But meanwhile (with the NHS performing 60,000 gallbladder removal operations per annum, and 103,000 people in the UK suffering heart attacks each year, and 94,000 people dying of coronary heart disease annually in the UK) I, personally, think it highly inadvisable to risk a high-fat diet OR a high-sugar diet. And that's just my opinion, nothing more.
[Statistics from NHS and British Heart Foundation]
It has been argued that one of the contributary factors to gallbladder removal is a low fat diet. This is because the gall bladder's bile secretions respond to the presence of fat in the diet. When dietry fat is no longer present in sufficient quantities the gall bladder is no longer being flushed and the bile within it becomes static. This, it is thought is how gall stones develope. When fat is re-introduced into the diet after a lengthly absence i.e fried breakfast, bacon sandwich,avocado etc the gallbladder responds and the gall stones can then enter the bile ducts.Fat is then seen as the culprit.
Sugar isn't the only component of a low fat diet. We are advised to base every meal on starchy carbs which contribute to blood glucose just as much as refined sugar. It may be that the heart atacks and coronary heart disease are down to the very high carbohydrate diet that is currently recommended by the medical profession. And that's just my opinion, nothing more.
[Statistics from NHS and British Heart Foundation]
It has been argued that one of the contributary factors to gallbladder removal is a low fat diet. This is because the gall bladder's bile secretions respond to the presence of fat in the diet. When dietry fat is no longer present in sufficient quantities the gall bladder is no longer being flushed and the bile within it becomes static. This, it is thought is how gall stones develope. When fat is re-introduced into the diet after a lengthly absence i.e fried breakfast, bacon sandwich,avocado etc the gallbladder responds and the gall stones can then enter the bile ducts.Fat is then seen as the culprit.
Sugar isn't the only component of a low fat diet. We are advised to base every meal on starchy carbs which contribute to blood glucose just as much as refined sugar. It may be that the heart atacks and coronary heart disease are down to the very high carbohydrate diet that is currently recommended by the medical profession. And that's just my opinion, nothing more.