead to heart disease, kidney disease and cancer. Not worth it if it's diabetes benefits evaporate after a year. Whole food plants are the way to go!

    • @equsnarnd
      @equsnarnd ปีที่แล้ว +2

      " Whatever someone can stick with that works!" That seems patently obvious but is the key. If an eating regime has you hating food or going off it for relief then throw it in the trash can.
      Another conundrum often cited is 'Excess fat is merely a matter of excess calorie intake.' Duh! That has the same explanatory power as 'Death is caused by Life.'

    • @mbrochh82
      @mbrochh82 ปีที่แล้ว

      this guy is far far far from unbiased. he's a vegan propagandist.

  • @niamhwarren7324
    @niamhwarren7324 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    So rare to see someone pay such attention to nuance around nutrition. Thanks for you brilliant videos!

  • @Nicksonian
    @Nicksonian ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Chris and Dr. Gil Carvalho are my most trusted nutrition experts on TH-cam…hands down! They certainly have their own preferences, but they don’t allow them to influence their presentations.

  • @GoneCarnivore
    @GoneCarnivore 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    A balanced diet could be the key. We are straying from the original diet that was advocated years ago and it worked. Now we are eating garbage labeled as food.

  • @carmenmarcinkiewicz7149
    @carmenmarcinkiewicz7149 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    As usual, incredibly important information.....with GORGEOUS backgrounds!!!
    Thank you for all you do!

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Thanks Carmen! I was hoping the backgrounds wouldn't just be thought of as distracting...

    • @carmenmarcinkiewicz7149
      @carmenmarcinkiewicz7149 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@PlantChompers I sooooo appreciated the backgrounds!!!

  • @wngimageanddesign9546
    @wngimageanddesign9546 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I will share from experience. I was 50, top of my health and fitness. BF at 8%, 5'10" 150lbs. Just finished a 2,300 mile bike tour of the Pacific coast. Omnivore Asian-American. I got convinced to switch to a vegan lifestyle to preserve and extend my health. In two years, I first developed arthritis, then Lupus, Hashimoto's Disease. I continued with my vegan diet not knowing the causes and most doctor's just said it's all psychological. I was living healthy. No sugar, no read meats, fruits, grains, legumes, nuts, cheese, rice, pasta, greens. I gained a huge amount of visceral fat, had Cushings Syndrome. Loss a lot of muscle mass, hair loss, skin disorders, worsening vision, tinnitus, horrific constipation, joint pain, spasms, cramps, and BPH. 5 years in, I developed insulin resistance/pre-diabetes. All my conditions made me unable to ride a bicycle ever since. And haven't been able to ride for 7 years. I had to give up my life long passion. 2022 I had enough and decided to try the carnivore diet after investigating others who had suffered similar circumstances, from perfect health to nearly identical symptoms and illnesses. The first 3 months of returning to eating red meat (beef) eggs, cheeses, chicken, fish, no sugars, no fruits, no seed oils, no grains, and limited refined carbs/starches....made a dramatic change and turn around in my health. I learned from actually living through it. Vegan and plant-based diet will lead to a dead end and chronic health problems. It robbed me of my life and lifestyle. And I'm slowly recovering now. The answer is YES, sugar, starches and carbs are the cause of Type-2 Diabetes. I ate tons of carbs, fruits, beans, legumes, produce, and it caused my Hashimotos, then insulin resistance, and Cushings syndrome. I always lived a life of avoiding sugar and don't drink sugary drinks or juices. I was healthy prior to veganism. No signs of diabetes before.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว

      It sounds like you had a food intolerance like Mikhaila Peterson. Did you ever get a diagnosis for what it was? On a population basis, there are far more people with health problems like you describe who eat meat, eggs, etc., so I like to know the diagnosis.

  • @chrisi4517
    @chrisi4517 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It’s difficult to add anything that others haven’t already covered but I can’t help but just thank you for your considered & intelligent oversight. Your videos are a pleasure to watch.

  • @counterstrike89
    @counterstrike89 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Did you ever hear of the French paradox, they also eat a lot of meat and rich dairy, they don't have heart disease or diabetes, most of Europe has meat.

    • @BrocLarter
      @BrocLarter 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The french paradox has been debunked. They undercounted heart disease and eat a lot of vegetables. When there's an outlier, it's best practice to look at the outlier more closely than throwing out the hypothesis that all the other data points lean towards.

    • @Spertzi
      @Spertzi 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      th-cam.com/video/tXJ8eo3P0V8/w-d-xo.htmlsi=UID6GZAitJhx-I-4

    • @greenleafyman1028
      @greenleafyman1028 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      The french was paradox was proven false and there are actually no paradox happening at all. What happened why french has lower diseases despite eating a lot of meat was due to french physicians underreporting disease related deaths according to World Health Organization Investigation.

  • @stevef6523
    @stevef6523 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Just the best videos on the internet about this stuff. Keep up the great work!

  • @JW4REnvironment
    @JW4REnvironment ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Bravo! As a former high school science teacher, I could not agree more with Chris that the mainstream media tends to overlook the work of most scientists who make key discoveries but do not typically have the time to communicate with the general public. Way back in the 1980s, I tried to teach students that fat is fattening--its the butter and sour cream on the baked potato that carry the fattening contents, more than the actual potato for many heavy butter/sour cream users and that beans were shown to be truly good for our diets. It is the rare scientist like Dr. Neal Barnard who both has research done at Physician's Committee and is also a truly effective communicator to the general public. Another example is climate change, where the mainstream media so often does not interview actual climate researchers like Michael Mann, Ph.D. at Penn. Hearty thanks to Chris for bringing Dr. Taylor's insights, which make lots of sense and to me, agree with Dr. Barnard's insights that we need to keep fat out of our cells to reverse Type 2 diabetes. And many thanks for showing us Plant Chomper viewers what the hard-working dedicated research scientists have found out.
    (Now, how do we get the Department of Agriculture to pay attention to the real science and recommend heavy veggie, fruit, and whole grain consumption over beef and pork consumption? How do we convince Congress it will benefit millions to restrict SNAP purchases to healthful foods?)

  • @GA-lf2uh
    @GA-lf2uh ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The link is that most fat in the liver is synthesised from carbs especially fructose. The fastest way to lose liver fat is a high protein diet with little or no fructose.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Which link? Did you have a paper to share?

  • @Punkyrooster6
    @Punkyrooster6 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Alright, dang it. I was vegan for two years and got to the lowest weight of my adult life. I fell off the wagon gained a lot back. Now on a low carb round, but this video kind of motivated me to get back on the plants.

  • @mandybyrd1788
    @mandybyrd1788 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Another amazing, informative video that centers science and discusses important topics clearly - Your work is truly appreciated!

  • @zoey4846
    @zoey4846 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The paper about HK was exactly what I had shared to you months ago. The elderly kept their traditional veggie high diet, while the younger generation immersed themselves in fast food and meat!
    From my observation, Keto/ low carbs diet are being practiced by my fds.

  • @DrReginaldFinleySr
    @DrReginaldFinleySr ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Excellent overview of some of the thinking behind the causal mechanisms of diabetes and how to prevent it. Thank you!

  • @chewiewins
    @chewiewins 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Best 21 minutes video summary everyone, especially Diabetic and prediabetic, should watch.

  • @eg7647
    @eg7647 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    What a fabulous trip! Thanks for sharing all that amazing scenery along with your excellent analysis. You have changed my life and I so appreciate the motivation each video provides to keep me on track. (The grandchildren are growing up so quickly!)

  • @tanyasydney2235
    @tanyasydney2235 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    In two words...saturated fat. And any excess fat.

  • @stevenfrew9301
    @stevenfrew9301 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Another great and informative video, thank you. It's helpful to have someone such as yourself to break down the studies and science into layman terms.

  • @briangriffin4378
    @briangriffin4378 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You have a gift for being sincere and believable in this jungle of endless theories and I appreciate that you use that gift with humanity and for the good of your fellow man.

  • @forestappalachia6047
    @forestappalachia6047 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    The meme about ppl not worrying about our health when we were eating pop tarts and sausage biscuits applied to a few of my family members soon after my wife and I switched to vegan. Now 5 years later they seem less worried.
    Also Chris, as a forester, I enjoyed seeing the European autumn colors in this vid. They have many of the same tree species we have here in the US. I'm in Michigan's upper peninsula now seeing vibrant colors in the forests.

    • @natalietannerblogger-theed9419
      @natalietannerblogger-theed9419 ปีที่แล้ว

      I totally get this and do NOT understand why people come out of the woodwork to worry about how I will get my protein from a. WFPB diet, but no one was worried about my triglycerides before???

  • @daraohogain
    @daraohogain 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Many thanks for the insightful dive into Roy Taylor's work on Diabetes. It's really nice to hear the appreciation for the research scientists behind the data. I had the privilege to work with Roy in Newcastle (though not on the diabetes study) and I always found his talks captivating due to his ability to communicate scientific research without the jargon. A big shout out to al the hard working researchers at the MRI Center and a quick recommendation to anyone visiting the UK to go see Newcastle and Northumberland (Banburgh, Lindisfarne, Alnwyck, Cragside are top UK destinations)

  • @emreulbe
    @emreulbe ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I am not vegan but I change my diet 80% whole food plant based. I lost 27 kg ( 54 lbs ) in 5-6 months. And still losing. My weight goes 107 kg (214 lbs) to 77 kg (154 lbs). I am hypertension and type 2 diabetes patient, my blood sugar was over 200 before with more medication, now with less medication 70-180 range. My hypertension medication 1/6th than before. Most importantly my diet is sustainable, I am very enjoying low fat plant based meals and fruits. First time I was found this diet I can't believe, I sad to me I try it look what's happens, in days my blood sugar drops to normalish range. Then I stick to it. I am so grateful for all plant based vegan community, thanks for all. Sorry for my English it's not my mother language.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wow Emre!!! 👏👏👏 That’s awesome. 💪

    • @emreulbe
      @emreulbe ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers Again thanks a lot for yours and other vegan channels, my life changed good way.

  • @nondescriptname715
    @nondescriptname715 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thanks you so much for sharing all this information in a clear, calibrated and fun way.
    I adore it and share it with my teenage niece, who wants to enter the biochemical field.
    This Roy Taylor episode, and his 1000 kCal advice, brought my sugar levels back to normal in two days!
    That after struggling for months on the high fat and high carb varieties of too much food.
    Keep up the good work!

  • @clampBendersWangdang
    @clampBendersWangdang ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I did WFPB for 2 years and was getting progressively worse. I developed IBS from all the fiber, I had fatigue and needed to go back to bed after breakfast of oatmeal but not before I went to the bathroom for a bout of diarrhea. I had daily headaches, gained weight rapidly and lost muscle mass and couldn't go far after a meal without looking for a bathroom. I had to cut out all grains, legumes and tubers, keeping fiber low before my energy levels were restored and I could travel without worrying about diarrhea.

    • @Ampe96
      @Ampe96 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      What do you eat now? I had the same experience with a whole food plant based diet, apart from the weight gain (I lost too much weight)

    • @clampBendersWangdang
      @clampBendersWangdang ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@Ampe96 Basically Paleo. I felt even better a big improvement in energy and headaches when I recently removed the last starchy foods: tubers. I still have to be a little bit careful with high FODMAP fruits for my stomach though but other than that all good.

    • @Ampe96
      @Ampe96 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@clampBendersWangdang thanks for your answer, I’m glad you’re better. I’m eating low carb right now, been doing that for about three weeks, my bathroom experience improved immensely and I feel ok but with low energy (I’m not eating enough calories and I’m close to underweight). But I’m still so doubtful of what is right to do, everybody has different opinions and every move I make I don’t know if I’m making the right thing or not

    • @clampBendersWangdang
      @clampBendersWangdang ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Ampe96 Your body have to become fat adapted so you might have to eat a bit more protein and fat to get more energy out of your food. If that doesn't work, try adding some fruit to see where your fat to carb balance is.

    • @clampBendersWangdang
      @clampBendersWangdang ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Ampe96 The thing is that there is no right and wrong. All you'll find are opinions on TH-cam. A plant based diet might work for some but not others. You have to remember that veganism is a moral standpoint, not what works in your body is another story that people on TH-cam can't say what's right in your body

  • @lpg12338
    @lpg12338 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    One of the most important things to remember when reading a report or study, is who is paying for the study.

  • @Bankai90
    @Bankai90 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    So what I wanna know is can I eat saturated fat while being in a low BMI/caloric intake?
    I have no issue to be at 8-12% BF while eating all macros in balance, with saturated fat included..
    But highcarb lowish fat makes me not only gain weight easier, I also feel hungry most of the day. So basically I'm getting fat while starving.

    • @tazot4064
      @tazot4064 ปีที่แล้ว

      Are you saying you eat 33% protein, 33% carbs and 33% fat?
      Is that what you mean by "balanced"?
      Because according to nutritional organization recommendations, eating 33% saturated fat is not balanced.

    • @Bankai90
      @Bankai90 ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@tazot4064 Oh I'm well aware of the current science and the recommendations.
      But I feel like shit when I live like that.
      And i feel incredibly good when i don't.
      That's why I've some struggle to go through with those recommendations for a longer period of time
      And no I don't mean 33% saturated fat. God even if I eat animal products 3x a day my sat fat will be around 10gr at best. Unless you use butter, coconut oil or tons of milk it's not that easy to rack up saturated fat. Eggs, salmon, meat. You'd have to eat quite a lot each day to hit 20gr lol.
      Most saturated fat comes from junk food. Cookies, ice, cake. And here it's usually even worse with vegan products.
      So the thing that is up for me which is bad with the guidelines is the cholesterol intake, this one adds up very fast. But for me it's insanely satiating.

  • @dionnestanford4703
    @dionnestanford4703 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you so much. I have rarely seen someone on line with ideas which so closely align with my own. I also have heart issues which are similar to yours and diabetes in the family. I will be paying extra close attention to my fat intake from now on, as I have been having chest issues recently.

  • @donwinston
    @donwinston ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I adopted a high fiber low saturated fat quasi vegetarian diet and regular rigorous exercise(cycling) to combat my type 2 diabetes. I lost 75 lbs and now have rock bottom normal blood sugar levels (Exactly 5.0 for two years. I get tested every three months). So I guess the reason is not being vegetarian but losing 75 lbs. But I also had high cholesterol and I'm certain being vegetarian is why I now have very low LDL cholesterol.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว

      Wow, Donald, congratulations! 👏💪 That is truly impressive.

  • @noblumoon
    @noblumoon ปีที่แล้ว +2

    The comment about being "too heavy for their own body"...my sister in law had been thin and considered underweight all her life. She had type 2 diabetes and when she died from complications after she had to have her leg removed due to gangrene, she was skin and bone....and I have known several very thin people with DT2.

  • @tamcon72
    @tamcon72 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This was another incisive and engrossing video. Not surprised to find that the evidence for the most salutary diet keeps piling up: More plants is better than fewer. Hope you had a wonderful vacation in the Baltics & Scandinavia; it's so important for children to travel, and it's good for adults, too! Thanks for posting : )

  • @Mark4Jesus
    @Mark4Jesus 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I read Taylor's book a few years ago... I tried a modified version of the calorie restricted diet he was putting his patients on. I lost a lot of weight. Then I ate like a pig with reckless abandon for a couple months and my weight didn't budge. But eventually after I took my eye off it my extra weight came back.

  • @bunkermunk1707
    @bunkermunk1707 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great info as usual from Mr Chompers! The openning shot on the deck of the M/S Viking Mariella which passes my window twice every other day in Stockholm. It's the best way to cross the Baltic. The other ship in the museum is the Vasa which sank in Stockholm in 1628 and was raised in the 1950's. A must see if you ever come to the Swedish capital for a visit.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว

      👆 Bunker knows his stuff! The Vasa museum is one of the most amazing thing I have ever seen. 👏 👏 👏

    • @bunkermunk1707
      @bunkermunk1707 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@PlantChompers I must correct myself. That was the Viking Gabriella not the Mariella in the shot. The Mariella ran the same route until 2021 when it was sold to Corsica Ferries. Thanks for the compliment.! I enjoy your videos more than any other nutrition channel I follow and I am delighted every time a video of yours comes into my feed.

  • @beatpirate8
    @beatpirate8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My question is what to do w diet of a person in the hospital who is sick. W hypertension diabetes and renal failure. It seems they can’t eat much of anything .

  • @evanpeterjones
    @evanpeterjones ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I've noticed that as well (6:30)! I started hearing epidemiology couldn't prove causation a few years ago but I learned the term epidemiology because my mother was a nurse, and told me epidemiologists proved that smoking causes cancer. That's always confused me. Glad to know I'm not the only one.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Those smoking studies were genius, by two British Researchers who were knighted by the queen - Richard Doll and Richard Peto. Google Dr. Doll and you won't be sorry. 👏

    • @notyourdad
      @notyourdad ปีที่แล้ว +2

      The difference is the strength of the correlation where the rate of cancer incidence in smokers is something in the neighborhood 5000% compared to non smokers, meanwhile the increase in incidence in heart disease among meat eaters is generally in the neighborhood of 20% or less. That is a relative increase as well, and a 20% relative increase in heart disease is absolutely miniscule and can absolutely not be taken as an indication of anything - now if that increase was similar to the one seen in smoking in relation to cancer that would be a completely different story. And yes, there is still not any causal evidence between smoking and cancer but the correlation is strong enough that it's worth taking seriously.

    • @penultimatename6677
      @penultimatename6677 ปีที่แล้ว

      No one is saying epidemiology is bad. Just that it is not as rigorous as other studies. The meat causation is very weak. We also have to consider the studies used in the comparisons. Often they have a bias or not rigorous. Maybe the group is eating low carb but what is the studies definition of low carb. What is the lifestyle of the group. Is the study closely monitoring the food choices.
      Smoking studies are easier to monitor. You either smoke or you don't smoke. The number of packs of cigarettes might be a bit inaccurate in these studies but much easier than following food choices.

  • @adamokoriscant8500
    @adamokoriscant8500 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I don't always agree with you, but I gotta respect how far you go down the rabbit hole

  • @RoyalDavid
    @RoyalDavid ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Kudos to your most through and persistent investigation. However, in my experience a plant-based diet includes too many carbs that convert to glucose or include fructose and subsequently raise insulin levels. Perhaps specific to myself my success has been contingent on overall carb minimization.

    • @notyourdad
      @notyourdad ปีที่แล้ว

      Fructose does not raise insulin - just a little correction.

    • @RoyalDavid
      @RoyalDavid ปีที่แล้ว

      @@notyourdad Thanks most kindly. But Alas, it raises Glucose in the Blood and it contributes to Fatty Liver?

    • @garyloewenthal
      @garyloewenthal ปีที่แล้ว

      @@RoyalDavid Predominantly (though not all the time), in the studies I've read on PubMed, there is an inverse relationship between fruit consumption and incidence of fatty liver disease. Ditto for whole grains. In clinical studies, the addition of at least certain fruits (e.g., blueberries) measurably lowers the insulin response to a given meal. It seems the quality of the carbs ingested (e.g., an apple vs an apple pie) makes a major difference.

  • @kaiustaelore4068
    @kaiustaelore4068 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Have you considered making a blog where you can recommend books with brief summaries and who you would recommend them for, that you have covered or will cover or might not get to cover. You are a great resource for things I might've not ever come across without you. A substack would be fine: It’s free i think. Love your work. Keep up the great job.

  • @kathleenklein4231
    @kathleenklein4231 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I don't have diabetes, but the doctor said possible pre-diabetes. I am switching to plant-based, just can't seem to give up yogurt yet. I think 700-800 calories a day is insane. I was doing 700-800 calories a day when I was active in ballet in high school and that led to an eating disorder.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว

      Well, of all the dairy products, yogurt is probably the best, no? At least the low sugar varieties. My wife and I make yogurt from unsweetened soy milk and add fruit, and we love it. 😋

    • @disinformationworld9378
      @disinformationworld9378 ปีที่แล้ว

      Fasting is zero calories. There can be a balanced pattern of fasting and eating to cure diabetes. Dr. Fung has done this with many patients (an appalling hack job “review” of his book on this channel).

    • @disinformationworld9378
      @disinformationworld9378 ปีที่แล้ว

      Any by the way “excess fat” in the liver is exactly what too much insulin resistance and carbs cause. But for some reason Dr Fungs book was trashed for saying the same thing a different way. Dietary fat is not causing fatty liver disease unless you are eating an extremely high amount (extremely unlikely due to satiety). That’s carbs. Dr Fungs point is that fasting alone has impacts on improving insulin resistance. This is one of the keys to curing diabetes.

  • @elhombreloco3680
    @elhombreloco3680 ปีที่แล้ว

    In my experience as a T2 diabetic of 25 years who is reversing his 13.5 A1c down to almost below 6 and still going down within just 3 months, I can say that, most likely, all of these experts are actually right. If you think about it there is actually no reason why one has to preclude the other...
    1. severe calorie restriction works really quickly (and probably works the best overall). Intermittent fasting and water fasting also kind of fall in here, but water fasting is still an enigma as it can raise your lipids, while severe restriction tends to lower them. To this point, my glucose was pretty much perfect for a few days straight. Then I would overeat on peanuts one day - not too many carbs overall, but a lot of calories. I would have trouble getting my glucose back to normal for two days after that (would constantly hover around 120). If I ate very little the next day, my glucose would be back to normal on the second day. This has been a pretty robust observation so far (I think I've seen this happen 3-4 times - don't blame me, I love peanuts).
    2. extremely low carb also works - this is what I've been doing and my numbers have literally plummeted into the ground (in fact my blood glucose might be better than yours). I regularly register below 80 fasting glucose, sometimes in the 60s. Almost never go over 120. I do eat animal foods high in saturated fat, but I also eat avocados, pecans, walnuts, pumpkin seeds, hazelnuts, broccoli, cauliflower and kimchi. I am almost constantly in ketosis with my ketones hovering between 1.7 and 3.5. And yes, I agree, if I ate even a single apple, my glucose would probably jump up to 200 and stay there for a while (I'll test this at some point, not ready yet), but as research has shown, high saturated fat intake does decrease your insulin response and increases insulin resistance. What the research hasn't shown is if this is a pathological process or a normal physiological adaptation that reverses once we switch from saturated fat back to carbs.
    3. low fat high carb also works - I haven't tried this yet, but I do think that extreme low carb might be better as an initial therapy for people with already damaged pancreases (like me) and really really high and stubborn insulin resistance (like me), to allow the pancreas some time to recover and to reduce AGE/inflammation at the same time. I do think that low fat high carb also makes a lot of sense, since it increases insulin sensitivity and most foods are of low caloric density so it's really hard to over consume.
    What I believe is actually the worst and is one of the main dietary drivers of T2 diabetes is combining saturated fats with carbs on the reg. This is what creates the positive feedback loop that eventually leads to diabetes. Something like saturated fat intake increases insulin resistance, however high blood glucose drives the pancrease to make more insulin, which in combination with more saturated fat further drives insulin resistance. That would explain why highly processed foods are universally accepted as horrible for diabetes (they are usually high in both saturated fat and carbs) and why both low carb and high carb can work for diabetes reversal.

  • @CristinaAcosta
    @CristinaAcosta ปีที่แล้ว +3

    At 6 weeks into my 12 weeks vegan experiment my cholesterol dropped from 298 to 207!! Blood pressure from yellow zone to green. Im far from perfect, eating vegan Trader Joe’s hotdogs and Italian sausage a couple meals per week. High aspirations and intermittent strictness are fine for now. Much easier to comply ( the vegan hotdogs are my bridge food)than I expected. Onwards

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว

      Wow, Christina!!! 👏👏👏 So great to hear. 😁💪

    • @CristinaAcosta
      @CristinaAcosta ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers Thanks. I am rather surprised. I’ve been doing intermittent fasting for three years and had very positive health changes. Nonetheless, things seemed to plateau then began gently sliding backwards. This small change to Vegan in the past several weeks has yielded huge results. Thanks for the inspo. Love your referrals to Dr. Gill Carvalho.

  • @regather59
    @regather59 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow, this was an excellent overview. I've been searching for this kind of clarity.

  • @sammiegirl883
    @sammiegirl883 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I started eating low carbs and reversed my diabetes in 6 months and my cholesterol is very healthy now.

    • @md82892
      @md82892 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Yes they'll say you shouldn't be alive by now. If by coincidence you get to live, you'll die soon because "studies" says so.@@avasdv

  • @disableddave1707
    @disableddave1707 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have been on low carb for almost 2 years. I was 117kg with an a1c of 8.7. I am now 95kg and my a1c is 6.4. My total cholesterol is 117 and my triglycerides are 89. I guess my body is good with the reduced carb diet.

  • @susanyounkin4192
    @susanyounkin4192 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I had gestational diabetes with all 3 of my children and was told that within 10 years I would have full blown type 2 diabetes. That seemed to be the path on which I was heading until I started eating a plant based vegan diet 8 years ago. Since then I have watched my a1c drop every single year. My youngest is about to turn 14 and the doc has decided to stop taking my a1c, since I “show absolutely no signs of diabetes” and she is beginning to question the validity of the glucose tests I took while pregnant.
    I’m staying on this lifestyle track for the rest of my life! It has also greatly reduced the migraines that Lymes disease had me suffering through.

  • @gusgonnet
    @gusgonnet ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Bravo Chris, you not only take us on a healthier journey, but you also take us on vacation with you and your family.
    I loved the ever-changing scenery, very entertaining. The lip-syncing was priceless, and the info was great - thanks again!

  • @clampBendersWangdang
    @clampBendersWangdang ปีที่แล้ว +5

    What everybody forgets about diabetes is that both low fat high carb and high fat low carb works for diabetes and the reason is the randle cycle that everybody forgets about because the have an ideology behind their diet. Diabetes occurs because most people eat high carb and high fat at the same time which leads to our cells rejecting anymore input.

  • @darongardner4294
    @darongardner4294 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Your body is designed to walk ,I walk 2 hours a day split into three stages ,one hour walk and two half hour walks .I have been doing this for years I eat one meal a day .Body fat content is a stable 14 per cent.Walking can be done on most surface types and you can walk in any foot ware you like.

  • @ghostviggen
    @ghostviggen ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Low carb in combination of fasting has been great for my blood sugar.
    It’s the mixed meals with carbs and fat that is the problem.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว

      Sounds like masked symptoms.

    • @ghostviggen
      @ghostviggen ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@PlantChompers Nope, glucose tolerance improved when I tested.
      The problem in western society is when we eat a mixed diet with highly processed food.
      Even Linnè discovered back in the day that low carb eating Sami in northern Sweden were healthier the the grain eating farmers in southern Sweden. The farmers mixed fat and carbs in their diet.

    • @ApexRevolution
      @ApexRevolution ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ghostviggen Glucose tolerance may have improved due to weight loss however.
      Meat, especially red meat, has been shown many times to be unhealthy.

    • @ghostviggen
      @ghostviggen ปีที่แล้ว

      @@ApexRevolution No meat has never been proven to be unhealthy. Several cultures eat mostly meat and are doing fine.

  • @julioandresgomez3201
    @julioandresgomez3201 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    That makes sense for many other diseases, they are a consequence of eating more than the body needs. Or at least it's the overeating that makes the body defenseless against something it could normally fight off. In the case of diabetes you can pour sugar on everything you eat, eat well above maintenance needs, it'll never cause diabetes if fat is below 10 grs a day. Of course that doesn't mean that you'll be free of other ills. Overeating takes a toll one way or another.

  • @patrycja2696
    @patrycja2696 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I was diagnosed with prediabetes and insulin resistance.
    Now after doing Keto, now carnivore my prediabetes is gone, insulin resistance gone, full blood work and lipid panel, tummy organs scan and heart are like in 16 years old. I have amazing mood and tones of energy from 5.30 am until 9.30 pm!!!

  • @rodcamp4472
    @rodcamp4472 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I have a PhD and am a deep analytical thinker. It is late night simple carbs often... like pizza at 11 pm or 1 am... plus eating too much seed oils. Those are the people who 'get' T2D. Eating a lot of bread or rice/deep fried batter (pizza or Chinese delivery) covers 90% of T2 diabetes! Ask anyone who 'has it'. The extra carbs in the blood turns into fat in the liver & pancreas

    • @spiritofadmetos9992
      @spiritofadmetos9992 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      But is is carb creep or vegetable seed oil/bleached flour creep?

  • @NiranjanBendre
    @NiranjanBendre ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great video as usual! Carbs are not the villian!

  • @michellestreb9224
    @michellestreb9224 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So grateful I found you & your podcasts! Love & appreciate your through but easy to understand scientific information.

  • @DrAJ_LatinAmerica
    @DrAJ_LatinAmerica ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Don't always agree with everything shown but always enjoy your videos. What truly baffles me is how many fight for "A" or "B" when we don't truly know, could be "C". Or in the end we may find the answer is all of the above but in proper periodization based on a matrix of factors per each individual..... Meaning we may find the so called perfect diet for person XX is not the perfect diet for person ZZ. There is much we don't know yet everyone wants to write a #$@$!&+:"*_ book like it is fact. We must stop the book writing and stop the Publish or Perish until we have a better answer. Would any of theses doctors or scientist turn in a final exam in math class with an answer of "could be 9 but might be x+1" ? No. Plus no one want to address the elephant - what if the perfect diet is meat and there are a billion people without resources or access to meat? Or say vegetables? Or what if they just plain hate both. Hardest part about dealing with humans is emotions, beliefs, social paradigms and economic differences. Then when we add in governments, big business, greed,....wow what a mess. Thanks for your hard work.

  • @pixievincent2478
    @pixievincent2478 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow! Not only is this episode full of amazing information that solidifies my beliefs in plant-based lifestyle, but you are amazing to watch - able to pull off such coherent information while transitioning from place to place. Please 'fess up - did you do all of the content at each stop and just splice it together, or did you actually PLAN how to chop it all up from place to place? I sure do appreciate your ways of keeping things interesting and current.

  • @koyuki6113
    @koyuki6113 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Hey chris, I have something to ask. Have you read any data on the dangers of underweight people? I have maximally gone to 52kg of weight by consuming tons of butter and dairy everyday for about 2 years when my grandma said I have to get fatter in the past (52kg is still underweight for me). After that, I started looking more into health and also went vegan which dropped me by about 5kg and so I weigh 47kg right now (bmi of 16.9). The thing is, I want to weigh around 49-50kg (even though that's still underweight), reason why is because I've actually experienced high blood cholesterol and symptoms of heart disease even though I'm only 19. My actual question being, do you think it's safe to consume around 20 ml (161 calories) of olive oil a day to get to the weight of 49-50kg? My diet normally consists of just whole foods and only fats for breakfast (nuts and peanutbutter). I will see a dietician soon about this, but I'm sure that you know more about this type of research, given that you have to be very careful your self and read a lot about the literature.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hmmm, Koyuki, that's a good question. My respect for doctors keeps deepening as I wonder how they answer questions like this. I get the feeling that you are a woman, probably not very tall, am I right? If you were older, I'd worry about osteoporosis, but being underweight is so common among youth. I know adults worry about it but my understanding is problems are pretty rare among thin youth. My wife, our kids, our grandkids were all rail thin growing up, no doctor had a concern, and they are still for the most part at a good weight, although it's creeping up. But no health problems from being so thin as teens.

    • @davidyong8719
      @davidyong8719 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Instead of olive oil, I recalled Dr Kim Williams saying can boost calorie intake and gain weight by eating nuts, seeds, avocado and soybeans. Get the nutrients and fiber in addition to the calories.

    • @koyuki6113
      @koyuki6113 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers Yeah, I’m a short woman, you guessed that right. Thank you for sharing that, it atleast puts me a bit more at ease, but yeah, osteoporosis is something I was worrying about.

    • @koyuki6113
      @koyuki6113 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@davidyong8719 I have already tried that, and I probably would try that again, snacking on nuts throughout the day. But I have another problem that is, I’m on a super tight budget as a student and nuts and seeds are really expensive here, and about soybeans, I haven’t seen a package anywhere that contains them as a whole food, I normally eat all of the other legumes though.

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 ปีที่แล้ว

      Being a little underweight is OK and not all that abnormal in people that eat a healthy plant-based diet.
      Eating more nuts and dried fruit is a healthy way to gain weight. Use some canola, olive, or sesame oil in your cooking, as well.

  • @jasminhembrow9400
    @jasminhembrow9400 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you. I am on the verge of type 2 diabetes. This information has helped me very much conclude what i need to do for prevention and reversal of type 2 diabetes. Thank you Sir.

  • @Coach_Jose
    @Coach_Jose ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This a study from medical news today:
    Fat storage and mobilization
    The scientists exposed human and rat beta cells to periods of excess sugar, with or without high fat levels.
    As expected, over time, high sugar levels reduced the cells’ ability to secrete insulin, compared with normal sugar levels.
    However, an abundant supply of fat appeared to protect the beta cells’ insulin secretion against the effects of high sugar levels.
    “When cells are exposed to both too much sugar and too much fat, they store the fat in the form of droplets in anticipation of less prosperous times,” Lucie Oberhauser, Ph.D., first author of the study, explains.
    “Surprisingly, we have shown that this stock of fat, instead of worsening the situation, allows insulin secretion to be restored to near-normal levels,” she adds.

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yes, rats often do behave differently than humans.

    • @Coach_Jose
      @Coach_Jose ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers Not really. We the only ones that think we need a high sugar diet.

    • @kinarrakid5036
      @kinarrakid5036 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@PlantChompers a typically biased response

  • @ervinjackson3261
    @ervinjackson3261 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I gave Roy a 10 that man know what he talking about scientifically

  • @Magnulus76
    @Magnulus76 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This information is so important, especially as Type II diabetes is a leading cause of death in the United States now.
    I've known several people (including myself) who tried low carb diets and long term it does nothing good for your health. The best diet for weight loss and diabetes prevention is low calorie, not low carb. And cutting down on branch-chain amino acids appears to go a long way towards preventing prediabetes as well, since populations that consume more animal foods have higher rates of diabetes than those that don't.

    • @Moralatheist101
      @Moralatheist101 ปีที่แล้ว

      You were sort of vague about "what" low carb actually does to your health that was "nothing good"? Please, pray tell, and expound more. Low calorie does not give you satiety because only fats can do that. Anything that raises blood sugar will also cause that blood sugar to drop a mere two to four hours later and then you have to eat again. Unless you are also saying that "willpower" is also needed to make your diet scheme work?
      In addition, you are misleading with your statement that, "populations that consume more animal foods have higher rates of diabetes than those that don't." If that were true, the Inuit in parts of Russia and the US would be leading the numbers in diabetes. They aren't, so my question to you is, are you purposefully cherry-picking the data or ignoring it altogether? The information you don't want to acknowledge is that prediabetes is high in countries that consume high carbs with high glucose-producing, processed foods. It has nothing to do with a low-carb diet. Nothing. At. All.
      If you really tried low carb "long term" you'd know all these things. If you half-assed it with processed "keto" foods - you really didn't try low carb. Try better. 30 days. Pure carnivore. Meat. Salt. Water. Think you'll die? Eskimos don't.

    • @Magnulus76
      @Magnulus76 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Moralatheist101 I got gouty joints and kidney stones eating a diet that was mostly meat and dairy in terms of calories. Now I eat vegan and feel alot better. I also have faster recovery after workouts.
      Fats contribute very little to satiety. There's not alot of evidence that high fat diets are better for weight loss than low fat diets.

  • @frenchiepowell
    @frenchiepowell ปีที่แล้ว

    Frenchie again today lol! Very interesting and helpful info that connected a lot of dots. Thanks for sharing this info and making the video!

  • @m-hadji
    @m-hadji ปีที่แล้ว +6

    After 25 years dealing with diabetes the only thing worked for me was - are you sitting?- elimination all carb from my diet. At least the one I could see and taste. It’s almost a year and I lost 45 lbs. i got a CGM and my mad doctor terminated my insulin injections along 3 other drugs. According to you I am getting worse latter but I take this small victory for now. By the way I have not miss fruits that much. And I definitely happier without 7injections. Beside that , it can be my mental dysfunction but l feel more energetic and walk at least 2 hours a day or bike 100 miles a week. Anyway my points is for now I am ok with stopping buying low fat stuff and missing one meal a day if I don’t feel having it.

    • @Moralatheist101
      @Moralatheist101 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Your post was awesome and I, too, am on the same page as you! I might get worse later but for now, I'll take feeling better as a sign that I'm on the right track with eliminating all carbs! Cheers!

    • @45-Subscribers
      @45-Subscribers ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Moralatheist101 how would it get worse later?

    • @md82892
      @md82892 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@45-Subscribers No one knows, but Vegans say so according to their studies. We and all of our ancestors was supposed to be having fatty liver disease and cardiovascular diseases and have an early death because of eating meat for hundreds of thousands of years. We exist because 200.000 years ago animals were actually made of plants (so we were qualified as vegans), animals decided to evolve in the last 100 years to become meat and unhealthy. 😜

  • @gray1572
    @gray1572 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Greetings from Alaska Chris. Great video. Appreciate your deep dives into these important questions.
    Wondering about the validity of McDougal’s stance on starchy veggies?

  • @doddsalfa
    @doddsalfa ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Supporting that carbs are not the cause of diabetes I started plant based diet no oil after a heart attack and diabetes diagnosis.All animal products out .4 meals a day starch diet and one liter orange juice that I realised was not a part of the plant based diet still at the same time cured my diabetes in a matter of weeks

    • @PlantChompers
      @PlantChompers  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That's awesome, Thordur! 💪

  • @jazzbaia
    @jazzbaia ปีที่แล้ว +2

    05:26 The excess fat in the liver and pancreas is valid when it comes to stating why people eventually suffer from T2DM. Fatty liver initially indicates metabolic syndrome showing elevated Insulin levels.
    05:50 This is where the speaker, Roy Taylor, starts declaring a controversial statement.
    Except for Linoleic acid (a fatty acid), eating fat does not cause the fat to accumulate in the liver and the Pancreas.

    • @jazzbaia
      @jazzbaia ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Lipogenesis: Glucose is a form of sugar present in the bloodstream. During the process of digestion, carbohydrates are converted into glucose, which serves as an energy source for our bodies. When our intake of glucose exceeds our immediate energy requirements, it gets stored as fat.
      The process of converting glucose into fat is called lipogenesis happening in the Liver. Your attending Physician or your Cardiologist can tell you our Liver creates cholesterol, VLDL, triglycerides and other fats your body needs.
      As to why those doing low-carb and especially a Carnivore diet does not die without carbihydrates is due to gluconeogensis - happening in the liver.
      Some studies for consideration regarding fat not causing NAFLD.
      Note:
      - I would make an exception for Seed oils, linoleic acid, which is almost all ultra-processed food in the market.
      - You will also find studies in support of n-6 despite the highly oxidative nature of Omega 6s.
      - Processed seed oils became part of the diet in the 1920s, thanks to Proctor & Gamble.
      - When searching for studies, check with NCBI not a random Google search.
      "Effect of Dietary Carbohydrate Restriction on Glycemic Control in Adults With Diabetes: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis" found that dietary carbohydrate restriction was associated with a significant reduction in liver fat content compared to higher-carbohydrate diets in patients with type 2 diabetes. This study reviewed 23 trials.
      DOI: 10.2337/dc17-2216
      Limitation: High heterogeneity among the included trials, a lack of data on the types and quality of carbohydrates, and a risk of publication bias due to the small number of trials for some outcomes.
      "Effect of Calorie-Unrestricted Low-Carbohydrate, High-Fat Diet Versus High-Carbohydrate, Low-Fat Diet on Type 2 Diabetes and Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease : A Randomized Controlled Trial"
      The study did not find any significant difference in liver fat content between the LCHF diet group and the HCLF diet group after 6 months of intervention. Both diets significantly reduced liver fat content by -7% in the LCHF group and -5% in the HCLF group, with no significant difference between the groups. The study also did not find any changes in blood tests for liver function (ALT, AST, GGT) between the groups. This suggests that saturated fat intake did not increase liver fat or cause NAFLD in this study population.
      DOI: 10.7326/M22-1787
      Limitation: Did not assess histological outcomes or long-term clinical outcomes.
      "Effect of a high-protein diet versus standard-protein diet on weight loss and biomarkers of metabolic syndrome: A randomized clinical trial" compared the effects of a high-protein diet versus a standard-protein diet on weight loss and biomarkers of metabolic syndrome in overweight and obese adults. The results showed that both diets significantly reduced liver fat content by -2% in the high-protein group and -1% in the standard-protein group after 16 weeks, with no significant difference between the groups. Both diets also significantly improved ALT, AST, GGT, total cholesterol, LDL-C, HDL-C, triglycerides, fasting glucose, fasting insulin, HOMA-IR, BMI, waist circumference, body fat percentage, and blood pressure levels, with no significant difference between the groups. This suggests that both high-protein and standard-protein diets may be equally effective in reducing liver fat content and improving metabolic parameters in overweight and obese adults.
      DOI: 10.1159/000471485
      Limitation: Did not assess histological outcomes or long-term clinical outcomes.
      For review of readers in the comment section :)
      "Saturated Fats and Health: A Reassessment and Proposal for Food-Based Recommendations: JACC State-of-the-Art Review" found that there is no strong evidence to support the current recommendations to limit saturated fat intake to 10% of energy or less. This study reviewed the evidence on the effects of saturated fat intake on cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and other health outcomes. The study also suggested that the food matrix and food processing may modify the health effects of saturated fat intake.
      DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.05.077
      Limitation: Based on observational studies and meta-analyses, which may have limitations in terms of causality, confounding, and heterogeneity.

  • @mattseaton5832
    @mattseaton5832 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I'm sad that I clicked on this video and indirectly supported this channel. Shame on me.

  • @78cheerio
    @78cheerio ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This ALT info is the most specific I’ve heard. Thank you!

  • @DrGreenbaumberg
    @DrGreenbaumberg ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Fatty liver and pancreas are clearly pathological and the blockage of fat metabolism by carbs is a clear contributor. Entirely unsurprising. So, yes, carbs can absolutely be a causal factor.

  • @ervinjackson3261
    @ervinjackson3261 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Roy is the real deal. I already been using this and it works.

  • @PlantBasedPietro
    @PlantBasedPietro ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I always look forward to your videos Chris and I am never disappointed!!!! Thank you for supplying us with all of this knowledge!!! Hope you have a great trip!!! :)