Posted on 01/25/2023 5:43:52 AM PST by Tench_Coxe
BLOOD clotting is a normal response to injury. Sometimes, however, it can lead to cramps, pain and swelling, and if it enters the circulatory system, it can be fatal. In a small study, one popular breakfast food has been linked to the condition.
(Excerpt) Read more at express.co.uk ...
Make a statement, grab all your eggs go out to the street and throw your eggs at passing cars.
Do you feel the need to perch on the back of your couch?
Pro Tip: Linked to is code for 'we didn't really study it, we used some date from a bunch of other studies of other things all using different methodologies and controls and searched it all of that data for slight correlations to anything we could and this popped out.'
'Linked to' = not real science, ignore it. Another headline will come in a year with an opposite conclusion because that's how BS works.
Johnny Cash was my dads favorite, i like him, too. And i love the Word!
100+ people in my condo complex I have talked to during our monthly social meetings. Not heard of any blood clots.
265+ MILLION Americans jabbed. Do you have links to ONE million casualties from the jabs?
If not, AT A MINIMUM the jabs are 99.7% safe.
SIZE MATTERS!
They’ve all become nose blind.
So, we should be thankful the price of eggs is prohibitive?!
Aaaaand just like that, we’re back to “eggs are bad for you”.
Are they good for us right now? Oh, no, they give us clotz.
“Ten years ago, researchers at The Cleveland Clinic published one of the first studies proposing a link between TMAO, dietary choline, and cardiovascular disease risk,5 but have just published a new study that offers some important new information about choline from eggs, one of the best food sources of choline available. The new study published in The American Journal of Medicine explored the difference between consuming eggs, a whole food source of choline, and taking supplemental choline on TMAO production, and concluded “… it may be more prudent to recommend natural sources of choline, like eggs, over supplements.”6
In this study of healthy adults, TMAO concentrations increased from baseline to end-of-study in the participants who consumed a choline bitartrate supplement alone or in combination with whole eggs or egg whites; however, there was no change in TMAO concentrations in the participants who consumed eggs alone or for those who took supplement of phosphatidylcholine, a form of choline found in eggs.
The results of this new study from Cleveland Clinic align with other studies in healthy, young adults that have indicated higher intake of choline from eggs (2-3 eggs/day) has no impact on blood levels of TMAO.7-”
The article posted says choline supplements raises TMAO levels. It left out that eggs (with natural choline) does not raise TMAO levels.
Deception by omission.
Check out 71 and 72
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