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Browning meat in the oven, grill or frying pan produces chemicals which may increase the risk of developing dementia, US researchers suggest.

Advanced glycation end (AGE) products have been linked to diseases such as type-2 diabetes.

Mice fed a high-AGEs diet had a build-up of dangerous proteins in the brain and impaired cognitive function.

Experts said the results were "compelling" but did not provide "definitive answers".

AGEs are formed when proteins or fats react with sugar. This can happen naturally and during the cooking process.

Researchers at the Icahn school of medicine at Mount Sinai, in New York, tested the effect of AGEs on mice and people.

The animal experiments, published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, showed that a diet rich in AGEs affects the chemistry of the brain.

It leads to a build-up of defective beta amyloid protein - a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease. The mice eating a low-AGEs diet were able to prevent the production of damaged amyloid.

The mice performed less well in physical and thinking tasks after their AGEs-rich diet.

A short-term analysis of people over 60 suggested a link between high levels of AGEs in the blood and cognitive decline.

"This paper adds to the body of evidence suggesting that using preventative strategies might reduce the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias in society and that could have very positive impact on us all."

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You can take my meat from my cold, dead, fingers.

 

This is just another scare story. Everything causes cancer, and everything causes Dementia. Pick your poison.

I'll take my chances.  

 

I've always found it humorous that they do all these tests on mice and then assume it will have the exact same effects on humans.

Humans have eaten meat forever, so who's to say we haven't evolved such that we can tolerate it.  It certainly worked that way with lactose.

  • Like 2

And I just read that Tylenol may have a strong link to causing ADHD in pregnant mothers' children after years of being assured it's safe. Just live your damn life. It's the only thing you can really control.

Exactly.

 

You can make your life as "perfect" from these perspectives and be super healthy. You'll still die. So you might as well just live your life accepting the fact that death will claim you at some point. Just enjoy your time here. Would be pretty sad missing out on chunks of the good stuff because it may kill you...

  • Like 2

I'll take my chances.  

 

I've always found it humorous that they do all these tests on mice and then assume it will have the exact same effects on humans.

Humans have eaten meat forever, so who's to say we haven't evolved such that we can tolerate it.  It certainly worked that way with lactose.

Because if it only shows up later in life, after child bearing age, it has very little effect on genetic fitness, and therefore is unlikely to be a protection that can be 'evolved'.

I'll take my chances.  

 

I've always found it humorous that they do all these tests on mice and then assume it will have the exact same effects on humans.

Humans have eaten meat forever, so who's to say we haven't evolved such that we can tolerate it.  It certainly worked that way with lactose.

I agree.  The biggest problem is that they don't look at evolution, and they base it on animals that have remained the same for longer than humans have been around.

While I do agree that Humans didn't eat meat near the quantity eaten today (back then during there winter there was little to no meat, and even during the summer a deer or fish, hell rabbits would have been tough to get).  I also think that we have evolved in such a way the body can handle it, and can discard most toxins (via the liver, bowels, intestines, etc).  While yes, we could drop meat, lactose (milk products), etc.. the body isn't able to get the nutrients it needs from a diet of pure vegetables, and we would be forced to take artificial nutrients to make up for it.. which can be way worse than eating a steak once a week.

  • Like 2

Speak for yourself man :(

Haha, well yeah it doesn't apply to everybody.  But there was a time when all humans were lactose intolerant, but that has changed drastically to present day.

 

http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2012/12/27/168144785/an-evolutionary-whodunit-how-did-humans-develop-lactose-tolerance

Haha, well yeah it doesn't apply to everybody.  But there was a time when all humans were lactose intolerant, but that has changed drastically to present day.

 

http://www.npr.org/blogs/thesalt/2012/12/27/168144785/an-evolutionary-whodunit-how-did-humans-develop-lactose-tolerance

 

My girlfriend is lactose intolerant.

 

Cost me a fortune in cheese, milk and other lactose free products.

 

She has a small amount of the enzyme lactase.

 

Body does not need lactose, really.

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