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  • "Fasting to Detox"

  • Most persistent industrial pollutants, like organochlorine pesticides

  • such as DDT and PCBs, were banned several decades ago,

  • and dioxin emission is strictly regulated.

  • However, we're still exposed to these chemicals through several routes,

  • the major source of which is contaminated food,

  • especially fatty animal products such as fish, meat, and milk.

  • When we eat these chemicals, they get primarily stored

  • in our own fatty tissue where they slowly leach out

  • into our bloodstream, but better in our fat

  • than in our brain or other vital organs.

  • Having more body fat may actually play a protective role

  • by sequestering the toxins away,

  • but they can come spilling out when we lose weight.

  • Body weight loss increases the concentrations

  • of potentially toxic pollutants in obese individuals.

  • Of the 19 pollutants studied, they all went up,

  • 15 significantly so.

  • Every study that has looked at it found increased blood levels

  • of toxic pollutants accompanying weight loss

  • whether induced by diet or bariatric surgery:

  • increases between 14 and 388 percent with a large enough loss.

  • The more weight that's lost, the higher the pollutant levels

  • climb because all those chemicals stored in your fat

  • over all those years come spilling out.

  • The theoretical concern is that if released into the blood

  • at a faster rate than they are cleared,

  • the levels of these compounds could become toxic,

  • causing side effects, such as sweating, headache, and nausea,

  • but the opposite happened when PCB-poisoned patients were fasted.

  • In 1979, about 2000 people in Taiwan were exposed

  • via an industrial accident that contaminated rice oil,

  • leading them to have a higher body toxicity burden

  • than even long-time consumers of seafood.

  • But after a modified fasting regimen,

  • all 16 patients they tried it on showed improvements,

  • with some enjoying dramatic relief of their sufferings,

  • but this was after just a few days of fasting;

  • so, they couldn't have really lost that much body fat.

  • And, they didn't measure PCBs before and after;

  • so, it's not clear they were experiencing some sort of detox,

  • nor what relevance this has for people

  • who haven't been acutely poisoned.

  • The initial rise in pollutant levels in the first year

  • of weight loss may eventually stabilize or fall.

  • Check out what happened in Biosphere 2,

  • a remarkable experiment designed to be a completely closed ecosystem,

  • the longest sustained period of humans isolated

  • in a confined environment on record.

  • But due to crop failures, it turned

  • into a 2-year experiment of calorie restriction.

  • They all lost about 25 pounds in the first 6 months

  • and stabilized there, and while the levels of PCBs

  • and a DDT metabolite known as DDE initially went up,

  • they appeared to start coming back down,

  • but that initial spike is quite a jump.

  • That's one of the reasons health authorities recommend women

  • don't try to slim down during breast-feeding.

  • For example, here's a woman whose breast milk levels

  • jumped up after she had fasted and lost about 20 pounds.

  • Because fat is mobilized into breast milk,

  • the secretion of human milk is a major way

  • these pollutants are eliminated from the mother's body.

  • Breast is still best regardless, but you can keep your levels lower

  • by not going out of your way to lose weight

  • until after breastfeeding is finished.

  • What can one do to help flush the contaminants during weight loss?

  • One of the reasons the pollutant levels in the biosphere subjects

  • eventually dropped is because they were eating a high fiber diet

  • centered around fruits, whole grains, beans, nuts, and vegetables,

  • and we know that fiber can bind to these pollutants

  • and potentially flush them out of the body.

  • So, when losing weight, eating lots of whole grains

  • may be important to increase the elimination of pollutants

  • while, of course, cutting down on animal fat, including fish,

  • so you don't pile on extra at the same time.

  • What about just eating some Pringles?

  • What was the dietary intervention in this randomized trial

  • to decrease the body burden of pollutants?

  • Subjects were randomized to 24 fat-free Pringles

  • a day or regular Pringles. What?! Why?

  • It all started with this crazy case report of a guy

  • heavily contaminated by PCBs who managed to rid himself

  • of 90 percent by losing weight eating potato chips

  • made out of the fake fat olestra, which doesn't get absorbed,

  • and so appears to pull pollutants out of the bloodstream

  • into the stool for elimination.

  • It works in mice, increasing the excretion of hexachlorobenzene

  • 30-fold and cutting the levels in their brains in half,

  • but in people, the drop in PCB blood levels with the olestra Pringles

  • was not statistically significantly greater, and for some reason,

  • LDL bad cholesterol levels shot up 28 points in the olestra group.

  • And, while olestra and drugs like cholestyramine may absorb

  • pollutants and remove them from your system,

  • they also may cause you to dump fat-soluble vitamins.

  • So, to get the best of both worlds,

  • losing pollution without losing vitamins,

  • fiber-rich foods maybe our best choice.

  • Instead of olestra supplementation to detox,

  • why not try to not tox so much in the first place.

"Fasting to Detox"

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