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Linda Larrowe Bergersen

Linda Larrowe Bergersen

Posted: October 27, 2010 09:45 AM

Are you one of those people who believe that eggs will do you harm? It might not be the whole truth. Because of a determination in the 1950s by researchers to come up with a cause of heart disease, and because cholesterol was found to be a component of artery plaque, the word spread that the elimination of eggs and all high cholesterol foods from the diet was a must. The New York Times has labeled this as a "longstanding conceptual error" pertaining to heart disease.

Learning the natural workings of cholesterol in the body dispels the harm. Whether we eat foods with cholesterol or not, our bodies manufacture its own cholesterol in order to maintain a healthy system. Cholesterol is a beneficial component of hormone, nerve and brain function. If the body is low on cholesterol, the liver will produce more; if the body has enough, production will halt. Also to dispel the egg cholesterol theory, in 2001, researchers at Kansas State University showed that a nutrient called phosphatidylcholine actually deters the cholesterol in eggs from getting into the body.

We need to accept that the reason for high cholesterol rates are still unanswered, and that cholesterol is not the only determining factor in heart disease. A Harvard School of Public Health study shows there is no significant link between eating eggs and developing cardiovascular disease. Facts show that aging, hormonal imbalance, even diabetes play roles in increasing cholesterol numbers. But diet and eating too much of unhealthful foods is the number one factor in all of it.

Cholesterol can definitely be found in artery plaque, and that is because cholesterol naturally travels through the system constantly, and works like a bandage to repair arterial breaks caused by inflammation. It goes to the damaged area, and will build up the more an artery has inflammation. This is how cholesterol has come to be determined a threat. Yet it's the processed foods that create the damaging inflammation.

The egg is a natural food considered to be one of the most nutritious. It's a complete natural package of a bundle of nutrients. And as long as the egg is "natural," unprocessed, and eaten whole, it is healthful.

(NOTE: While eggs, in moderation, can add nutrition to a balanced diet, people on low-fat, low-cholesterol diets for heart disease should still limit their intake of eggs.)

Unfortunately, eggs are another food in our diet whereby their development has been altered and jeopardized, much like beef. The beef we used to consume was from grass-fed cattle, and now the majority we eat is typically from corn-fed cattle. The omega 6 oil in corn disturbs the nutritional balance in relation to the omega-3 content, causing more inflammation. The majority of chickens are fed a diet consisting of corn, soy and/or grains, and not the grass, seeds and bugs that are filled with protein they should naturally be consuming. Free-range chickens have a better chance of having a more naturally balanced diet, but it is very difficult to find chickens that have corn-free feed.

Processed eggs include dehydrated, liquefied, packaged, etc. Omelets or scrambled eggs served at restaurants are very often made from liquefied eggs bought from a distributor that are packaged in ready-to-pour cartons. Because they are packaged, they also contain preservatives, sugars and/or possibly hydrogenated oils. It's best to order poached or soft boiled, or ask if the scrambled eggs are made from fresh whole eggs just to make sure.

Eating just the egg whites equates to not eating a "whole food." The entire egg is the complete package. Each component of the egg holds a variety of nutrients that complement the other, but it is the yolk that contains more of the nutrients and 50 percent of the protein.

Some researchers say that if eggs are not cooked properly they can also cause inflammation. They indicate that cooking the egg yolk at high heat will oxidize its cholesterol and cause free radicals in the body, but others, such as the author of Cholesterol Myths, Uffe Ravnskov, believes otherwise. Precaution could always help by eating more eggs sunny-side up, soft-boiled or poached. Another good practice is to cook eggs at the lowest temperature possible; just put a cover on the pan, turn the heat down and let it cook. It takes longer but is actually more tasty.

(Warning: Use caution when cooking runny eggs; raw eggs can contain salmonella.)

So if you're feeling guilty about eating eggs at breakfast, consider all the factors. And look around your plate; is there refined bread for toast? Processed and pasteurized fruit juice without the fiber? Sugary syrup on the refined pancakes made with hydrogenated oil? It's not just the eggs you need to worry about.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
katmeyster
We don't have a spending problem.
03:00 AM on 12/02/2010
Buy them from local farmers or friends if you can -- better, raise them yourself. Eggs are great and healthy this way.
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shocktreatment
Just barely standing it
03:01 PM on 11/30/2010
Serum cholesterol is not a predictor of coronary heart disease, period. The most respected epidemiological study of the causes of heart disease is the Framingham Heart Study. Started in the town of Framingham, Massachusetts, by Harvard University Medical School in 1948 it is multigenerational, and going on.

22 years into the study: "There is, in short, no suggestion of any relation between diet and the subsequent development of CHD (coronary heart disease) in the study group."

Then, twenty-seven years later, the Journal of the American Medical Association published a report concluding that saturated fat reduced strokes. Since stroke tends to hit older men more than CHD, they examined whether a fatty diet was causing those in the trial to die of CHD before they had a stroke. Nope:

"This hypothesis, however, depends on the presence of a strong direct association of fat intake with coronary heart disease. Since we found no such association, competing mortality from coronary heart disease is very unlikely to explain our results."

After 49 years, no relation between a fatty diet and heart disease. None. Such conclusions do not help sell statins, Howling about "dangerous blood levels" doesn't change material fact: In an 09 study, 75% of heart attack patients had "normal" cholesterol.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19081406?dopt=Abstract

The authors' conclusion? "Normal" is too high! Sell more drugs!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
katmeyster
We don't have a spending problem.
03:01 AM on 12/02/2010
We certainly wouldn't want the truth to prevent us from putting every single American on a statin drug.
11:10 PM on 11/29/2010
To really measure nutrition value requires machines--the food has to be mashed up & pulverized, then the machines test it for various nutrients chemically or mechanically somehow.
http://www.wellnessstarts.com/nitro-muscle-mass-review.html
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrP
10:43 PM on 11/29/2010
(NOTE: While eggs, in moderation, can add nutrition to a balanced diet, people on low-fat, low-cholesterol diets for heart disease should still limit their intake of eggs.)

It saddens and amazes me that such a wonderful article is marred by this note, which completely contradicts everything else said in the post. Why, oh why?
01:24 PM on 11/30/2010
This note, unfortunately, was interjected by the Huffington editors, not by the author. It seems it was added for some sort of legality reasons, I'm not sure.
06:53 PM on 11/29/2010
Eggs should be eaten from local sources that you trust. Obviously organic and free range are best.

People should pay attention to the amount of saturated fat they eat because that can cause your body to produce more of it's own cholesterol. Most of all just be sensible. Don't eat three eggs everyday and don't have an egg every morning if you're eating other high cholesterol foods daily. It really is about moderation and not about eliminating rich foods.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DrP
10:31 PM on 11/29/2010
Please explain the science behind these statements. It should be a challenge, since there isn't any validity behind anything that you are saying here.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
McHale Ann Haiman
05:14 AM on 11/29/2010
I enjoy deviled eggs and egg salad and that is pretty much it. Eggs themselves do not taste good to me. I used to enjoy them, but I haven't had a super good omelet in a long time. Plus, they smell funny and feel gross. I hate runny, undercooked eggs, but can't stand that sponginess they get when they are too cooked. Bleh.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gennaphyr
Reformed and recovered Christian fundamentalist
02:09 AM on 11/29/2010
I love eggs, just as I love bananas, they are the perfect pre-packaged fast food! A hard-boiled egg along with my banana is what I eat for breakfast everyday
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Leslie Robinson Goldberg
Writer
09:58 PM on 11/28/2010
Among the animals raised for food chickens and turkeys are the most tortured. Free-range is mostly an advertising slogan. There's no "range." There's a darkened shed crammed with birds, some alive, some dead, all sick in one way or another. I wouldn't eat an egg if it was the most perfect food on the planet, guaranteed to provide perfect health, perfect thinness. I can't participate in that level of cruelty. I just finished a great dinner of a salad with beets, onions, tomatoes, lettuce, carrots and a big sweet potato. Sunflower seeds. Two slices of Ezkiel bread, a little marmalade. That's enough for me. Oh, and I hiked five miles today. Training for a half marathon.
12:00 PM on 11/29/2010
here's your medal
11:51 AM on 11/30/2010
You can get eggs straight from a farm or a friend if you are worried about cruelty. The chickens on the farm I visited were onl caged at night... to protect them from coyotes. The "cage" had plenty of room for them to move around too. It's true that some of the factory farms are beyond horrible, but if you really, really love eggs like I do - it is possible to get them ethically.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
09:02 AM on 11/28/2010
Eating the whole egg is wise: the yolk contains enough lecithin to break down most (not all) of the cholesterol in the egg. Eating only the white is like eating only the crust of white bread: not making much dietary progress. Eat only ONE egg hardboiled, instead of an omelet of three cooked in butter.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
getsit
good morning, I'm here
03:16 PM on 11/29/2010
There is also good cholesterol in eggs which we need. If we used eggs as our protein resource more often, we could cut down on red meats and save money to boot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
R Davis
“The truth is rarely pure and never simple.”
12:52 AM on 11/28/2010
And they taste good too.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Vivian Alicia Evans
12:50 AM on 11/28/2010
My grandmother has always said that eggs are an almost perfect food. For someone who was still xcountry skiing in her eighties I have to give her judgement merit. I include natural whole eggs in my diet, soft boiled poached and steamed are my favorite breakfasts. I also enjoy a quiche from time to time with lots of veggies. Long live good wholesome eggs.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
09:04 AM on 11/28/2010
Natural is the key: factory eggs are chemically infused and produced by unhappy, unhealthy hens.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Adam616
bweh
12:31 AM on 11/28/2010
I love eggs. I eat eggs. And my cholestorol level remains low.

Your levels are based on what your body produces, not what your mouth eats.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
getsit
good morning, I'm here
03:19 PM on 11/29/2010
True. Often high cholesterol is hereditary. If you don't eat it, your body produces it anyway.

The secret is to eat a diet higher in good fats than bad. I like ground beef, buy a very low fat one and add olive oil to moisten the meat. Yum. Substitutions can taste good too.
07:34 PM on 11/27/2010
I have been eating 5+ plus eggs a day for the last 5 years.
I ´m 44, my blood pressure is 120/80 and my triglycerides are at 51.

Ain´t nothing wrong with eggs.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Amalek
Highly decorated HP warrior
12:04 AM on 11/28/2010
You have deprived almost 8,000 chickens the joy of a normal chicken life.
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SteveDenver
Progressive and liberal, just like Jesus Christ.
09:06 AM on 11/28/2010
Funny! I was going to quibble the math, but realized that not every fertilized egg thrives.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ThomasPaine1776
Left is right; Right is wrong
01:24 AM on 11/28/2010
All it takes is one tiny clog of cholesteroley waxey, fatty animal gunk to block one of the 8 coronary arteries to kill you. Blood pressure is not illumative of the state of health of your arteries.
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03:26 AM on 11/28/2010
Guess you didn't read the article.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
getsit
good morning, I'm here
03:21 PM on 11/29/2010
Eggs aren't the bad guys. It's the total of saturated and trans fats you've eaten over your lifetime that causes the damage in SOME people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cccoyote
America couldn't be bought by corps.
06:50 PM on 11/27/2010
I suppose the modern eggs from robotic chickens are completely harmless nutritionally, you know, the ones that come in the 18 pack also found at low quality chain restaurant and have the pale greenish-yellow yolk reminiscent in color of ant1freeze. The chemical content on the other hand ...

Egg purchasing is very vague, definitions are not concise.

" The reality is that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has no standards to dictate the use of the term “free range,” allowing egg producers to freely label any egg as a free range egg. In fact, to qualify as free range, a chicken coop must simply have a door that is left open some of the time. “Cage free,” on the other hand, is a term that essentially evokes a similar meaning as “free range,” the difference being that farms feel the term is less misleading. There is no legal definition of cage free."

The best for flavor and health, in my opinion are organic.

"Organic vs Non-Organic Eggs – Eggs that are certified organic are produced through organic means. Chicken are fed with organic food. The chickens must also live in a cage-free environment and have access to the outdoors. These chickens are also antibiotic-free (exceptions are granted for infectious outbreaks in the flock). In addition to maintaining the organic standards of chicken and eggs, for an egg to be considered organic the care of the chicken must meet high animal welfare standards."
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03:27 AM on 11/28/2010
Good to know. Thanks.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gary Storch
Democracy is NOT for Sale!
05:37 PM on 11/27/2010
We are basically being poisoned by the corporations that supply us with our processed foods.
The average person today NEVER sees natural or true organic food stuff.