People from India are
multifactorial health risk….
Today's Post: Monday, 1-25-2016 (Upgraded 2-24-2016)
Are you from India? Did your parents come from India?
That's good! Some of the most effective company founders and the
most important technology executives in the Silicon Valley are like you.
You're quite important to the Silicon Valley economy.
BUT you are also at severe multifactorial risk to your
health!
People like you are at unusually high risk for heart
disease, type 2 diabetes, and other related health issues.
Worse, that's true even if you are still in your twenties
or thirties!
AND, that's still true even if you look trim!
(This is important if you work with people from India, particularly if
they have moved to the United States.
And, because such people have been so successful, it’s important to you
if you live in the Silicon Valley or even the United States because they are so
important to the economy!
Last, but far from least, most other Americans are at similar risk for
the same diseases, it’s just less severe in most cases or happens later in
life.)
A. The better news is that we
are beginning to know why this is so.
Better yet, we are beginning to know how to lower these risks and
prevent them from harming people.
There are three underlying causes:
1. The foods and water for
people near the Indus River are high in arsenic. So people from there and people who are the
children of people from there who may have been impacted in utero before
birth. Arsenic exposure can and does
cause heart disease and related cardiovascular diseases.
And, it can cause this in people in their twenties and thirties who are
at an age where they expect to be healthy and not have to worry about such
things.
Dr Raj Dash at Stanford has started a program to treat such
people. When I went to hear him speak he
DID have such patients!
(Besides getting tested to see if treatment is needed, it’s important
to avoid eating ANY kind of rice. The
arsenic in the water it’s grown in is high enough it can cause this harm to
anyone.
With their other risks already, NOT adding this one is critical for people from
India.)
Rice also tends to slam up blood sugar which is something people from
India should avoid like the plague! (See
the next section.)
2. The heredity of people from
India, or who are descended from people from India, has been optimized for the
hot climate of India and for the conditions of India of over 60 years ago.
a) People from India hardly have any brown fat to boost their
metabolism when they are cold compared to people from Europe.
b) In fact, the calories burned by heat apparently mean there is far
less need for their bodies to use insulin to lower blood sugar. As a result, research shows that many people
from India release far less insulin in response to high blood sugar than Europeans.
And, THAT means when people from India eat or drink the things that
slam up blood sugar that many Americans eat and drink and think normal, they
can lower it less. This produces blood
sugar high enough to do damage and get diagnosed as diabetic.
This effect is robust enough unless they take care NOT to eat and drink
these things and take other steps, people from India can have this problems even
if they do regular moderate exercise!
The calories burned from fighting heat and the walking their ancestors
did plus the need for a smaller body so it can be cooled more efficiently, mean
that people from India, particularly those who don’t exercise, carry a good bit
of visceral and other internal fat and often don’t look fat or weigh enough to
alarm doctors who go by BMI tests. BUT people
from India often have enough fat to cause the same health problems obese
Europeans get.
When they move to the United States where the climate is far different;
and the mainstream foods and lifestyle have recently been harmful to the health
even of Americans of European ancestry, this creates even greater harm.
In fact, this puts people from India or nearby or who had parents who
were at even more extreme risk and often at younger ages!
3. The foods and spices of
people living in India and who eat in a traditional way are protective –
astoundingly so in some ways.
But if they discontinue eating that way in part -- or even worse
totally discontinue eating that way -- when they live in the United States,
they stop that protection.
B. How can people
who have these risks protect themselves?
The first step is to know they are at risk which readers of this post
will learn.
The second step is to get the blood test for Arsenic, take steps to
reduce the impact of that if they test high; AND stop the things that expose
them to even more arsenic.
The third step is to know the tests that reveal risk for type 2
diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, and cardiovascular disease.
They then need to get these tests.
Then they need to take the protective steps that turn down these risks
or stop them. AND, they need to do so while
knowing the extra effort that they may need to do so because of their heredity.
The fourth step is to know which parts of the traditional lifestyle of
India are protective and how to use that knowledge either by resuming it or
taking supplements based on it or both.
C. The process is much like
solving an engineering or technical problem which people here from India are
often unusually skilled at doing.
Get the tests.
Completely remove or stop the causes.
(Most Americans of European ancestry fail to do so. But the ones who get good results always do
so. For people from India, this is a
mandatory step to get protection!)
Create a customized plan to add the protective actions and have it do
extra for those areas the test show are already most needed.
Decide which things to begin right away.
And schedule a time to begin those things at a level that is so easy
that it is for sure doable.
Then gradually add more things and begin ramping up how well you do the
most important ones.
Then manage the process for excellence just like you would for a
critical path business or scientific project.
D) If you are one of the people this affects,
> Do you want to know more about this subject?
> If you find out, would you take action to protect yourself?
> Would you begin as soon as possible?
> After you learn the information, would you want to know more about
ways to get help with the process?
* If so, I’m the blogger, David
Eller; and I can send you more and explain what else I can do that might help
you get good results.
* Most Americans of European ancestry need to do far more to protect
themselves from high blood sugar than they do now.
But many of them fail to because they don’t know they are at risk or
how to stop it.
They mostly get away with this until retirement age. So while it’s highly desirable and will keep
them mentally sharp, healthy, and alive longer.
For the reasons above, this inaction is NOT something people from India
can afford to do.
> Do you want to continue to be at risk when it could be easily
stopped?
Some doctors know these risks are most effectively stopped by lifestyle
changes and which ones work best and fastest.
And, they know the drugs for them have harmful side effects and are far
less protective.
But they don’t know how to get people to make the lifestyle changes; so
they tend to prescribe the drugs, the far less effective alternative, only.
The difference is as much as 95% effective for lifestyle changes and 5%
effective or less for the drugs.
>Which would you rather have?
> Why can I help?
Because my Dad’s mother died of a heart attack at age 70; and right at
age 70, he had the first of about four heart attacks and then died of heart
failure worsened by the treatment he was given, I decided to find out how to
avoid that.
Because I exercised and almost ate well, when I was a young man, my
heart risk was moderate:
LDL 130 and triglycerides 150 and HDL about 50; and my HSCRP
inflammation was likely about 1.5.
From the many steps I’ve learned work since then AND acted on, my LDL
is 75; my triglycerides are 35, and my HDL is 104 and my HSCRP inflammation is
0.27.
So as I got 40 years older, my heart attack risk has dropped from
moderate to close to zero.
This was all lifestyle changes and zero drugs!
> Would you like to know the fastest and most effective part of what
I do, that you can begin within a few days?
2 Comments:
Thanks for posting such researched information. Would you please share what kind of daily food plan you changed and what are all kind of exercises you adopted to transform your current health.
Happy to do so,
As a young man I wanted to be an entrepreneur which even then I knew could be stressful. Kenneth Cooper, MD an exercise physiologist, was asked by the US Air Force to research what exercise could do for their people. Why was it valuable? And, what was the "minimum weekly requirement"?
He told them that aerobic exercises such as walking, running, swimming, and bike riding when done to a certain level each week would enable their people to deal better with stress and prevent heart disease. And, his data found that running was the most time efficient way to get that weekly minimum.
He then wrote the book Aerobics which I and many others read about this.
1. So I began to run 14 miles each week and did for a few years. (I still exercise daily but now no longer run since that much began to cause my Achilles tendon to act up.)
But, some runners, most of them men, who ran a lot more than that began showing up in the news as dying of heart attacks.
So, I decided to stay safe I'd best eat a heart healthy diet so I could keep running with less worry.
The know-how then was weak*; but between not drinking soft drinks or eating daily desserts or fast food and my consistent running AND taking one 300 mg tablet of niacin after breakfast, I was in better shape than most.
(*The thought then was that rice and brown rice were beneficial for your heart. Now we know it's horrid for your heart even without the high levels of arsenic currently in both!)
That's when I got the 130 LDL reading that was still moderately high risk. I added a second 300 mg niacin after my lunch. And since I'd read that sterols lowered LDL AND I found the Natrol Cholesterol Balance supplement was inexpensive, I also add taking 3 a day of those.
My LDL readings then went down to 100 to 106. (Since then, I've done other things to drop my LDL readings to 75 or less. See my post on this blog yesterday, Tues, March 29, 2016 titled, Advanced Heart Attack Prevention.)
2. About the same time period that I was getting the 130 LDL reading my doctor added a fasting glucose test. It was 115. THAT should have frightened me; but I didn't know that then. But I did know my doctor thought it was high enough it would be better if it was lower.
(This would have been much worse if I did drink soft drinks etc and wasn't exercising!)
I immediately switched to no sugar applesauce and cut back 75% on the brown sugar I as having on my oatmeal. I kept exercising and began taking 200 mcg a day of Chromium Polynicotinate by Solgar and 200 mg a day of alpha lipoic acid. My next fasting glucose was 89 and it ranged as high as 97.
Then I cut back another 75% on sugar and began eating oatmeal only every other day and began taking cranberry extract instead of drinking ANY cranberry juice to help me lose fat.
Now my fasting glucose tends to be 78 to 81.
Creating a plan that works for you needs to include foods you like. But here are some tips.
Have most of it be health OK proteins and vegetables with daily amounts but less of health OK extra virgin olive oil or other monosaturated fat foods and organic fresh fruit.
Vary between days for variety but have what you eat most Mondays be the same every week. And do the same for the other days of the week.
That makes what you eat and making changes in it consistent and predictable. It also makes shopping for it consistent and faster!
And be sure to exercise too! I'll post on that again tomorrow, Thursday, 3-31.
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