"Flashback Friday: The Problem of the Paleo Diet Plot" Our epidemics of disease caused by diet have led to a great deal of research what humans are supposed to eat for optimal health. In 1985, an influential article was published proposing that our chronic illnesses are due to a lack of connection between what our bodies evolved eating during the stone age over the past 2 million years, and what we eat today, advocating a return to the hunter-gatherer diet type: low-fat meat, fruits, vegetables, and nuts. Although it might be reasonable to suppose that our nutritional requirements were established in the prehistoric past, We must ask ourselves in what prehistoric past. Why only in the last 2 million years?
We have been evolving for 25 million years from the great ape, our common ancestor, time in which our nutritional requirements and our digestive physiology were established, that were probably little affected by our hunter-gatherer days at the end of that trajectory. So what did we eat during the first 90% of our evolution?
What the rest of the great apes ended up eating: more than 95% of plants.
This could explain why we are so susceptible to heart disease. For most of human evolution, cholesterol may have been virtually absent in the diet. Free from bacon, butter, trans fat, and high amounts of fiber, which removes cholesterol from the body. Now this could have been a problem since our body needs a certain amount of cholesterol, so our bodies not only evolved to make cholesterol, but to preserve and recycle it. Our bodies evolved to maintain cholesterol.
So if you think of the human body as a machine to conserve cholesterol and we put it in the modern world with bacon / eggs / cheese / chicken / pork / pastry, So of course, it is not surprising that heart disease due to obstruction of the arteries is our main cause of death. What used to be such a good fit for 90% of our evolution, clinging to cholesterol at all costs since we weren't getting much in our diet, Today it is a poor adaptation, a problem that leads to blockage of the arteries. Our bodies simply cannot bear it. As the editor-in-chief of the American Journal of Cardiology pointed out 25 years ago, no matter how much fat and cholesterol carnivores eat, they never develop atherosclerosis. You can give a dog the cholesterol equivalent of 500 eggs and a stick of butter, and it will just wag its tail.
Their bodies evolved from wolves, and they are used to eating cholesterol and getting rid of excess, whereas, in a matter of months, a fraction of that cholesterol it can start to clog the arteries of animals adapted to eating a more plant-based diet. Even though our bodies were designed through natural selection to feed mainly on fruits, vegetables and seeds for 90% of our evolution, Why don't we adapt better to meat consumption in the last 10%, during the Paleolithic?
We've had almost 2 million years to get used to all that extra saturated fat and cholesterol. If a life of eating like this clogs the arteries of almost everyone, Why were the genes of those who had heart attacks not extinguished and were replaced by those who could live to an advanced age with clean arteries, regardless of what they ate?
Because most did not survive until an advanced age; they did not live long enough to have heart attacks. When the average life expectancy is 25 years, the genes that are passing are those that simply allow us to reach reproductive age at any price, And that means not starving. So, the more concentration of calories in food, the better.
So eating a lot of marrow and brains, human and otherwise, would have had a selective advantage, as it would have been to discover a time machine with reserves of cream cakes. If we just have to live long enough to get our kids to puberty to pass our genes on, we do not need to develop any protection against the ravages of chronic diseases. To find a population almost free of chronic diseases in old age, we don't have to go back a million years. In the 20th century, missionary hospital networks in rural Africa They discovered that coronary artery disease is practically non-existent there. And not just heart disease, but high blood pressure, strokes, diabetes and common cancer, among others.
In a sense, these populations in rural China and Africa They were eating the type of diet that we have been eating for 90% of our last 20 million years: an almost exclusive diet of foods of plant origin. How do we know that it was their diet that protected them and not something else?
In the 25-year update to his original article on the paleo diet, the authors tried to clarify that neither then nor now they propose that people adopt a specific diet solely based on what our ancestors ate. Diet recommendations should be tested. That is the reason why the pioneering research of Pritikin, Ornish and Esselstyn is so important because it shows that plant-based diets can not only stop heart disease, rather, it has been proven to reverse them in most patients. In fact, it is the only diet in history that has achieved it, perhaps because that's what we ate for most of our evolution.
.
Video Description:
The Paleolithic period represents just the last two million years of human evolution. What did our bodies evolve to eat during the first 90% of our time on Earth?
Subscribe to NutritionFacts.org's free newsletter to receive our fasting infographic that covers the latest research on the risks and benefits of different types of fasting: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe.
For more on “paleo” and low carb diets, see: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5TLzNi5fYd9Bn61b8235QCqr0QwMEfR9
What about the keto diet? I recently did a 7-video series on that. Check it out here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL5TLzNi5fYd8H9nNYTHuxVBTCNP0hZDu3
Have a question about this video? Leave it in the comment section at http://nutritionfacts.org/video/flashback-friday-the-problem-with-the-paleo-diet-argument and someone on the NutritionFacts.org team will try to answer it.
Want to get a list of links to all the scientific sources used in this video? Click on Sources Cited at http://nutritionfacts.org/video/flashback-friday-the-problem-with-the-paleo-diet-argument. You’ll also find a transcript and acknowledgements for the video, my blog and speaking tour schedule, and an easy way to search (by translated language even) through our videos spanning more than 2,000 health topics.
If you’d rather watch these videos on YouTube, subscribe to my YouTube Channel here: https://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=nutritionfactsorg
Thanks for watching. I hope you’ll join in the evidence-based nutrition revolution!
-Michael Greger, MD FACLM
Captions for this video are available in several languages. To find yours, click on the settings wheel on the lower-right of the video and then "Subtitles/CC."
Do you have feedback about the translations in this video? Please share it here along with the title of the video and language: https://nutritionfacts.zendesk.com/hc/requests/new
Image thanks to ToM via Flickr.
https://NutritionFacts.org
• Subscribe: https://nutritionfacts.org/subscribe/
• Donate: https://nutritionfacts.org/donate/
• How to Survive a Pandemic: https://nutritionfacts.org/how-to-survive-a-pandemic/
• How Not to Die: https://nutritionfacts.org/book
• How Not to Diet: https://nutritionfacts.org/how-not-to-diet/
• Facebook: www.facebook.com/NutritionFacts.org
• Twitter: www.twitter.com/nutrition_facts
• Instagram: instagram.com/nutrition_facts_org/
• Podcast : https://nutritionfacts.org/audio/
October 02, 2020
Tags :
benefits of paleo
,
dr. greger
,
low carb diet
,
nutrition facts
,
nutritionfacts.org
,
Paleo Diet
,
Video
,
what is the best diet
Subscribe by Email
Follow Updates Articles from This Blog via Email
35 Comments
Thanks Michael. Very good point regarding how recent the hunter gatherer era was in our evolutionary history, and how little effect it will have had on our evolution.
Reply DeleteCool thumbnail!
Reply Delete🎵 ...They're not listening still...~ Don McLean
Reply DeleteThank You Dr Greger !
Reply DeleteExcelent explanation!!!
Reply DeleteThats a great summary of human nutrition
Reply DeleteI can't tell you how many times your voice in my head rings in unison with an argument against a friend, I'm like "what sir? You have a claim?! Well let's - put-it to-the test!"
Reply Delete❤️❤️❤️
Reply DeleteI'm listening. But I'm part of the choir! Blessings and eat your veggies.
Reply DeleteI regret to say you are correct. a family member is having severe stomach issues. I recommended some small diet changes based on dr gregers books. no interest.
Reply Deletebut when your diet is pizza and diet coke, common sense alone says to make change. but none so deaf as those who wont hear.
Perhaps . they never will...............
Reply DeleteTruly impressive Dr Greger and nf team. I’m floored at this video.
Reply DeleteThe good thing about arguing from evolutionism is that you make a case for or against everything and anything.
Reply DeleteAs an anthropology major I once wrote a 30 page paper for graduate credit on the Paleolithic diet. The dept. supplied me with replicas of molars. The wear clearly indicated they were eating a lot of pre-historic grains. The Paleo crowd buys in to the caveman cartoon idea, and it's not true. Hunting was likely a wintertime activity in the colder climes, but not the main source of subsistence. Why hunt when you can gather.
Reply DeleteI mean ive been fighting my dad and my sister's for food i dont wanna eat
Reply DeleteI really like these videos where who is speaking is left to the imagination. I feel it highlights the information much better and helps me to focus on what is being said rather than who is saying it. Great research!
Reply Delete@joe bob 47 These folks will be the first to scream the loudest when neoliberal capitalism swallows any universal medicare coverage here in Canada and elsewhere, as the sociopathic 1% continues its march to destroy civilization as we know it.
Reply DeleteStay up on the latest news by subscribing to NutritionFacts.org’s free e-newsletter: https://bit.ly/NF_newsletter. -NF Team
Reply DeleteAh, very interesting.
Reply DeleteClifton Painter Same!
Reply DeleteThen there is Genesis 1:29
Reply Delete@robertusga Genesis 1:29 is a whole food plant based diet which is just what the Dr says is best.
Reply Delete@S W Exactly my point.
Reply DeleteWe agree. 🧐👍
Reply DeleteTo say what you do is so important is an understatement! Thank you for your dedication and caring!!!
Reply DeleteHelp,my father has a serious heart disease.
Reply Deleteinfarcted
severe aortic stenosis
Atherosclerosis
Cardiac insufficiency
He can't operate
he has 80years.
Great video, but now I have the urge to watch all the old Geico caveman commercials lol.
Reply DeleteI miss this old style where I could actually read what was on screen.
Reply DeleteHi NF team - Please improve the audio quality of your latest videos. The audio on this Flashback video is great - but the newest videos have very poor audio quality in comparison. I really struggle to keep up. Please fix this 🍎
Reply DeleteThe vegan genius, that’s you!
Reply Delete@Sowiso4 There are 61 comments on this thread: I'm not going through them all, trying to guess which one you mean.
Reply Delete@Dinar AndFriends Are there no time stamps on your comments or are your comments all mixed up ? Cause usually they should be all ordered by the time and since both my comments where send just 2 minutes apart they should be right above each other. It starts with "
Reply Delete@cine ma Oh Boy, you and that "Dinar AndFriends" guy ..."
@Sowiso4 It sounds like more abuse, so I won't waste my time.
Reply DeleteDinar AndFriends about meat going bad: we evolved during 2 1/2 million year ice age. Simply go listen to the very recent Rogan podcast with the Glen Villeneuve and what he did living with practically nothing in North Alaska in a hut. When the flies stopped laying eggs, he could kill one caribou and live for months and months bc the meat wouldn’t go bad. The ice age we evolved in was likely harsher. Ice was up to two miles thick in certain places in the present United States. Meat preservation would only be an issue very briefly during a few summer months. (And all this is leaving out fish and aquatic life).
Reply Delete@Reece Sullivan
Reply Delete>> we evolved during 2 1/2 million year ice age.
Um...the ice ages were about 18 to 12 thousand years ago. You need to get your basic facts right before lecturing to others.