Guest guest Posted June 16, 2005 Report Share Posted June 16, 2005 ************************************** June - August 2005 issue of Dr. Michael Greger's quarterly newsletter ******************************************************* CONTENTS (online at http://www.DrGreger.org/newsletters.html ) I. Latest Updates in Human Nutrition A, Making the Healthiest Food on Earth Even Healthier B. Treating Springtime Allergies with Spirulina? C. Figs Fight Fatigue D. Heart Attacks, Side-Effects, or a Healthy Diet E. Plant-Based Diets Beneficial in Pregnancy F. Soy and Cancer: A Meta-Analysis G. Dairy Diet Myth H. ATTACK OF THE SUPERBUGS 1. Chicken Out of Urinary Tract Infections 2. Campylobacter Joins the Resistance 3. The Hard-Boiled Truth: Salmonella and Eggs 4. Don't Wash Your Meat 5. Bacteria or Cancer II. Bird Flu Update: Perfect Storm Gathering III. Carbophobia Update: Atkins Is Toast IV. Personal Update: New Job and New 501c3 Status ******************************************************* I. LATEST UPDATES IN HUMAN NUTRITION -------------------------- A. Making the Healthiest Food on Earth Even Healthier A quote from the May 2005 issue of the Center for Science in the Public Interest's Nutrition Action Healthletter: " Get a bunch of nutrition experts in a room and the conversation will inevitably turn to dark leafy greens. " [1] How true that is. And two new studies just discovered two ways to make your daily (at least!) green leafy salad even healthier. It's not enough to eat healthy food, we also have to absorb it. One of the key components that makes dark green leafies so nutritious are the carotenoid antioxidants, like alpha-carotene, beta-carotene, and lutein. These compounds are lipophilic, though. " Lipo- " is from lipos, the Greek word for fat (as in liposuction); " -philic " is from the word philia, one of the four Greek words for love (as in... well we won't get into that). So these carotenoid nutrients are fat-loving molecules, and as such our body can use ingested fat to entice out these nutrients trapped within our greens. So researchers at Ohio State University paid about a dozen people to eat salads (this is America, you've got to PAY people to eat salad) with or without avocado, one of the healthiest sources of fat, and then measured the amount of carotenoids that made it into everyone's bloodstream. Those eating a salad including half an avocado absorbed about 10 times more carotenoids than those eating the fat-free salad![2] Would the same hold true for the lycopene in salsa? Lycopene doubles as an extremely powerful carotenoid antioxidant and the red pigment that makes fruits and vegetables like watermelons and tomatoes red. Adding avocado to salsa more than quadrupled the amount of lycopene absorbed by test subjects.[3] (You wouldn't have to pay me to be in that study--yum!) The other salad enhancement study recently took place at the Universitia di Urbino in Italy. With the understanding that it's the antioxidants that give fruits and vegetables their anticancer, antiviral, and anti-inflammation properties, scientists experimented with adding different fresh herbs to salads and measuring their resultant total antioxidant content. They found that adding just a single sprig of fresh herbs (the weight of 3 paper clips worth of thyme, sage or marjoram--a kissing cousin of oregano) literally doubles the antioxidant power of a bowl of salad. It's almost like eating two salads for the price of one! The researchers conclude: " We stress the need to introduce aromatic herbs as a seasoning supplement in the diet of every age group. " [5] Right now at farmers' markets and plant nurseries across the country are little pots of herbs desperate for a good home. Take them in, nurture them, then rip off their limbs and eat them. -------------------------- B. Treating Springtime Allergies with Spirulina? People have been harvesting pond scum for thousands of years. The Aztecs, for example, were skimming it off lakes and into their diets half a millennia ago. Were they onto something? Spirulina is one of the most popular blue-green algae supplements on the market. In addition to being one of the most concentrated known source of nutrients (though how much of it can you really eat?), there is building evidence of its anti-inflammatory properties. To see if it might be of therapeutic value to seasonal allergy sufferers, researchers at the University of California at Davis School of Medicine enrolled 3 dozen sniffley sneezers into a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study (one of the most rigorous study designs to minimize various biases). Compared to placebo, participants taking 2 grams of spirulina a day were able to cut their production of inflammatory mediator Interleukin-4, a chief conductor of allergic reactions within the body, by over 30%.[7] So should those with runny noses run out and grab some? Two months ago I would have said yes, but not now. I was actually in Hawai'i, the spirulina export capital of the world, when the bombshell hit. Published in the journal of the most prestigious scientific body in the United States, the National Academy of Sciences, researchers came to a disturbing revelation about the safety of blue-green algae in general. We've known for years that a few rare types of blue-green algae could produce hepatotoxins (compounds toxic to the liver), but spirulina was considered generally[8] free of any such toxins.[9] But in April 2005 a coordinated effort of researchers across the world found evidence that almost all blue-green algae seem to be able to produce a neurotoxin called BMAA (beta-N-methylamino-L-alanine). BMAA is bad stuff. It's been implicated in a neurodegenerative disease as horrible as its name sounds, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis/parkinsonism-dementia complex. This disease attacked the Chamorro people of Guam who were eating flying foxes, who in turn were eating seeds of a cycad tree, whose watery roots concentrated the toxin from a certain type of algae. Now with this new study we know that the production of this neurotoxin is not limited to some rare Guam algae, but may be produced by almost all blue-green algae under the right conditions. So it turns out the only two places you may be likely to find BMAA is in the brains of Alzheimer's patients[10] and on the store shelves of your local natural foods store in the form of blue-green algae.[11] Until we know more, I strongly discourage people from eating blue/green algae (including the spirulina that, until April, was what made the popcorn I always smuggled into the movie theatre such a brilliant green hue). Those interested in reducing inflammation will have to choose other plant foods like--as one recent article published in the Journal of Nutrition discovered--gazpacho, a vegetable soup which " decreased biomarkers of inflammation in both women and men. " [12] -------------------------- C. Figs Fight Fatigue In search of some of the most nutrient-dense foods in existence, chemists at the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania started looking at dried fruit. Since 90% of a fruit's weight is water, they figured that dried fruit might be ten times more nutritious by weight than fresh. Well, it didn't quite work out that way. The drying process destroyed about 80% of the chief antioxidant compounds, but, given that the nutrition in dried fruit is ten times more concentrated, dried fruits did still come out ahead, finishing out with about 10% more antioxidant content than fresh (by weight). And with all the fiber and minerals intact, dried fruit tested out to be little nutrition powerhouses. A new study out of Korea just found that the antioxidant boost provided by fruit consumption only seems to last about 2 hours.[13] So carrying around some trail mix is a convenient way to make sure your body is constantly flooded with antioxidants throughout the day. Which dried fruits are the best? Of the six fruits tested--apricots, cranberries, dates, figs, raisins and plums--shooting to a surprise finish at number one was... figs! (OK, OK, the study was paid for in part by the California Fig Advisory Board, but still...). Aren't dried fruits packed with concentrated sugars though? And isn't sugar a pro-oxidant? Well, yes, but dried (and fresh) fruits are so packed with antioxidants that not only do they successfully counter the potential detriment of their own sugar, they are powerful enough to take on a can of Coke, too. When you drink a dozen spoonfuls of sugar in a soft drink (aka " liquid candy " ), the antioxidant capacity of your blood drops dramatically as your body starts using up its antioxidant stores to deal with the oxidant stress caused by all that sugar. Well what if you doubled the amount of sugar you ingested by drinking a cup of soda with a serving of dried figs on top? Even the high fructose corn syrup in the soda is no match for the antioxidant power of fruit. Despite the double sugar load, subjects washing down their figs with soda still experienced an overall rise in antioxidant levels in their bloodstream.[14] No, that doesn't mean you can eat or drink all the candy you want as long as you pop a few raisins. Stick with the fruit. In addition to having the highest antioxidant content among the six fruits tested, of the thousands of whole foods in the USDA nutrient database, figs make the top ten for fiber content. (For the curious, the top five are #1. Cloud ear mushrooms (the number one fiber-containing whole food on the planet and I've never even heard of it?), #2. Flax seeds (I've heard of those), #3. Sesame seeds, #4. Dried unsweetened coconut, and #5. Air-popped popcorn). And fiber consumption, according a new review, may help boost energy levels.[15] Half the fiber we swallow is eaten by the good bacteria in our colon. Our colonic comrades ferment the fiber we eat into short-chain fatty acids, which our body then absorbs and sends straight to our muscles to be used as a ready fuel source. Of course, another byproduct of this fermentation product is gas, some of which is absorbed by other bacteria to produce even more fuel for us, but the rest of which is indeed excreted. Maybe a more appropriate title would be Fight Fatigue with Fig Farts. -------------------------- D. Heart Attacks, Side-Effects, or a Healthy Diet One of the laws of ecology is that you cannot do just one thing (because everything is connected to everything else). Yet, when physicians put people on statin drugs to cripple the enzyme that produces cholesterol within your liver, they hope there won't be any other effects. Unfortunately within the ecology of the body that too often is not the case. About one in six people on these cholesterol-lowering drugs experience other untoward effects,[16] and there is growing concern about the very rare (but very serious) life-threatening adverse reactions to this class of drugs. We've known about the potential for rare cases of these drugs causing muscle breakdown, but recently there's been increasing concern about rare cases of these drugs causing nerve breakdown--a so-called drug-induced polyneuropathy.[17] It seems that statins may also co-cripple the synthesis of a key energy-producing enzyme in nerve cells. Thankfully, one doesn't have to choose between the risk of getting a heart attack and the risk of suffering side-effects from life-long drug therapy. That's because David Jenkins has done it again. Currently one of the world's most respected nutrition researchers (it was his team that invented the glycemic index), Dr. Jenkins has just published yet another study proving that a completely plant-based (vegan) diet alone can lower cholesterol levels as much as the combination of a low-fat vegetarian diet AND a statin drug.[18] Although, as drugs go, statins seem remarkably safe, users do risk (albeit extremely rarely) being written up as case reports with unpleasant names like " Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis from Atorvastatin. " That one, published in the Journal of the AMA, described a horror story of a woman whose skin erupted in blisters and then started necrosing off. Patches of her skin started disintegrating and sloughing off after only four days on the statin drug. After two weeks on a morphine drip, thankfully, she pulled through.[19] Contrast that with the side effects of a healthy plant-based diet. What's the worse that can happen? Maybe less reading time on the toilet because you're not constipated anymore? As the revered Moses Maimonides wrote in the 12th century: " No illness which can be treated by diet should be treated by any other means. " -------------------------- E. Plant-Based Diets Beneficial in Pregnancy Adequate magnesium status is critical for the health of both mother and fetus during pregnancy. Magnesium deficiency during pregnancy is associated with everything from bothersome calf muscle cramps to a potentially life-threatening complication called eclampsia. So where is magnesium found? Well, it forms the core of chlorophyll molecules, so--you guessed it--dark green leafy vegetables, as well as beans, seeds and whole grains. So researchers at the German Institute of Human Nutrition reasoned that women who followed plant-based diets would have a better magnesium status and fewer magnesium deficiency-related complications than those following the Standard American Diet (SAD). And, that's exactly what they found. They followed over a hundred women through their pregnancies and not only did those following a plant-based diet indeed have " markedly " higher magnesium intakes, but they had significantly fewer leg cramps during the second and third trimesters. The researchers conclude that this is in line with the " substantial evidence from many studies that plant-based or vegetarian diets can reduce the risk for many nutrition-related diseases. " [20] -------------------------- F. Soy and Cancer: A Meta-Analysis Some studies suggest that soy consumption prevents cancer, some studies find no association and internet sites like Mercola.com suggest that ingesting soy actually causes cancer. (Joseph Mercola, who boasts the " #1 natural health website, " just received a warning letter from the FDA ordering him to stop making illegal claims about the products he sells. See http://www.casewatch.org/fdawarning/prod/2005/mercola.shtml ). So what does the balance of evidence show? That's where a meta-analysis comes in. Instead of picking and choosing studies to suit one's agenda, meta-analyses look at essentially every study ever done on a topic and kind of pool the data all together. A meta-analysis of the effect of soy on cholesterol levels back in the '90s, for example, showed that the evidence of a cardio-protective role of soy was so strong that the FDA authorized a health claim on soy products that they may reduce the risk of heart disease. Now finally, published in a recent issue of the Journal of the American College of Nutrition, a meta-analysis on the role of soy in cancer prevention. Researchers looked at three types of cancer: breast cancer, prostate cancer and gastrointestinal cancer (like colon cancer). Combining all the best published studies, they found highly significant reductions in cancer risk among consumers of soy products. Women of all ages who eat soy enjoy 22% less breast cancer (36% less for postmenopausal women!), male soy consumers are 34% less likely to get prostate cancer, and both men and women who consume soy reduce their risk of developing gastrointestinal cancer by 30%.[21] The evidence is so strong that there is now another health claim before the FDA--soon we may see labels saying that soy protects against cancer as well. -------------------------- G. Dairy Diet Myth " Drink Milk... Lose Weight " say the ads which ran in over 30 newspapers and magazines. October 2003, the dairy industry launched an entire " Healthy Weight with Milk " campaign to boost sales. Curiously, that also happened to be the same year a review of that exact subject was published in the Journal of Nutrition. The review found nine randomized controlled studies in the medical literature on body weight and dairy. Seven of the nine studies found no significant change in body weight compared to controls and the last two found that those who increased their dairy consumption gained significantly more weight than the nondairy control groups.[22] Subsequent and even larger studies published in 2004[23] and 2005[24] showed the exact same thing. So, wait a second. How can the dairy industry's ads claim that " a clinical study shows it helps you burn more fat and lose more weight than just cutting calories alone? " Well, because there is actually one tiny study, published by Michael Zemel of the University of Tennessee, which did find that the 11 study participants instructed to eat more dairy did seem to lose more weight. Yes, of course the study was bought and paid for by the dairy industry, but it goes further than that. This guy Zemel owns a patent on the claim that dairy foods aid weight loss, which is licensed to dairy food manufacturers. As the Center for Science in the Public Interest noted, " In the world of patents and PR, a little science can go a long way. " [25] Similar maneuverings were involved in the increased dairy recommendation in the new USDA Dietary Guidelines, even though a recent World Health Organization review found no significant relationship at all between low dairy consumption and osteoporotic fracture risk.[26] Assigned to write the dairy guideline was Connie Weaver, head of nutrition at Purdue University and a funding favorite of the National Dairy Council. Walter Willet, head of nutrition at Harvard, calls the guideline committee's report " egregious, " accusing them of ignoring the evidence linking dairy to cancer. " There is no nutritional requirement for dairy, " Dr. Willet told the Wall Street Journal, " at all. " [27] To hopefully clear up the dairy/weight question once and for all, last week on June 6, 2005, Harvard researchers published what may be considered the definitive study on the subject in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine. A study which followed the milk-drinking habits of not 11 kids, or even 12 kids, but over 12,000 kids! After following these 9- though 14-year-olds for years, they found that " children who reported higher total milk intake experienced larger weight gains. " The more milk they drank, the heavier they became. Boys who drank the " recommended " three servings of milk a day were 35% more likely to become overweight and girls who drank three servings were 36% more likely to become overweight over time.[28] " Given the high prevalence of lactose intolerance, the energy content and saturated fat in milk, and evidence that dairy products may promote both male (prostate) and female (ovarian) cancers, we should not assume that high intakes [of dairy] are beneficial, " the researchers told reporters. " Furthermore, these cancers may be linked to consumption during adolescence. " [29] What most surprised the researchers was that those who drank low-fat milk (skim and 1%) gained the most weight of all! The weight gain seemed tied more to the dairy protein intake than the dairy fat intake (extra whey protein is often added to low-fat milk during processing). Although there are at least four human studies that show that the dairy protein whey itself may promote weight gain, the researchers guessed that the blame lay in the growth hormones in milk, like the sex steroid estrone found in whey. After all, milk is designed by mother nature to start an 80-pound calf on her way to 1,400 pounds by her second birthday. This new study has serious implications for our childhood obesity epidemic, which not only has devastating health consequences but social consequences as well. A study released the same week by researchers at the Centers for Disease Control found that teens who perceived themselves as overweight were more than twice as likely to attempt suicide.[30] -------------------------- H1. SUPERBUGS: Chicken Out of Urinary Tract Infections Urinary Tract Infections are the most common infectious disease in women, affecting millions every year in the United States. And they are getting harder and harder to treat as antibiotic resistance among the chief pathogen, E. coli, becomes more and more common. When people think of E. coli infection, they typically think of the Jack-in-the-Box E. coli 0157:H7 infection, which starts as hemorrhagic colitis (profuse bloody diarrhea) and can then progress to kidney failure, seizures, coma and death. While E. coli 0157:H7 remains the leading cause of acute kidney failure of our children in this country,[31] only about 50,000 people get infected every year and only about 50 die. But literally millions of people get what's called " extraintestinal " E. coli infections--urinary tract infections (UTIs) which can invade the bloodstream and cause an estimated 36,000 deaths annually in the United States. That's over 500 times as many deaths as E. coli 0157:H7. We know where E. coli 0157:H7 comes from--fecal contamination from the meat, dairy and egg industries[32]--but where do these other E. coli come from? Medical researchers at the University of Minnesota published a clue to the mystery this April in the Journal of Infectious Disease. Taking over a thousand food samples from multiple retail markets, they were not surprised to find evidence of fecal contamination in 69% of the pork and beef and 92% of the poultry samples as evidenced by E. coli contamination. We know meat products are crawling with intestinal bugs. In fact, animal manure has been found to be the source of more than 100 pathogens, including bacteria, parasites and viruses that could be transmitted from animals to humans.[33] More surprising was that " >80% of their E. coli isolates from beef, pork, and poultry exhibited resistance to >=1 antimicrobial agent, and >50% of isolates from poultry were resistant to >5 drugs! " [34] One rarely finds exclamation points in the medical literature. But what was most surprising was that, for example, half of the poultry samples were contaminated with the extraintestinal E. coli bacteria. It seems that the UTI-type E. coli are food-borne pathogens as well, " found in many retail foods, " the researchers write, " particularly poultry but also beef or pork.... " The researchers conclude: " The highest prevalences and densities of resistant E. coli and ExPEC [Extraintestinal Pathogenic E. Coli] were found in meat products. This is consistent with contamination of animal carcasses with the host's fecal flora during slaughter and processing and with use of antimicrobial agents in food-animal production. " The researchers go so far as to say that the extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli " may rival (or exceed) E. coli O157:H7 as a foodborne pathogen. " [35] Science News comments on a 2005 California study which found the same thing:[36] " According to new research, this wave of multidrug-resistant UTIs may have a surprising source: eating meat. " [37] The scientists suspect by eating chicken and other meat, women infect their lower intestinal tract with these antibiotic-resistant bacteria which can then creep up into their urethra. Commonsense hygeine measures to prevent UTI's have always included wiping from front to back after bowel movements and urinating after intercourse to flush any infiltrators out. Now perhaps we can add a third measure: avoiding meat. -------------- H2. SUPERBUGS: Campylobacter Joins the Resistance Campylobacter is the most common bacterial cause of food poisoning in the United States. One study found Campylobacter contaminating 98% of retail chicken meat, the most common cause of Campylobacter poisoning.[38] And the bacterium is growing dangerously resistant to multiple classes of antibiotics. But we still have a few big-gun antibiotics left to deal with resistant bugs. So, for the time being (before the bacteria outsmart these new antibiotics as well), do we have good evidence showing that partially resistant bugs like Campylobacter currently pose a particular threat? We do now. Typically, Campylobacter only causes a self-limited diarrheal illness ( " stomach flu " ) which doesn't require antibiotics. If the gastroenteritis is particularly severe or if doctors suspect that the bug may be working it's way from the gut into the bloodstream, the initial drug of choice is typically a quinolone antibiotic like Cipro. Quinolone antibiotics have been used in human medicine since the 1980s, but widespread antibiotic-resistant Campylobacter didn't arise until after quinolones were licensed for use in animal feed as growth promoters in the early 1990s. In countries like Australia, which reserved quinolones for human use only, resistant bacteria simply do not exist.[88] When the FDA announced they were intending to join other countries and ban quinolone antibiotic use on U.S. poultry farms, the drug manufacturer, Bayer, sued the FDA. Bayer lost the lawsuit last year, but is currently appealing the decision. Meanwhile, poultry factories continue to spike the chickens' water supply with these antibiotics critical to human medicine. Evidence released in May 2005 found that retail chicken samples from such factories are more than 450 time more likely to carry antibiotic-resistant bugs. Even companies like Tyson and Purdue which supposedly stopped using antibiotics years ago are still churning out antibiotic-resistant bacteria-infected chicken. Scientists think the bacteria that became resistant years before are still hiding within the often dirt floors of the massive broiler sheds or within the piping of the water supply. Another possibility is that the carcasses of the chickens raised under so-called " Antibiotic Free " conditions are contaminated with resistant bacteria from slaughterhouse equipment which can process over 200,000 birds in a single hour.[88] In someone infected with Campylobacter, if the initial quinolone antibiotic isn't effective, doctors switch to stronger antibiotics reserved as a last resort. Does this delay lead to poorer patient outcomes? Scientists recently studied thousands of patients with Campylobacter infection to answer that question, and, indeed, the delay in treatment caused by quinolone-resistant Campylobacter led to up to ten times more complications--infections of the brain, the heart, and the most frequent serious complication they noted, death.[39] -------------- H3. SUPERBUGS: The Hard-Boiled Truth: Salmonella and Eggs In June 2005, the Centers for Disease Control released data showing resistant Salmonella led to serious complications as well.[40] Foodborne Salmonella emerged in the Northeast in the late 1970s and has now spread throughout North America. Salmonella hospitalizes thousands of people every year and kills hundreds. And Salmonella infection can be the gift that keeps on giving: Salmonella infections can lead to chronic conditions such as arthritis, bone infections, cardiac inflammation and neurological disorders.[41] In the United States, more than one in five " broiler " chickens may be Salmonella infected (at least in Russian roulette, there are six chambers).[42] But it's even more of a problem with egg-laying hens. Eggs are the primary vehicle for the spread of Salmonella bacteria to humans, causing an estimated 80% of outbreaks. This year, the CDC published the first estimate of how many Americans get Salmonella from eggs every year. According to the best data we have, eating Salmonella-infected eggs may cause 168,000 illnesses every year in the United States alone.[43] A comic strip up in my office helps explain the level of infection: Father and daughter are in the grocery store. " That's a cow's tongue?! " the girl exclaims, face contorted in disgust. " EEEEww...I would never eat anything that was in a cow's mouth! " " Me neither, " replies the father not looking up from his shopping list. " Let's see... " he continues, " where are the eggs? " Ruthie stops. " Wait a minute! " she exclaims, eyes wide in realization. Can't you just wash off the eggs? Unfortunately, no. Many of the tainted eggs are infected within the hens' ovaries even before the shell forms, so you can't wash away the infection. And, as we'll see, washing meat doesn't work either. -------------- H4. SUPERBUGS: Don't Wash Your Meat Can't you just wash off meat like one rinses off fruits and vegetables? No. In fact, the new federal dietary guidelines specifically recommend that " meat and poultry should not be washed or rinsed. " The USDA explains: " Bacteria in raw meat and poultry juices can be spread to other foods, utensils, and surfaces. " Juices? Animals are not fruits. They don't have juice. In chickens, for example, the " juice " is a fecal soup of bloody serum absorbed in the scalding and cooling tanks in the slaughter house. Further, the infection is actually inside these animals. Millions of chickens are drowned alive in the scalding tanks (the federal Humane Slaughter Act exempts all birds), which may introduce the pathogens into their lungs. However new research from the USDA's chief scientific research agency suggests that the primary source of lung contamination with bacteria like Campylobacter is inhaled manure during production (where up to tens of thousands of chickens are overcrowded into broiler sheds) or during transport.[44] The June 2005 issue of the Tufts University Health and Nutrition Letter notes: " Your own hands, where they grasped the meat while washing it, could become just as bacteria-laden as the surface of the food....The best bet is to leave meat or poultry untouched until you start cooking it " [45] (what are you supposed to do--levitate it into the oven?) New research, though, suggests that even this precaution may not be enough. In March 2005, researchers published a study in which they swabbed the external surface of prepackaged raw meat in the grocery stores for fecal contamination. And did they ever find it. Even though most of the packages looked clean on the outside, they found Salmonella, Campylobacter and multidrug-resistant E. coli on the outer surface of packages of meat. Just picking up a package of meat in the store could put one at risk. Poultry beat out the competition for the most contamination, followed by lamb, pork and beef. One swab of a single Q-tip picked up over 10,000 live E. Coli bacteria. As few as 10 bacteria of the hemorrhagic type (E. coli 0157:H7) can lead to a potentially fatal infection.[46] The researchers conclude, " The external packaging of raw meats is a vehicle for potential cross-contamination by Campylobacter, Salmonella, and E. coli in retail premises and consumers' homes. " [47] OK, fine, but what if you handled the meat like they do in the lab--first wiping the package off with rubbing alcohol using sterile gloves, then cutting it open with a disposable blade before lifting a piece out with sterile forceps into the oven--once it's cooked to the proper temperature it's safe, right? Unfortunately, the internal temperature required to cook the fecal contamination dead (160 degrees F) is the same temperature which produces carcinogenic compounds called heterocyclic amines. -------------- H5. SUPERBUGS: Bacteria or Cancer In May 2005, a major review of these cooked-meat carcinogens was published by researchers at the U.S. Department of Energy. When skeletal muscles are heated beyond a certain temperature--be it moist heat (boiling) or dry heat (broiling, frying, grilling)--the muscle creatine combines with blood sugars and amino acids to create heterocyclic amine carcinogens. Of all the meats tested, cooked chicken breast formed the highest levels of these toxins. Although there are cooking methods that result in lower carcinogen concentrations (marinating followed by a microwaving pretreatment and pouring off of the " juices, " followed by relatively low temperature frying with frequent flipping), there does not seem to be a way to cook meat to an internal temperature necessary to kill off bacteria without producing at least some carcinogenic compounds. And even low doses have been shown to cause human DNA mutations which could lead to cancer. Human studies suggest that eating well-done meat can raise the risk of breast cancer, prostate cancer, and colon cancer by more than 400%. The researchers conclude, " There is a general consensus that human exposure to potent genotoxic heterocyclic amine carcinogens produced in meat during cooking is widespread. " [48] Meat consumers are then faced with a dilemma, choosing between the risks of food poisoning or cancer. ******************************************************* II. BIRD FLU UPDATE: Prefect Storm Gathering In my last update in March 2005 ( " Bird Flu Spreads its Wings " http://www.drgreger.org/march2005.html ) we were left with a New Scientist editorial entitled " Bird Flu Outbreak Could Kill 1.5 Billion People " and the head of the World Health Organization in Asia saying " The world is now in the gravest possible danger of a pandemic. " Well. according to the World Health Organization (WHO), the situation is now even graver. The WHO convened an emergency meeting last month, May 2005, to discuss the latest findings. They issued a press release: " [The findings] demonstrate that the viruses are continuing to evolve and pose a continuing and potentially growing pandemic threat. " There are three essential conditions necessary to produce the next pandemic. First, a new virus arises from a nonhuman animal reservoir (such that humans have no natural immunity to it). Second, the virus evolves to be able to kill human beings efficiently. Third, the virus must evolve to be able to spread between humans easily--via a sneeze or handshake. So far, conditions one and two have been met in spades. Three strikes and we're out. At this time, nearly all of the human deaths have " involved people who lived or worked with poultry, poultry meat or eggs in Southeast Asia. " [49] USDA researchers tested thigh and breast meat in chickens and effectively proved in a study published March 2005 that chicken meat from infected birds can indeed be a source of infection.[50] While UN officials have urged people to stop drinking duck's blood[51] and eating " tiet canh " (congealed duck blood pudding) the fear is that once bird flu has enough chances to mutate inside of human hosts, it can then flood across the world human-to-human like the bird flu epidemic did in 1918. The global mortality from the 1918 pandemic has recently been revised upwards to as many as 100 million people dead.[52] Experts fear this new virus may turn out many times more deadly. " This is the worst flu virus I have ever seen or worked with or read about, " one virology chair who has been studying avian influenza strains for decades told a reporter. " We have to prepare as if we're going to war and the public needs to understand that clearly... if this does happen, and I fully expect it will, there will be no place for any of us to hide. Not in the United States or in Europe or in a bunker somewhere. The virus is a very promiscuous and efficient killer. " [53] The top Russian virologist offers a potential death count: " Up to one billion people could die around the whole world in six months... We are half a step away from a worldwide pandemic catastrophe. " [54] Dr. Michael Osterholm, director of the U.S. Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy, is probably our nation's top expert. He continues to make attempts to describe the ensuing unimaginable horror. He suggests people consider the devastation of the recent tsunamis in South Asia: " Duplicate it in every major urban centre and rural community around the planet simultaneously, add in the paralyzing fear and panic of contagion, and we begin to get some sense of the potential of pandemic influenza.[55] An influenza pandemic of even moderate impact will result in the biggest single human disaster ever--far greater than AIDS, 9/11, all wars in the 20th century and the recent tsunami combined. It has the potential to redirect world history as the Black Death redirected European history in the 14th century. " [56] " Nature " is considered by many to be the most prestigious scientific journal in the world. They commissioned their senior reporter in Paris to write a fictional yet realistic account of how the pandemic could be expected to unfold. Writing as a blogger in December 2005, it's fiction, but not fantasy. Read it in full at http://www.nature.com/news/2005/050523/full/435400a . According to the top experts in the world, these bird flu scenarios are not just Chicken Little stories. " We're not crying wolf, " swears Canada's top expert, head of the national microbiology lab. " There is a wolf. We just don't know when it's coming. " [57] The head of the CDC's International Emerging Infections Program in Thailand agrees: " The world just has no idea what it's going to see if this thing comes, " he said, but then stopped. " When, really. It's when. I don't think we can afford the luxury of the word 'if' anymore. We are past 'if's. " [58] So what can we do? Almost all of the antibiotics ever created only work against bacteria. There are a few classes of drugs, including drugs like amantidine, that work against certain viruses as well. But the present bird flu virus has already evolved resistance to this first generation of antivirals. How? " The Chinese have been incorporating amantadine in their chicken feed, so we have lost that as a treatment, " notes one U.S. flu expert.[59] Scientists are pinning their hopes on oseltamavir (also known as Tamiflu), the best prospect in the latest generation of antiflu drugs. Unfortunately, there is not enough to go around. Made from star anise, a plant in limited global supply, there is now a two-year waiting list for new orders.[60] And the orders, of course, are coming from dozens of rich Western countries who are attempting to stockpile the drug,[61] not the poor countries like Vietnam where any pandemic is likely to start. " The only effective way to stop a global pandemic is to stop it in Southeast Asia, " writes the editorial board of the journal of the Canadian Medical Association. " Although likely to have only a limited effect, stockpiles of oseltamavir need to be created throughout Southeast Asia. " Scientists reason that if the human outbreak can be caught early enough, maybe they could even stop it. Once the pandemic hits, writes one leader in the field, " School closure, quarantine, travel restrictions and so on are unlikely to be more effective than a garden hose in a forest fire. " [62] It's like a spark and a squirt gun, describes the director of the U.S. National Vaccine Program. " If you aim properly you can get the spark and be done with it. If you miss, though, the fire is going to spread and there is nothing you can do to stop it. " [63] When a senior public-health official was asked if he could imagine the developed world sending its resources to combat the flu in Southeast Asia, the reply was, " Who are you kidding? " [64] The Western world is continuing in its " narcissistic planning, " [65] ignoring pleas from the World Health Organization to pour resources into Southeast Asia.[66] The U.K., for example, is spending $700 million to stockpile antiviral drugs. That's ten times the entire health budget for Vietnam. In Cambodia, the total annual budget for a campaign to encourage citizens to report suspected cases of bird flu is about $3000.[67] Once the outbreak spreads globally, though, stockpiles in rich countries will provide no more than a pandemic " speed bump. " [68] Canada, for example, has ordered 20 million doses although they suspect they'd need more than 200 million.[69] Who's going to have access to the limited supply? Priority for prophylactic treatment goes first to " key decision makers. " [70] The current U.S. stockpile would treat less than 2 percent of the population.[71] Some scientists are advocating it just be sold over the counter and let whomever can afford it have access.[72] From the editorial board of one of the most prestigious medical journals in the world, " If the greatest pandemic in history is indeed on the horizon, that threat must be met by the most comprehensive public-health plan ever devised. " [73] If one reads the behind-the-scenes policy journals like Foreign Affairs, though, senior officials admit that planning for what they call " the most catastrophic outbreak in human history " is " abysmally inadequate. " [74] Realizing that given the current political situation the prospects for preventing the pandemic are practically nonexistent, chief scientists like Osterholm are going to the business community to at least work on providing an infrastructure for survivors of what is being predicted in policy journals as the " shutdown of the global economic system. " [75] Speaking to a conference of agricultural bankers, Osterholm laid it all out: " This is going to be the most catastrophic thing in my lifetime. When this situation unfolds, we will shut down global markets overnight. There will not be movement of goods; there will not be movement of people. This will last for at least a year, maybe two. " [76] If we can't stop a human outbreak once it's started, can we stop a human outbreak in the first place? The WHO advises that " [p]revention of... avian influenza in humans is best achieved by controlling infection in poultry. " [77] At this stage though, with over a hundred million birds dead so far and confirmed spread into migratory wild bird populations, this prospect seems similarly untenable. [78] Asia provides a veritable genetic-reassortment laboratory for the virus--the mix of an unprecedented number of people, pigs, and poultry. " It is sobering to realize, " Osterholm writes, " that in 1968, when the most recent influenza pandemic occurred, the virus emerged in a China that had a human population of 790 million, a pig population of 5.2 million, and a poultry population of 12.3 million; today, these populations number 1.3 billion, 508 million, and 13 billion, respectively. Similar changes have occurred in the human and animal populations of other Asian countries, creating an incredible mixing vessel for viruses. " [79] In that kind of environment, New Yorker reporter Michael Specter wrote that " one sneeze from a pig could be enough to start a pandemic. " Large commercial poultry operations provide an ideal spawning ground for new pandemic strains. Tens of thousands of broiler-type chickens are crammed into large sheds. Because they live in their own manure, the virus has an opportunity to be excreted in the feces and then breathed in or swallowed by the thousands of other birds, allowing the virus to rapidly and repeatedly circulate. With so many birds to mutate within and pass back and forth, low virulence strains can readily turn into deadly ones.[80] Describing another deadly animal-to-human virus that arose in Asia, this one in 1999, the Thai Minister of Public Health explains: " A hundred years ago, the Nipah virus would have simply emerged and died out; instead it was transmitted to pigs and amplified. With modern agriculture, the pigs are transported long distances to slaughter. And the virus goes with them. " And countries trying to protect their poultry industries have covered up their outbreaks, making it that much more difficult to stem the tide early.[81] Charun Boonyarithikarn is another senior Thai public-health officer. " Chickens used to live in our backyards, " he told a New Yorker reporter. " They didn't travel much. Now, throughout the world, farms have become factories. Millions of chickens are shipped huge distances every day. We can't stop every chicken or duck or pig. And they offer millions of opportunities for pathogens to find a niche. " Dr Samuel Jutzi of the Food and Agriculture Organization told the conference: " There is an increasing risk of avian influenza spread that no poultry-keeping country can afford to ignore. " [82] Vietnam has already banned duck and goose farming, but this may be a case of too little too late.[83] Another pandemic may force humanity to realize that it may have to give up the habit of raising birds completely. In response to the February 28, 2005 lead New Yorker story on the threat of bird flu, staff writer Michael Specter was asked if, based on his research, we would " have to rethink such things as large-scale poultry farming? " He replied " Well, I can't imagine a better prescription for killing large numbers of animals with a single disease than packing tens of thousands of them into factory farms where they are lucky if they have fifteen inches of personal space. Still, the economic incentives toward factory production of food are huge--we want cheap meat. So it's going to be very difficult to change. " [89] So what does the poultry industry think about the possibility of its own industry leading to a worldwide epidemic that kills millions of people? The Executive Editor of Poultry magazine wrote an editorial on that very subject in its last issue: " The prospect of a virulent flu to which we have absolutely no resistance is frightening. However, to me, the threat is much greater to the poultry industry. I'm not as worried about the U.S. human population dying from bird flu as I am that there will be no chicken to eat. " [84] ******************************************************* III. CARBOPHOBIA UPDATE: Atkins Is Toast Although my latest book Carbophobia: The Scary Truth About America's Low Carb Craze is selling well, I can hardly take credit for the downfall of the Atkins Empire. Here's a sampling of recent newspaper headlines: " Poor Sales Cripple Atkins Diet Firm, " [85] " Atkins Diet Firm on Brink of Liquidation. " [86] And my personal favorite: " Good Riddance to the Atkins Diet. " [87] I will continue to do my part, though, in exposing the truth behind these dangerous diets. I've got over a dozen live radio interviews lined up this month--please see http://www.DrGreger.org/dates.html for a schedule if you want to listen in. I'm excited to report that my publisher, Lantern Books, has chosen Carbophobia for its quarterly book club discussion. So if anyone's going to be near New York City on June 27th, you should stop by. Details can be found on the Lantern website http://www.LanternBooks.com . And of course, for the latest updates, always keep it tuned to http://www.AtkinsExposed.org. To commemorate the downfall of the high-fat fad in Britain, one London paper asked some high-profile authors to write about their experiences on the Atkins diet. One felt " as healthy and attractive as a McDonald's cheeseburger. " Another had to " confess to feeling like a constipated lump of lard. " A third wrote: " How do I feel now? You know that expression 'You are what you eat'? Well, I feel like I just ate a big bowl of stupid. And you wouldn't believe how fattening that is. " ******************************************************* IV. PERSONAL UPDATE I am proud to announce that I have accepted a position with The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). I am now its Director of Public Health and Animal Agriculture. After being on the road for a bit too long, it was a welcome change to move to D.C. and stay in the same time zone for more than a few days. So please note my new mailing address (my latest contact information is always on my website at http://www.DrGreger.org/bio.html). With HSUS's bold new leadership and a stated mission to " create a humane and sustainable world for all animals, including people, through education, advocacy and the promotion of respect and compassion, " I think I'm going to fit right in. My first project is to help counter the Bush administration's consideration of backpedaling on the downer cow ban (the late-breaking news, of course, is that another U.S. downer may be confirmed with mad cow disease this week--keep tuned to http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow ). For years the meat from cows too sick or crippled to even walk was considered too risky to be allowed in the federal School Lunch Program. So downer meat was evidently not safe enough to feed to kids at school, but evidently was safe enough to feed to kids once they got home from school (or feed to adults for that matter). Thankfully, after the discovery of the first confirmed case of mad cow disease in the United States, the USDA finally banned the inclusion of meat from downed cattle in the human food supply. Now, with building pressure from some sectors of industry, the USDA seems to be having second thoughts. For what we can all do to keep the downer ban from going down, check out the April 21, 2005 issue of HumaneLines, the Humane Society's free weekly electronic alert or, even better, sign up at https://community.hsus.org/humane/join.tcl . An alert should also be sent to HumaneLiines about how to support Senate action to ban the use of quinolone antibiotic-treated chicken in the National School Lunch Program. I'm also proud to announce that after ponderous delays with the IRS, the institute I set up to further my work is now an officially-recognized 501c3 nonprofit organization. Any donations sent to support my work are tax-deductible to the fullest extent of the law. If anyone is so motivated they can click the donate button at the bottom of my newsletter page at http://drgreger.org/newsletters.html ******************************************************* REFERENCES: (Full text of specific articles available by emailing article-request) [1] " Easy Greens. " Nutrition Action Health Letter 32(2005):16. [2] Unlu, NZ, et al. " Carotenoid Absorption from Salad and Salsa by Humans Is Enhanced by the Addition of Avocado or Avocado Oil. " Journal of Nutrition 135(2005):431-436. [3] Ibid. [4] Ibid. [5] Ninfali P, et al. " Antioxidant Capacity of Vegetables, Spices and Dressings Relevant to Nutrition. " British Journal of Nutrition 93(2005):257-266. [6] Ninfali P, et al. " Antioxidant Capacity of Vegetables, Spices and Dressings Relevant to Nutrition. " British Journal of Nutrition 93(2005):257-266. [7] Mao TK, et al. " Effects of a Spirulina-Based Dietary Supplement on Cytokine Production from Allergic Rhinitis Patients. " Journal of Medicinal Food 8(2005):27-30. [8] Iwasa M, et al. " Spirulina-associated hepatotoxicity. " American Journal of Gastroenterology 97(2002):3212-3. [9] " Health Canada Announces Results of Blue-Green Algal Products Testing--Only Spirulina Found Microcystin-Free. " Health Canada news release 17 Sept 1999. [10] Murch SJ, et al. Acta Neurologica Scandinavica. 110(2004)267-269. [11] Cox PA. " Diverse Taxa of Cyanobacteria Produce Beta-N-Methylamino-L-Alanine, a Neurotoxic Amino Acid. " Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 102(2005):5074-5078. [12] Sanchez-Moreno C, et al. " Consumption of High-Pressurized Vegetable Soup Increases Plasma Vitamin C and Decreases Oxidative Stress and Inflammatory Biomarkers in Healthy Humans. " Journal of Nutrition 134(2004):3021-3025. [13] Ko SH, et al. " Comparison of the Antioxidant Activities of Nine Different Fruits in Human Plasma. " Journal of Medicinal Food 8(2005):41-46. [14] Vinson JA. " Dried Fruits: Excellent in Vitro and in Vivo Antioxidants. " Journal of the American College of Nutrition 24(2005):44-50. [15] Smith AP. " The Concept of Well-Being: Relevance to Nutrition Research. " British Journal of Nutrition 93(2005):S1-S5. [16] Napoli C and V Sica. " Statin Treatment and the Natural History of Atherosclerotic-Related Diseases: Pathogenic Mechanisms and the Risk/Benefit Profile. " Current Pharmacologic Design 10(2004):425-32. [17] Anderson JL, et al. " Do Statins Increase the Risk of Idiopathic Polyneuropathy? " American Journal of Cardiology 95(2005):1097-99. [18] Jenkins DJA, et al. " Direct Comparison of a Dietary Portfolio of Cholesterol-Lowering Foods With a Statin in Hypercholesterolemic Participants. " American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 81(2005):380-7. [19] Journal of the American Medical Association 279(1998):1613-1614. [20] Koebnick C, et al. " Long-Term Effect of a Plant-Based Diet on Magnesium Status During Pregnancy. " European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 59(2005):219-225. [21] Badger TM, et al. " Soy Protein Isolate and Protection Against Cancer. " Journal of the American College of Nutrition 24(2005):146S-149S. [22] Barr SI. " Increased Dairy Product or Calcium Intake: Is Body Weight or Composition Affected in Humans? " Journal of Nutrition 133(2003):245-8S. [23] Obesity Research 12(2004):A23. [24] Gunther CW, Legowski PA, Lyle RM, et al. " Dairy Products Do Not Lead to Alterations in Body Weight or Fat Mass in Young Women In A 1-Y Intervention. " Am J Clin Nutr 2005;81:751-6. [25] " Dairy Does Diets. " Nutrition Action Healthletter September 2004:8. [26] Kanis JA, et al. " A Meta-Analysis of Milk Intake and Fracture Risk: Low Utility For Case Finding. " Osteoporisis International 21 October 2004. [27] Zamiska N. " How Milk Got a Major Boost By Food Panel. " Wall Street Journal 30 August 2004:B1. [28] Berkey CS, et al. " Milk, Dairy Fat, Dietary Calcium, and Weight Gain . " Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 1599(2005):543-50. [29] Fox M. " Milk may make for heavier kids, study finds. " Reuters 6 June 2005. [30] Eaton DK, et al. " Associations of Body Mass Index and Perceived Weight With Suicide Ideation and Suicide Attempts Among US High School Students. " Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 1599(2005):513-9. [31] NIH National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease Fact Sheet. " Foodborne Diseases. " February 2005. [32] Schoenl JL and MP Doyle. " Variable colonization of chickens perorally inoculated with Escherichia coli O157:H7 and subsequent contamination of eggs. " Applied Environmental Microbiology 60(1994): 2958-62. [33] Commission of European Communities. Communicable Diseases Resulting from Storage, Handling, Transport and Landspreading of Manures. Batiment Jean Monnet, Luxembourg (1982):139-47. [34] Jones TF and W Schaffner. " Perspectives on the Persistent Scourge of Foodborne Disease. " 205(2005):1029-31 [35] Johnson JR, et al. " Antimicrobial-Resistant and Extraintestinal Pathogenic Escherichia coli in Retail Foods. " Journal of Infectious Diseases 205(2005):1040-9. [36] Ramchandani M, et al. " Possible Animal Origin of Human-Associated, Multidrug-Resistant, Uropathogenic Escherichia coli. " Clinical Infectious Diseases 40(2005):251-7. [37] Brownlee C. " Beef About UTIs. " Science News 15 January 2005. [38] Stern NJ, Line JE. " Comparison of three methods for recovery of Campylobacter spp. from broiler carcasses. " Journal of Food Protection 1992;55:663-6; Price LB, et al. " Fluoroquinolone-Resistant Campylobacter Isolates from Conventional and Antibiotic-Free Chicken Products. " Environmental Health Perspectives 113(2005):557-60. [39] Hemls M, et al. " Adverse Health Events Associated with Antimicrobial Drug Resistance in Campylobacter Species: A Registry-Based Cohort Study. " Journal of Infectious Disease 191(2005):1051. [40] Varma JK, et al. " Hospitalization and antimicrobial resistance in Salmonella outbreaks, United States, 1984-2002. " Emerging Infectious Disease. June 2005. [41] International Journal of Food Microbiology 24(1994):11-31. [42] Journal of Infectious Disease 183(2001):1295-9. [43] Schroeder CM, et al. " Estimate of Illnesses from Salmonella Enteritidis in Eggs, United States, 2000. " Emerging Infectious Diseases 11(2005):113-5. [44] " Finding the Source of Campylobacter. " USDA Agriculture Research Service News 23 May 2005. [45] " Why Not Wash Meat and Poultry Before Cooking? " Tufts University Health and Nutrition Letter 23(2005):7. [46] Foodborne Pathogens: Risks and Consequences, Report No. 122, CAST- Council for Agricultural Science and Technology, September 1994. [47] Burgess F, et al. " Prevalence of Campylobacter, Salmonella, and Escherichia coli on the External Packaging of Raw Meat. " Journal of Food Protection 68(2005):469-75. [48] Knize MG and JS Felton. " Formation and Human Risk of Carcinogenic Heterocyclic Amines Formed from Natural Precursors in Meat. " Nutrition Reviews 63(2005):158-65. [49] Editorial. " Avian influenzavirus: Are we prepared? " Canadian Medical Association Journal 172(2005):965. [50] Swayne DE and JR Beck. " Experimental study to determine if low-pathogenicity and high-pathogenicity avian influenza viruses can be present in chicken breast and thigh meat following intranasal virus inoculation. " Avian Diseases 49(2005):81-5. [51] Schuettler D. " Asia's Bird Flu Here to Stay, FAO Says. " Reuters 23 February 2005. [52] Johnson NPAS and J Mueller. " Updating the Accounts: Global Mortality of the 1918-1920 " Spanish " Influenza Pandemic. " Bulletin of the History of Medicine 76(2002):105-115. [53] Specter M. " Nature's Bioterrorist. " New Yorker 28 February 2005: 52-61. [54] " Russian Expert Says Flu Epidemic May Kill Over One Billion This Year. " Moscow News 28 October 2004. [55] Kennedy M. " Parallels with the 1918 Spanish flu outbreak. " National Post 9 March 2005. [56] " Bird Flu Could Kill Millions " The Gazette (Montreal) 9 March 2005:1A. [57] Kennedy M. " Parallels with the 1918 Spanish flu outbreak. " National Post 9 March 2005. [58] Specter M. " Nature's Bioterrorist. " New Yorker 28 February 2005: 52-61. [59] " Can Tamiflu save us from bird flu? " New Scientist 2 June 2005. [60] " Roche faces Tamiflu production bottleneck following WHO bird flu warning. " Forbes 29 May 2005. [61] " Can Tamiflu save us from bird flu? " New Scientist 2 June 2005. [62] Editorial. " Avian influenzavirus: Are we prepared? " Canadian Medical Association Journal 172(2005):965. [63] Specter M. " Nature's Bioterrorist. " New Yorker 28 February 2005: 52-61. [64] Specter M. " Nature's Bioterrorist. " New Yorker 28 February 2005: 52-61. [65] Editorial. " Avian influenzavirus: Are we prepared? " Canadian Medical Association Journal 172(2005):965. [66] " WHO's call for international pandemic action unheeded. " Canadian Medical Association Journal 172(2005):1429. [67] Ibid. [68] " Feds to stockpile antivirals as pandemic 'speed bump.' " Canadian Medical Association Journal 172(2005):1428. [69] Ibid. [70] Ibid. [71] Fox M. " U.S. still unprepared against new flu, experts say. " 26 May 2005. [72] Laver G. " Influenza drug could abort a pandemic. " Nature 434(2005):821. [73] Editorial. " Avian influenza: perfect storm now gathering? " The Lancet 365(2005). [74] " Q & A with Laurie Garrett. " Foreign Affairs July/August 2005. [75] Osterholm MT. " Preparing for the Next Pandemic. " Foreign Affairs July/August 2005. [76] " Bird Flu Seen as the Next Pandemic. " Star Tribune (Minneapolis) 16 November 2004. [77] Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy. " WHO: flu pandemic threat may be growing. " 18 May 2005. [78] Schuettler D. " Asia's Bird Flu Here to Stay, FAO Says. " Reuters 23 February 2005. [79] Osterholm MT. " Preparing for the Next Pandemic. " New England Journal of Medicine 352(2005):1839-42. [80] HorimotoT and Y Kawaoka. " Pandemic threat posed by influenza viruses. " Clinical Microbilogy Reviews 14(2001):129-49. [81] Specter M. " Nature's Bioterrorist. " New Yorker 28 February 2005: 52-61. [82] " WHO warns of bird flu pandemic " BBC 23 February 2005. [83] Piller C. " Vietnam officials ban duck, goose farming to staunch bird flu. " Los Angeles Times 5 February 2005. [84] Thaxton YV. " Are you Prepared for AI? " Poultry April/May 2005:5. [85] The Independent 17 March 2005. [86] Press Association 16 March 2005. [87] Daily Mail (London) 16 March 2005. [88] Price LB, et al. " Fluoroquinolone-Resistant Campylobacter Isolates from Conventional and Antibiotic-Free Chicken Products. " Environmental Health Perspectives 113(2005):557-60. [89] Specter M and B Greenman. " Fighting the Flu. " New Yorker Online. 21 February 2005. ******************************************************* To to Dr. Greger's free quarterly newsletter, send a blank email to drgregersnewsletter-. If anyone missed previous months, check out my newsletter archive at http://www.DrGreger.org/newsletters.html Until next time, -Michael -- (206) 312-8640 185 South St #6 Boston, MA 02130 mhg1 http://www.DrGreger.org http://www.AtkinsExposed.org http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow.htm HEART FAILURE: Diary of a Third Year Medical Student (full text now available free): http://www.upalumni.org/medschool My new book: CARBOPHOBIA: The Scary Truth Behind America's Low Carb Craze http://www.lanternbooks.com/detail.html?session=a2bc38f2856ef73e88f55552a47cc4f8\ & id=1590560868 To to my free monthly nutrition newsletter send a blank email to: drgregersnewsletter- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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