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Is Your Diet Killing You? | Dr. Benjamin Bikman

12,581 просмотров • 1 год назад •via X (Twitter)

Комментарии: 6

Фото профиля PodLand SuperNova
PodLand SuperNova1 год назад

Jordan chats with Dr. Benjamin Bikman, a bestselling author and bioenergetics Ph.D.. Review Below ... We’ve heard quite a bit about metabolic health over the past few years, but to hear Dr. Bikman combine “cardio” and metabolic into a single word and then squarely focus on insulin as a driving cause of positive or negative cardio-metabolic health, the fuzzy worlds of “diet” and “health” sure cleared up quickly for this reviewer. In summary, this is a rather dense conversation about the negative affects of too much insulin relative to the 10 most common diseases. While dense, it is a conversation chock full of knowledge, some which you have heard perhaps, but none-the-less presented articulately and believably from Dr. Bikman. The ten most common death causing diseases in the world can be attributed to poor cardio-metabolic health. Think heart disease, diabetes, alzheimer’s, obesity and various points of connectivity to cancer and more. Dr. Bikman makes the point that carbohydrates drive these increased insulin levels. And while people know that an over-indulgence on carbohydrates is bad, our medical / testing systems are not properly conveying the right information to us early enough to prevent us from getting sick…before we get sick. Bikman advocates for thinking about measuring insulin early and often. Looking at high Glucose, for example, and while good to identify, its already a negative process that should have been examined earlier. Additionally, in some cases there are problems that are not glucose problems like fatty liver disease. High insulin causes fatty liver disease independent and earlier than any rise in glucose. So, why don’t we look at insulin more as a healthcare practice? Well, Bikman wonders if its because there are no drugs to prescribe to fight high insulin…there are for glucose. “We Are Eating For Winter All The Time” - Dr Benjamin Bikman Dietary change is the best way to fight all of this. Remember, carbohydrates of all types convert into glucose and glucose, of course, increases insulin levels. An overabundance of insulin can result in insulin resistance which can result in the plethora of diseases discussed. So, yes, cutting carbs is important. It’s always the same advice in the end..fewer carbs and more meats, fats, greens, etc. Bikman makes the point that we should throw the food pyramid away and challenge our doctors to look beyond glucose. Its seems, even in health, that truth is always a few layers under the surface. THE PODSCORE: 4 (of 5) Mics. @jordanbpeterson @JBPpod @BenBikmanPhD #insulin #glucose #keto #carnivorediet

Фото профиля So.Gay
So.Gay1 год назад

Add these foods to your diet

Фото профиля CherryOnTop
CherryOnTop1 год назад

@ScottAdamsSays @OwenGregorian You need to watch that!!! 🤠🌷

Фото профиля Faramarz Soroush
Faramarz Soroush1 год назад

Great talk

Фото профиля Corinne
Corinne1 год назад

Kid lunch box foods are mostly fruit and carbs. We’ll see if my son eats the eggs, meat, and butter he’s getting tomorrow 😁

Фото профиля treya
treya1 год назад

I will miss seeing you in Kelowna and will eat a steak in your honor - please try to visit us soon

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Dr. Benjamin Bikman just revealed the longest living humans all had HIGH cholesterol. But doesn't high cholesterol cause heart disease? That's what doctors told us for decades, yet a 2023 Swedish study proved otherwise. They looked at the most consistent variables in people who lived the longest. They found three things: 1) Low uric acid 2) High cholesterol 3) Good glucose control "The longest lived people had high cholesterol levels. It is one of the most consistent themes of longevity research." Bikman is a metabolic scientist who says cholesterol is required for your body to function at the most basic level: • Every sex hormone is built from it • LDL helps your immune system fight infections • Your mitochondria cannot produce energy without it Yet we live in a world that hates cholesterol. Modern medicine told us it was bad to have high levels of it. The reason is because they sold us statin lowering drugs. "We have chosen markers in modern medicine that we have well-designed drugs for." Bikman says the marker that actually predicts heart attacks is triglycerides—not cholesterol. But there's no profitable drug that lowers triglycerides. And there is one for cholesterol. The molecule we've been told to fear may be the one keeping us alive the longest. — Dr. Benjamin Bikman (Benjamin Bikman) on Steven Bartlett's (@SteveBartlettSC) Diary of a CEO podcast PS. This account exists to share interesting health insights. If you found this post intriguing, follow me for more.

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