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High fat diets and bone density in athletes

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Deanna wrote:

> Don't think I wasn't thinking of you, lol. But it is really ironic

> that

> this group of endurance cyclists (non weight bearing exercisers) go

> high

> fat for 3 months and get 2/100 percent more skeletal mass than before.

> Bear in mind, that the average Jane loses one percent bone mass per

> year

> starting at age 40. So the increase really is substantial in this

> situation, but is dependent on age just how significant. All the

> while,

> the ones who misname the " high protein " (which is really high fat) diet

> as one that will just suck the calcium out of your bones, seem to be

> wrong in this case.

I did a quick search and cannot find any studies supporting high fat

diets increasing bone mass. I really want to find evidence supporting

this but everything I see supports the opposite.

I didn't get to read all the articles so forgive me if I missed the

goods ones. I wonder if it has something to do with the type of fat

they are feeding the rats. Are they giving them hydrogenated fats?

Sandy

http://scholar.google.com/

scholar?hl=en & lr= & q=high+fat+diet+bone+density & btnG=Search

Atherogenic high -fat diet reduces bone mineralization in mice

F Parhami, Y Tintut, WG Beamer, N Gharavi, W … - J Bone Miner Res,

2001 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

.... In this study, effects of an atherogenic high -fat diet versus

control chow diet

on bone were tested in two strains of mice with genetically ...

Genetic loci determining bone density in mice with diet -induced

atherosclerosis

TA Drake, E Schadt, K Hannani, JM Kabo, K Krass, V … - Physiol

Genomics, 2001 - physiolgenomics.physiology.org

.... Also, administration of a high -fat diet to mice can impair both

central and peripheral

sensitivity to leptin (28) and cause reduced bone density (40). ...

Abstract:

Abstract. Diets with a high saturated fat content can produce

deleterious effects on the absorption of dietary calcium and

consequently an adverse effect on bone mineralization in growing

animals. Hence dietary fat may have long-term consequences for skeletal

health and skeletal pathologies such as osteoporosis.

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