7 comments

  • lithocarpus a day ago

    I am dubious about "red meat" being called pro-inflammatory.

    Are there any studies showing that real red meat - say venison or grass fed beef or acorn-fed pork is inflammatory or harmful?

    I'd not be surprised if a comparative study of diets could show that higher amounts of red meat in the diet correlated with bad health, but I have never seen anything suggesting the red meat itself is a problem other than perhaps processed meat like hot dogs.

    Processed food - for sure, there are many aspects of most processed food that I think are harmful. Inflammatory I think generally means it's damaging the body in some way which causes inflammation.

    • cluckindan a day ago

      Correct me if I’m wrong, but as I understand, it’s the quality of lipids in grain fed meat that causes inflammation.

      Grain feeding causes ratio of omega-3 to omega-6 polyunsaturated fatty acids get skewed towards more omega-6, which causes increased synthesis of pro-inflammatory interleukins and other PUFA metabolites.

      • pluralmonad a day ago

        Recently started eating grass fed meat. Now every time I cook chicken thighs from a grocery store I cannot ignore the overt corn flavor. Its so disturbing I have cut back my chicken consumption significantly.

      • lithocarpus a day ago

        Yes that makes sense. I'd still rather eat the grain fed meat than the grain itself, but best would be grass fed meat.

    • pengaru 19 hours ago

      > I am dubious about "red meat" being called pro-inflammatory.

      I dunno, recently I was told about alpha-gal syndrome which for the first time made me appreciate "red meat" has some special properties WRT human consumption.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alpha-gal_syndrome

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galactose-alpha-1,3-galactose

      • lithocarpus 8 hours ago

        "The condition results from past exposure to certain tick bites"

        This is a real thing I know two people who have it, but I haven't heard of any evidence that it applies to all people even in a small way. I'm open to hearing if you have, though.

  • a day ago
    [deleted]