confused utterings


U-turn : Butter, cheese, eggs not ?!bad for heart


U-turn : Butter, cheese, eggs not bad for heart
Myth Busted
LONDON: A cardiologist of Indian origin in the UK has spun conventional medical wisdom around by showing that fatty food like butter, cheese, eggs and yoghurt can be good for the heart.

Cardiologist Aseem Malhotra published his findings on Wednesday in the British Medical Journal (BMJ) saying that the medical advice of cutting down on saturated fats to reduce the risk of heart disease may be wrong. He said that recent studies “have not supported any significant association between saturated fat intake and risk of cardiovascular disease”.
Malhotra is an interventional cardiology specialist and registrar at Croydon University Hospital in London says scientific evidence shows that advice to reduce saturated fat intake “has paradoxically increased our cardiovascular risks.”

He says the government’s obsession with levels of total cholesterol “has led to the over-medication of millions of people with statins and has diverted our attention from the more egregious risk factor of atherogenic dyslipidaemia” (an unfavourable ratio of blood fats).

Saturated fat has been demonized since the 1970s when a landmark study concluded that there was a correlation between incidence of coronary heart disease and total cholesterol which was then correlated with the percentage of calories provided by saturated fat, Malhotra said.

“But correlation is not causation,” he said. But patients were advised to “reduce fat intake to 30% of total energy and a fall in saturated fat intake to 10%”. One of the earliest obesity experiments published in the Lancet in 1956 compared groups consuming diets of 90% fat versus 90% protein versus 90% carbohydrate and revealed that the greatest weight loss was in the fat consuming group. More recently, a study revealed that a “low fat” diet showed the greatest decrease in energy expenditure an unhealthy lipid pattern and increased insulin resistance (a precursor to diabetes) compared with a low carbohydrate and low glycaemic index diet.

Malhotra pointed to the United States where percentage of calorie consumption from fat has declined from 40% to 30% in the past 30 years (although absolute fat consumption has remained the same) but obesity has rocketed. One reason, he said, is that the food industry “compensated by replacing saturated fat with added sugar.” Adopting a Mediterranean diet after a heart attack is almost three times as powerful in reducing mortality as taking a statin, writes Malhotra.

“Doctors need to embrace prevention as well as treatment. The greatest improvements in morbidity and mortality have been due not to personal responsibility but rather to public health… It is time to bust the myth of the role of saturated in heart disease and dietary advice that has contributed to obesity,” he said.

Commenting on the study, the chair of Britain’s National Obesity Forum David Haslam said, “It’s extremely naive of the public and the medical profession to imagine that a calorie of bread, a calorie of meat and a calorie of alcohol are all dealt in the same way by the amazingly complex systems of the body. The assumption has been made that increased fat in the bloodstream is caused by increased saturated fat in the diet whereas modern scientific evidence is proving that refined carbohydrates and sugar in particular are actually the culprits.” 
 
 comment:- looks like a paid advertisement on behalf of

Butter, cheese, eggs suppliers

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Control gadgets with your makeup

LONDON: Scientists have created metal eyeshadow and false eyelashes that allow the wearer to control gadgets with the blink of an eye. The cosmetics range that lets users control machines has been developed by Brazilian researchers. Katia Vega, a beauty technology designer at the Pontifical Catholic University in Rio de Janeiro, developed a prototype whereby people wearing the electronic makeup can operate lights and control aerial drones using contractions of their eye muscles.


“In incorporating technology into traditional make-up, I thought I could empower people without making them look like a cyborg,” she said.


After applying the makeup, users close their eyes in long blinks or winks to create a circuit that allows them to operate various devices, ‘The Times’ reported. Vega said that she was developing variations of the technology to improve the lives of disabled people by using facial expressions to activate household electronics, hospital beds and airconditioning. The inventions were demonstrated at an Interactive Tabletops and Surfaces conference at the University of St Andrews.

The ultimate purpose of developing the electronic makeup is to eventually integrate the technology with smartphones and other wearable computers, such as Google Glass. For instance, imagine being able to take a picture with your smartphone by winking. The technology is yet another step toward blurring the line between our bodies and our electronic devices.

For cyber defence, UK to hire criminal hackers


The UK’s new cyber defence unit could recruit convicted criminal hackers, the defence secretary has said. Philip Hammond said the armed forces did not have an “absolute bar” on signing up criminals, and told the BBC’s Newsnight that former hackers would be assessed on case basis. Lieutenant Colonel Michael White, head of the new team of “cyber reservists”, said he would not be setting “hard and fast rules about individual personality traits”.


The Joint Cyber Reserve Unit will be responsible for protecting the UK from cyber attacks — attempts to extract information and attempts to deny services by bringing websites down.

In addition, hackers will be used as a military asset with an “offensive capability” — striking out at enemy targets for the benefit of national security.

David Day, a computer forensics expert, told Newsnight that former malicious hackers represent “some of the best talent” in the country. And White said, “I think if they could get through the security process, then if they had that capability that we would like, then if the vetting authority was happy with that, why not? We’re looking at capability development, rather than setting hard and fast rules about individual traits.”