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  • "Pros and Cons of a Macrobiotic Diet"

  • Macrobiotic diets have been described by the American Medical Association

  • as one of the most dangerous dietary regimens, posing not only serious

  • hazards to the health of the individual, but even to life itself.

  • After all, macrobiotic diets are predominantly vegetarian

  • with a great emphasis placed on whole grains.

  • What's wrong with that?

  • Well, they also used to tell people to not drink water, which isn't good,

  • and to avoid fruit, so much so it's resulted in modern-day cases of scurvy.

  • Now thankfully, the macrobiotic diet has evolved over the past 30 years.

  • This is the more contemporary version: an emphasis on whole grains, vegetables,

  • and beans, while minimizing most meat, eggs, and dairy.

  • I don't like them restricting fruits, don't like all the added salt,

  • but compared to the standard American diet it's got a lot of things going for it.

  • Only a quarter of the saturated fat intake, less than half the sugar intake.

  • A very respectable fiber intaketwo and a half times the national average

  • but actually taking in more sodium.

  • So while the macrobiotic diet is an anti-inflammatory diet

  • has a negative dietary inflammatory index score

  • as opposed to the pro- inflammatory American diet

  • some of the most anti-inflammatory foods are herbs and spices.

  • So instead of adding all that sea salt and soy sauce,

  • the macrobiotic diet could be improved by using natural seasonings instead.

  • OK, but has the macrobiotic diet ever been put to the test?

  • Yes, for diabetes.

  • The restriction on water probably wouldn't help, as higher plain

  • water consumption is associated with lower type 2 diabetes risk,

  • though part of that may be because they're drinking less soda.

  • And fruit restriction is probably not helpful since fruit consumption

  • is associated with a significantly reduced risk of type 2 diabetes as well,

  • but same with green leafy vegetables, which is where the macrobiotic diet

  • can really shine: it includes lots of greens.

  • Look, you can do randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled,

  • crossover studies of kale and show that it suppresses

  • the after-a-meal increase in blood sugars.

  • Eat a meal of white rice, chicken, and eggs and get a big spike in blood sugar,

  • though significantly less adding just a tablespoon of dried kale powder,

  • as opposed to some kind of placebo powder,

  • though the effect is visually exaggerated by their y-axis shenanigans.

  • And macrobiotic diets use whole grains, which can significantly improve

  • insulin sensitivity compared to refined grains, which may be due in part

  • to all the wonderful things fiber can do to help our good gut bacteria thrive,

  • which could potentially lower inflammation and decrease diabetes risk.

  • But you don't know until you put it to the test.

  • Just three weeks on a strictly plant-based diet

  • composed mostly of whole grains, vegetables and beans,

  • and they got about a 10% drop in blood pressure,

  • a whopping 35% drop in LDL bad cholesterol,

  • and a 38% drop in fasting blood sugars in just 21 days.

  • Were these changes statistically significant?

  • Here's some three-month P values for you.

  • Those are my kind of P values.

  • In other words, yes, the changes were significant in every possible way.

  • Similarly, short-term interventional studies on diabetics

  • with these so-called Ma-Pi 2 macrobiotic diets

  • have been performed across four continents.

  • The "Ma-Pi" comes from the guy that came up with the diet, Mario Pianesi

  • a strictly plant-based diet based mostly on whole grains and vegetables,

  • with legumes and some seeds, and decaf green tea as the preferred beverage.

  • Look at these extraordinary numbers: a near 40% drop in fasting blood sugars,

  • near 27% drop in LDL cholesterol in 21 days.

  • Now they did lose weight, a few pounds a week,

  • but those kinds of results were way more than one would expect with weight loss.

  • And here's the kicker.

  • That 40% drop in blood sugars was after cutting their insulin in half!

  • So those numbers greatly underestimate the effects.

  • Better results on fewer drugs. That's the power of plants.

  • All we need now is a randomized, controlled clinical trial

  • to really seal the deal, which we'll cover next.

"Pros and Cons of a Macrobiotic Diet"

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