Tuesday, March 8, 2011

"Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead"

Thanks to Paleo Runner(who I don't think is Paleo, but is old):



Looks like a good movie. But why is he on a juice fast?

Because Dr. Joel Fuhrman told him to eat this way. Poor Joe Cross.

Example of a wheat belly.
In the trailer Joe describes how he likes to eat two pizzas. That's not slices, he points out, that's pizzas. Joe has a wheat belly, as you can clearly see.

Joe mentions that he's got urticarial vasculitis, which is a rare, chronic auto-immune disease of unknown cause.

Hmm... Wheat belly and a chronic auto-immune disease.  Could it be?

"Dermatitis Herpetiformis Presenting as Chronic Urticaria"

Dermatitis Herpetiformis is also known as celiac disease, which is a subset of wheat poisoning.  Sure enough.  Of course the juice diet wouldn't include any wheat, one would imagine.

Joe Cross is a perfect candidate for a paleo/primal diet.  The fast is a high-fat diet, as he's using the stored fat in his body to fuel himself.  A low-carb paleo/primal diet replicates this, sustainably, unlike the mostly-vegan approach Fuhrman advocates, which starts out high-fat, but turns low-fat as soon as Joe runs out of body fat.  High-fat diets are sustainable, low-fat diets are not.

Fuhrman's diet, which is some ways is a vegan take on the paleo diet, is way better than the two-pizzas-a-day diet, but it's not optimal. 
 
And I feel for Joe, I really do.  I did the Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead thing myself, and it sucks.

P.S. How's Joe doing?
"JC: At the beginning of the movie I was 310, after juicing for 60 days I lost about 80-85 pounds – thereabouts. I lost another 20 pounds for the next three months by just eating plant foods, such as fruits, vegetables, nuts, until I was off full medication. So that was five months of me like that and I was down to 210. Then since that – Feb. 8th – and three and a half years later – I’ve fluctuated 220 on the low side and 240 on the high side. Most of the time I sit at about 230. So that’s about a 85-90 pound consistent weight loss."
"Chronic urticaria: A cutaneous manifestation of celiac disease":
"Celiac disease, or gluten-sensitive enteropathy, is an immune-mediated disease of the small bowel that results in malabsorption. It classically presents with gastrointestinal symptoms including chronic diarrhea, weight loss, abdominal bloating and anorexia. It is becoming more frequently identified in asymptomatic patients with a diagnosis of deficiencies related to malabsorption of iron, folic acid, vitamin B12 and vitamin D. It is increasingly identified as a cause for early or refractory osteoporosis. Occasionally, celiac disease presents with cutaneous manifestations alone. Dermatitis herpetiformis is a well-recognized cutaneous manifestation of celiac disease. Other cutaneous manifestations include alopecia, angular stomatitis and aphthous ulcerations. Described here is a case of a 24-year-old woman who presented with intermittent urticaria and gastrointestinal complaints. She was found to have celiac disease on small-bowel biopsy. Both her gastrointestinal symptoms and urticaria resolved when she was put on a gluten-free diet, suggesting that her urticaria was a cutaneous manifestation of celiac disease."

6 comments:

  1. I did this and it was amazing. I felt refreshed, renewed and plan to juice fast once a week for the rest of my life. I was so glad I stumbled on this, after vacationing with relatives for a week I did the fast for 5 days and loved it. It's amazing to see how many people are so afraid to walk away from eating processed food, Cargill meat and Tyson Chicken, feel and look like crap but won't give juicing a try.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I maintain an extremely healthy lifestyle focusing completely on a micro-nutrient focused diet, and I used a 60 day juice fast to get where I am. Maintaining my weight loss (for two years so far) has been easy, and at my last physical, my physician said all of my test results reflected those of an 18 year old. (I'm 41)

    I do eat raw fish a couple of times a week, and will occasionally splurge on a good piece of red meat or a great chicken dish.

    "Poor Joe Cross?" I think he would be to differ.

    ReplyDelete
  3. "Poor Joe Cross" because I feel bad for anyone following Dr. Joel Fuhrman's advice

    He advocates a diet which, if not done right, will result in nutritional deficiencies and an early death. Even if done "right" it may result in deficiencies, because we just don't know enough about human nutrition over the long term.

    Poor Joe Cross because he's getting advice from a bad source. It's nice that it's worked out so far.

    ReplyDelete
  4. "Poor Joe Cross" because he's probably already suffering the effects of protein deficiency and he may not even know it because those symptoms show up gradually over time. Fuhrmann claims his diet is the "nutrient rich" way to eat, but doesn't acknowledge any of the important nutrients in meat. One of those nutrients that you can only get naturally from meat is vitamin B12. According to Harvard Medical School, "a severe vitamin B12 deficiency can lead to deep depression, paranoia and delusions, memory loss, incontinence, loss of taste and smell, and more ... Strict vegetarians and vegans are at high risk for developing a B12 deficiency."

    Vitamin B12 deficiency can be sneaky, harmful
    http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/vitamin-b12-deficiency-can-be-sneaky-harmful-201301105780

    ReplyDelete
  5. "Poor Joe Cross" because he's probably already suffering the effects of protein deficiency and he may not even know it because those symptoms show up gradually over time. Fuhrmann claims his diet is the "nutrient rich" way to eat, but doesn't acknowledge any of the important nutrients in meat. One of those nutrients that you can only get naturally from meat is vitamin B12. According to Harvard Medical School, "a severe vitamin B12 deficiency can lead to deep depression, paranoia and delusions, memory loss, incontinence, loss of taste and smell, and more ... Strict vegetarians and vegans are at high risk for developing a B12 deficiency."

    Vitamin B12 deficiency can be sneaky, harmful
    http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/vitamin-b12-deficiency-can-be-sneaky-harmful-201301105780

    ReplyDelete
  6. "Poor Joe Cross" because he's probably already suffering the effects of protein deficiency and he may not even know it because those symptoms show up gradually over time. Fuhrmann claims his diet is the "nutrient rich" way to eat, but doesn't acknowledge any of the important nutrients in meat. One of those nutrients that you can only get naturally from meat is vitamin B12. According to Harvard Medical School, "a severe vitamin B12 deficiency can lead to deep depression, paranoia and delusions, memory loss, incontinence, loss of taste and smell, and more ... Strict vegetarians and vegans are at high risk for developing a B12 deficiency."

    Vitamin B12 deficiency can be sneaky, harmful
    http://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/vitamin-b12-deficiency-can-be-sneaky-harmful-201301105780

    ReplyDelete

Please don't comment here. Go to https://tuckergoodrich.substack.com.

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.