Guest guest Posted May 15, 2003 Report Share Posted May 15, 2003 I just started reading The Cholesterol Myths today. Price probably mentioned it, but I read NAPD a while ago and must have forgotten-- I was suprised by how *litttle* milk the Maasai drink. I was thinking for some reason it was gallons a day, and figured they had much more milk available than meat. But in TCM it says they only drank a half gallon a day, and would eat their balance in meat, and sometimes eat 4-10 pounds of meat in a day! (I myself drink over a quart of milk a day, and I don't herd cattle ;-) ) So that raises the question-- with all that cattle meat, why aren't the Maasai overdosing on iron? According to Mercola and others excess iron can be a major problem for people who can afford to eat meat all the time. But the Maasai have no apparent problem with this nor heart disease due to it. That brings me back to what I'd wondered allowed a couple months ago-- is iron excess perhaps not due to organic iron in meat, but only inorganic iron from cooking metals and fortified flours, etc? The inorganic iron that is used for fortifier interferes with vitamin E while the organic iron does not, so I've read. So couldn't the oxidative damage associated with excess iron be not related to the oxidative effect of iron, but to the depressed anti-oxidant activity of vitamin E? This would explain why iron excess poses a problem to folks in industrialized countries where much or most of their iron is inorganic from flour products, and not in non-industrialized countries where it all comes from meat. Any thoughts? Chris " To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. " --Theodore Roosevelt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 15, 2003 Report Share Posted May 15, 2003 Chris- This has been my theory for quite awhile now. It's somewhat tenuous, since there's no direct evidence supporting it except for anthropological data showing that even cultures which ate lots and lots of meat (including liver) had no discernible problem with iron excess while people eating a modern diet, even with very little meat, can develop iron toxicity. This just goes to show that it's not just what bulk elements you eat that matters, but the forms they come in and the cofactors that accompany them. That's not to say we couldn't potentially give ourselves an iron overdose, but I'd guess that would be because of other problems, like gut dysbiosis, rather than iron consumption itself. >That brings me back to what I'd wondered allowed a couple months ago-- is >iron excess perhaps not due to organic iron in meat, but only inorganic iron >from cooking metals and fortified flours, etc? - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 15, 2003 Report Share Posted May 15, 2003 , Here's one more shred of evidence for it: People who eat whole grain bread have lower levels of heart disease than those who eat white bread. This could be due to probably a million things, but Mercola took it to suggest that the phytates in the bread were curbing iron overload, which contributes to heart disease by its oxidative effect. Another interpretation: 100% whole grain breads contain organic iron rather than " enriched " with iron, *and* contain vitamin E, which both lacking in white bread and interfered with by the iron in white bread. Chris In a message dated 5/14/03 11:39:06 PM Eastern Daylight Time, Idol@... writes: > This has been my theory for quite awhile now. It's somewhat tenuous, since > there's no direct evidence supporting it except for anthropological data > showing that even cultures which ate lots and lots of meat (including > liver) had no discernible problem with iron excess while people eating a > modern diet, even with very little meat, can develop iron toxicity. > > This just goes to show that it's not just what bulk elements you eat that > matters, but the forms they come in and the cofactors that accompany > them. That's not to say we couldn't potentially give ourselves an iron > overdose, but I'd guess that would be because of other problems, like gut > dysbiosis, rather than iron consumption itself. " To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. " --Theodore Roosevelt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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