Vegetarianism: Nutrition Science Meets Media Nonsense

Vegetarianism: Nutrition Science Meets Media Nonsense

We get hyberbolic headlines about nutrition studies almost every week; it’s how we roll. We can come back to the reasons why we roll that way, and who profits from it, some other time.

For now, it’s enough to note that the global spate of headlines saying things like “vegetarian diet raises risk of heart disease and cancer,” allegedly in response to a new study by scientists at Cornell, takes it to a new, absurd, stupefying level. Maybe this is all just tailor-made for April Fools’ Day. The headlines are making fools of the journalists and editors writing them, and anyone reading them. Maybe it’s all a joke. It’s certainly hard to take it seriously.

The study does not report that vegetarianism increases the risk of heart disease, cancer, or any other bad outcome. Nothing of the sort. Not even close.

The study, accessible here for the brave among you, is by some leading experts in fat metabolism at Cornell. The senior author, J. Thomas Brenna, is a friend and colleague known globally for just such expertise. I have written about Dr. Brenna’s work before.

In this instance, the team speculated that human beings might show adaptations to the fats in their diets over time. In particular, they hypothesized that vegetarian populations might display some known genetic variants that make them better at producing the fats they weren’t getting directly from their food.

So, they compared genetic markers in a population of 234 primarily vegetarian Indians, to those in 311 Americans with fairly typical diets, and found, indeed, that the Indians had a higher frequency of genetic mutations that make them good at producing the fats their diet doesn’t provide.

An example? Well, one is that vegetarians are better at converting plant-based omega-3 fat, notably one called ALA, into the long-chain omega-3’s often called “fish oil,” namely EPA and DHA. This is what the authors predicted.

How did headlines about harm emanate from this? Well, the authors also found that among those adapted to the oils and foods of a traditional vegetarian diet, the imbalances of the modern diet might be especially harmful. The study did not suggest that vegetarian diets were harmful. Rather, it showed that traditional vegetarian populations might be especially prone to the harms of the modern diet. This might help explain, for example, why ethnic Indians seem so prone to type 2 diabetes when they transition to a diet of burgers, fries, and soda.

A reasonable take-away, then, might be that traditional, balanced vegetarian diets are an excellent, healthful choice for anyone so inclined, but may be especially important for people from populations that have made that choice for a long time. They have a higher likelihood of being specifically adapted to it.

As for the mechanisms by which the imbalances of oils in the modern diet can conspire against the health of all of us, and perhaps traditional vegetarians even more so, they are featured in prior work by Dr. Brenna and colleagues, and as noted, I cover them, at least nominally, in my prior column on that work.

As for the current study, it looked only at gene frequencies. Not heart disease, not cancer, not death. Despite the insane headlines, the study had nothing to do with death, or disease. It was a study of gene patterns.   We already know that good vegetarian diets prevent disease, even reverse it, and are in the mix with the most health-promoting dietary options on the planet. We know they are good for the planet as well. All of that is established. Designing a study to challenge that would be like conducting a study to see if maybe the earth is still flat after all.

As for the general idea that creatures adapt to what they eat, just visit a zoo. It’s on rather flagrant display. Bamboo isn’t very nutritious food, but it works for the pandas. At some level, this new study is simply affirmation that we are creatures, too. We, too, adapt to our diets.

That’s it, folks- really. Traditional vegetarian diets are very good for us, and the typical American diet, very bad for us. The specific contribution of this study is to note that the typical American diet may be especially bad for traditional vegetarians who haven’t evolved defenses against it. They have, in accord with prediction, adapted to thrive on their native diet.

The world, by the way, remains spherical- more or less.

Oh, and happy April Fool’s Day!

 

-fin

P.S. - I never like to put words in a colleague's mouth.  I ran this by Dr. Brenna himself.  His reaction, truncated, was: "...terrific, right on..."

David L. Katz

Director, Yale University Prevention Research Center; Griffin Hospital
President, American College of Lifestyle Medicine

Founder, The True Health Initiative

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Laurence Mitchell

Retiring from the wold of Antiques Dealing. Now on a journey to educate the public about my Tree (exercise) Connection workshops where anyone can learn how trees can become their nature gym.

9y

Yesterday one of my meat eating colleagues who is riddled with conditions was talking to me about the nonsense of diets. I was telling him that when I masticate my salad veggies it can take me upwards of ten minutes to chew my food to non existence. This would mean eating my salad would take hours longer than the time I have. His answer, 'you see nature is telling you that veggies are not meant for us. Actually I have a cousin who sustains his life virtually without any veggie supplement. I sometimes wonder whether there is any truth in this but cold pressing my veggies into a juicer is also time consuming. Perhaps we all have the wrong idea of whats good for us. Perhaps it's all about mindset and that our body can adopt whatever food substance that can nourish us so long as our brain as the capacity of acceptance. But I got on to reading your article after looking at another the with the title that was sort of dancing and diet. Imagine fifty years from now getting a musical prescription for life woes.

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I am quickly going to vegetarism Italian meet is very suspicious

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George Shagov

TechLead at Cloud.ru SDN Dev Team

9y

My additional two cents Neither vegeterian nor vegan nor raw diets do respond to the health problem completely. I tried all of them. It took years. To understand the entity, the core of 'how it works' the only author I can refer at the moment is Arnold Ehret. This is a really master, a genius. V=P-O :-)

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John C. Shuey

Homo sum humani a me nihil alienum puto.

9y

Like many people my diet has evolved away from junk food (oh how I love Hostess Cupcakes, the orange ones), pasta and processed meats. I probably eat fifteen different fruits and vegetables on an average day. I do continue to eat meat but not huge portions. And I formally exercise five or six hours per week while otherwise being very physically active. All this pays dividends in my old age and when I had to have a major operation to correct a birth defect that began to threaten my life, the doctors raved about my physical condition. Having lost 100 lbs a decade prior, I thought they were just being polite; The Rock, I am not. It's funny, but I am SO active that I kept pestering them on the limits of what I could do in recovery. They really didn't have the answers because old people aren't supposed to be in good shape. They resorted to googling the way you or I would when we want to know the safe internal temperature of chicken (providing you eat chicken, of course). Strict vegetarianism isn't for me but I do think we need to lean more on our green friends. Healthy food has come a long way from Brussel sprouts boiled to mush and that awful Loma Linda fake-meat-in-a-can.

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Frank Genovese Ⓥ

Principal at 3215 Holdings

9y

Thank you for your well thought out response and for bringing clarity to the discussion.

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