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  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Praetorian View Post
    Just wondering what prevents scurvy?

    P
    This is what they say:

    One of the most common questions people ask when they first hear about the all-meat diet is, “Where do you get your vitamin C?” Since a vitamin C deficiency leads to scurvy, a very serious and ultimately lethal illness, it is a perfectly understandable and legitimate line of inquiry.

    None of the long term practitioners of an all-meat Zero Carb diet that I have interviewed take any supplemental vitamin C. None of these individuals have experienced any symptoms of vitamin C deficiency, even after 2-18 years of eating this way. If you wish to read the dietary details of some of these individuals, please see my page with links to all of the Zero Carb Interviews that I have published to date.

    There appears to be an alternative biochemical pathway for preventing scurvy that occurs when one is eating a fat-burning ketogenic diet, as opposed to a sugar-burning glucogenic diet. While the mechanism of action is not entirely clear, it is considered to be an established fact. Dr. Stephen Phinney has speculated that the blood ketone beta-hydroxybutyrate may itself be the anti-scorbutic factor.

    Vilhjalmur Stefansson, an anthropologist who lived with the native Inuit tribes of the Arctic and ate their traditional all-meat diet for almost a decade, agreed to spend a full year under the observation of physicians in Bellevue Hospital in New York in 1928-29 – eating nothing but meat – to prove that an all-meat diet was health-sustaining and capable of meeting all of the nutritional needs of the human body. His diet did not contain any dietary sources of vitamin C. He did not develop scurvy any other vitamin deficiency diseases during the course of the one year study. Here is a summary of the study results:
    1. Two men (Stefansson was joined by Andersen,a colleague and friend, in the study) lived on an exclusive meat diet for 1 year and a third man for 10 days. The relative amounts of lean and fat, meat ingested were left to the instinctive choice of the individuals.
    2. The protein content varied from 100 to 140 gm., the fat from 200 to 300 gm., the carbohydrate, derived entirely from the meat, from 7 to 12 gm., and the fuel value from 2000 to 3100 calories.
    3. At the end of the year, the subjects were mentally alert, physically active, and showed no specific physical changes in any system of the body.
    4. During the 1st week, all three men lost weight, due to a shift in the water content of the body while adjusting itself to the low carbohydrate diet. Thereafter, their weights remained practically constant.
    5. In the prolonged test, the blood pressure of one man remained constant; the systolic pressure of the other decreased 20 mm. and the diastolic pressure remained uniform.
    6. The control of the bowels was not disturbed while the subjects were on prescribed meat diet. In one instance, when the proportion of protein calories in the diet exceeded 40 per cent, a diarrhea developed.
    7. Vitamin deficiencies did not appear.
    8. The total acidity of the urine during the meat diet was increased to 2 or 3 times that of the acidity on mixed diets and acetonuria was present throughout the periods of exclusive meat.
    9. Urine examinations, determinations of the nitrogenous constituents of the blood, and kidney function tests revealed no evidence of kidney damage.
    10. While on the meat diet, the men metabolized foodstuffs with FA: G ratios between 1.9 and 3.0 and excreted from 0.4 to 7.2 gm. of acetone bodies per day.
    11. In these trained subjects, the clinical observations and laboratory studies gave no evidence that any ill effects had occurred from the prolonged use of the exclusive meat diet.

    For further details and a complete discussion of this very interesting clinical study, please see the paper “Prolonged Meat Diets with a Study of Kidney Function and Ketosis” by Walter McClellan and Eugene Du Bois, published on February 13, 1930 in The Journal of Biological Chemistry.

    Stefansson and his comrade Andersen did eat some of their meat cooked “rare” in this year long study. They also included some organ meats (liver, brains, kidneys), as well as raw bone marrow from time to time. Therefore, it is certainly possible that a small amount of vitamin C was present in these raw or lightly cooked animal foods. It has been shown that when a person’s diet is very low in carbohydrate, the vitamin C they do consume is much better absorbed than when eating a diet high in carbohydrates – so a much smaller amount might be suffient to prevent scurvy.

    Fred and Alice Ottoboni explain,

    “From the viewpoint of the clinician, perhaps the most important finding about ascorbic acid activity is its competition with glucose within the body. In 1975, Mann proposed that, because of their structural similarity, ascorbic acid and glucose might utilize the same membrane transport. This extremely important concept was eventually confirmed experimentally, and ultimately led to an understanding of how glucose and ascorbic acid compete for transport by insulin and entry into cells.” Please see their article “Ascorbic Acid and the Immune System” in The Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine, Volume 20, Number 3, pg. 179-183, 2005

    Gary Taubes also mentions this in his book Why We Get Fat:

    “The vitamin-C molecule is similar in configuration to glucose and other sugars in the body… It is shuttled from the bloodstream into the cells by the same insulin-dependent transport system used by glucose… Glucose and vitamin C compete in this cellular-uptake process, like strangers trying to flag down the same taxicab simultaneously. Because glucose is greatly favored in the contest, the uptake of vitamin C by cells is “globally inhibited” when blood-sugar levels are elevated… In effect, glucose regulates how much vitamin C is taken up by the cells, according to the University of Massachusetts nutritionist John Cunningham. If we increase blood-sugar levels, the cellular uptake of vitamin C-will drop accordingly… Glucose also impairs the re-absorption of vitamin C by the kidney, and so, the higher the blood sugar, the more vitamin-C will be lost in the urine. Infusing insulin into experimental subjects has been shown to cause a “marked fall” in vitamin-C levels in the circulation.”

    Additionally, an all-meat diet may reduce the need for vitamin C in completely different way altogether, as explained in the blog post Why Meat Prevents Scurvy:

    “Meat [also] prevents [scurvy] because it bypasses the need for vitamin C. Vitamin C is required to form collagen in the body… Vitamin C’s role in collagen formation is to transfer a hydroxyl group to the amino acids lysine and proline. Meat, however, already contains appreciable quantities of hydroxylysine and hydroxyproline, [thus] bypassing some of the requirement for vitamin C. In other words, your vitamin C requirement is dependent upon how much meat you do not eat.”

    However, the fact remains that most of the Zero Carb-ers I have interviewed do not consume any organ meats or raw bone marrow, and many seem to prefer their meat cooked longer than “rare.” The best case in point is The Andersen Family. They have been eating a diet comprised almost exclusively of ribeye steaks cooked medium to medium-well for almost 2 decades. They take no vitamin C (or any other supplements for that matter), and they have never shown any symptoms of scurvy or other vitamin deficiency diseases.

    Finally, I would like to add that just because vitamin C deficiency does not seem to be an issue on an all-meat diet, this does not mean that supplemental vitamin C is not beneficial. Scurvy prevention is one thing, optimal health is another. High dose vitamin C has been used to help heal everything from hepatitis to cancer. So, if you are seriously ill, I strongly encourage you to investigate the potential role of vitamin C – in addition to an all-meat diet – as a therapeutic adjunct to help support your healing process. For further reading, please see:

    Vitamin C Against Cancer by H.L. Newbold

    Cancer and Vitamin C by Linus Pauling and Ewan Cameron

    The Healing Factor: Vitamin C Against Disease by Irwin Stone and Linus Pauling

    Curing the Incurable: Vitamin C, Infectious Diseases, and Toxins by Thomas Levy

    Vitamin C: The Real Story, the Controversial and Healing Factor by Steve Hickey
    “Strong people make other people stronger. They don’t put them down.”
    "If success makes you arrogant, you haven’t really succeeded. If failure makes you determined, you haven’t really failed...''

  2. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by dngerfield View Post
    being a bodybuilder though it's gonna be interesting to see whether you'd be able to gain any mass without carbs....i've tried to limit my carbs in the past but muscle gains were too slow for me
    This is what I was looking for all day yesterday, how would this diet effect our life style? Finally found a good read by Lane Norton and the bottom line is this diet would not work at all for us. Your right dngerfield, not only would it be near impossible to gain muscle on this diet but you'd probably lose a good portion of muscle that we already have.
    Exploit the earth or die..

  3. #13
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    The mom is hot

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hosehead View Post
    The mom is hot
    haha. Good input Hosehead.

  5. #15
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    For bodybuilding purposes no this diet would not work as insulin is a huge factor in promoting muscle growth.

    P
    BodyAthletica has teamed up with Canadian Protein.com!
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  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Praetorian View Post
    For bodybuilding purposes no this diet would not work as insulin is a huge factor in promoting muscle growth.

    P
    i realize there are many variables but on average, how many carbs minimum are needed to increase muscle mass?

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by dngerfield View Post
    i realize there are many variables but on average, how many carbs minimum are needed to increase muscle mass?
    Dr.Mauro diPasquale claims that you can gain mass,but its not the best diet for quick mass.

  8. #18
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    Just saw this, this morning:

    Joe Charlene Andersen‎Zeroing In On Health
    39 min

    Yesterday I received a letter from a young woman who writes for the UK Daily Mail (second largest news source in the United Kingdom), today I received a letter from a gentleman that works for a news outlet that numbers these companies as clients: The Daily Mail, Guardian, Telegraph, Times, Trinity Mirror, Yahoo, Huffington Post, AOL, BBC, ITV, ABC, New York Post, Das Spiegel, Le Monde, South China Morning Post, The Australian and Times of India. Both want to interview our family and do a further article on our diet. I have let both of them know that we are uninterested in pursuing any further interviews or articles. In spite of the fact that our interview has helped many, my wife and boys have had a tough time dealing with the outrageous anger that eating an all-meat diet has inspired. For every positive letter or note that we've received there has been almost as many derisive, angry and even threatening letters. We are a small family living a quiet life in a small town. We love our life as is! I have recommended to both writers to have a look at Esmee's blog and perhaps find an individual (or family) there that would want to do an interview. I'm proud of our lifestyle and don't regret doing the original interview on Zero Carb Zen or anything that I said in the interview. I am thinking of my wife and boys. This is not an acceptable situation for them.

    ~ J
    “Strong people make other people stronger. They don’t put them down.”
    "If success makes you arrogant, you haven’t really succeeded. If failure makes you determined, you haven’t really failed...''

  9. #19
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    really pathetic when people can't get off their soap-box and stop telling others how they should live their life....i'm guessing many of the douche bags were vegans lol

  10. #20
    Muscle Bound
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    Not that they are the 1st to have an all meat diet in the history, they sure actually break concepts and have many people re-think their ideas.

    Just the fact they look that good/healthier/younger then the majority of people (the guy is 57btw) prove how wrong many nutritionist are if meat was so unhealthy as they say.



    Eric
    “Strong people make other people stronger. They don’t put them down.”
    "If success makes you arrogant, you haven’t really succeeded. If failure makes you determined, you haven’t really failed...''


 
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