Here's my dilemma. I have been doing 98% carnivore now for 10 months, and feel great. It's not 100% since I put honey in my 1-2 cups of coffee/day (with heavy cream...yum) and eat fruit maybe 3-4 times a month. Other than that, it's steak, homemade hamburger patties and cheese. I lost 25 lbs and am probably the leanest/strongest combo I have ever been. I realized that even though I squat heavy, my knees feel great probably because of the lack of inflammation from crummy food.
My dilemma is I can't find good studies that talk about fiber or cholesterol or fat because in general nutrition studies seem flawed. One study I read had saturated fat as bad, but the control group ate saturated fat from muffins and there seems to be a lot of examples like that. Has there ever been a study that shows that even if you are lean, work out, avoid processed foods and refined sugars, you are still at high risk of a heart attack due to high LDL, and more so apo B? If CRP is low, homocysteine is low, triglycerides are low, and HDL is high, are people still having heart attacks?
I'm not trying to push an agenda, I just have found a diet that I love but I DO NOT want to do it if there is good data supporting its negative effects. I'd honestly eat more fruit, but fruit and vegetables give me IBS. It's not totally cleared on carnivore (was short term), but much better still.
I hear Peter Attia stress how bad apoB is, but what data is he referencing that says it's bad even if the other markers are good?
My dilemma is I can't find good studies that talk about fiber or cholesterol or fat because in general nutrition studies seem flawed. One study I read had saturated fat as bad, but the control group ate saturated fat from muffins and there seems to be a lot of examples like that. Has there ever been a study that shows that even if you are lean, work out, avoid processed foods and refined sugars, you are still at high risk of a heart attack due to high LDL, and more so apo B? If CRP is low, homocysteine is low, triglycerides are low, and HDL is high, are people still having heart attacks?
I'm not trying to push an agenda, I just have found a diet that I love but I DO NOT want to do it if there is good data supporting its negative effects. I'd honestly eat more fruit, but fruit and vegetables give me IBS. It's not totally cleared on carnivore (was short term), but much better still.
I hear Peter Attia stress how bad apoB is, but what data is he referencing that says it's bad even if the other markers are good?