The Hemp Connection:
fatty liver

  • A nutritional option for fatty liver

    Fatty liver is a common problem in women with PCOS. In this study, EPA, an omega-3 fatty acid and a fish oil, was shown to improve the symptoms of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (fatty liver). EPA is the fish oil that you cannot get when you rely on vegan sources of omega-3's--it's not in flax, and it's not in marine algae. Some research shows that when you've eaten enough marine algae to completely saturate your tissues, what's left can be used to make EPA, but it's not the way of getting it that the body prefers.

    This is important to understand, because the vast majority of foods that are labeled as supplemented with omega-3 fatty acids either contain ALA (primarily in the form of flax) or DHA (primarily from marine algae).

    The other advantage to eating fish is, that if you've put a fillet on your plate, you've likely removed another (fattier) kind of protein. That's the positive double whammy you get in seafood choices.

    In my training I was always encouraged to develop good negotiation skills. In other words, if a client didn't like a certain food, to have a few other options up my sleeve that would provide equivalent nutritional value. Only when I got into omega-3 chemistry, inflammation, and PCOS, did I realize that in this one crucial area, I would have to dig my heels in and advocate that this essential nutrient was simply non-negotiable: if you don't eat fish, you miss out on total health.

    Over the weekend I had an animated discussion with another dietitian who was adamant that her clients (mainly with eating disorders) simply were not going to accept this. I told her they simply would not achieve total health…and possibly total recovery. I got some resistance, but hopefully at some point this colleague will come to understand that we're here to guide our clients where they have the potential to go. We're not here to tell them what they want to hear, with the hopes that somehow health will just magically appear.

    Tanaka N, Sano K, Horiuchi A, Tanaka E, Kiyosawa K, Aoyama T. Highly Purified Eicosapentaenoic Acid Treatment Improves Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis. J Clin Gastroenterol. 2008 Apr;42(4):413-418.

  • It's your insulin resistance causing your cravings…NOT!

    It's your insulin resistance causing your cravings…NOT!

    Practically every time I hear a health professional explain, on the Internet or in person, why a woman with PCOS has carbohydrate cravings, they blame it on insulin resistance. The rationale is, that because glucose is not getting into cells, the cells are hungry and asking for sugar.

    Did you know, as rational as this explanation sounds, research does not support it?

    A study published in 2004 (and one of the few I've ever even seen that acknowledged that women with PCOS crave sugar) compared several appetite hormones to appetite measures in 16 pairs of women with PCOS matched with controls. They could find no statistically significant correlation between reported appetite and insulin levels. Rather, it was testosterone levels that seemed to be the problem.

    Because insulin resistance has some effect on how much free testosterone is available to affect appetite, it could be argued that the effect is still there, but more indirect. However, another study reported that it is the eating of too much sugar and the resulting change in liver function that ultimately determines free testosterone levels, not insulin. (In this particular study the diet was up to 70% sugar, to be sure the desired metabolic effect was achieved and could be studied.) The resulting fat production by the liver was correlated with reduced levels of sex hormone binding globulin, the blood protein that binds to testosterone and inactivates it.

    So while the cravings are there, be sure not to blame their cause on a solution that may not help. Our philosophy at inCYST is that balancing fatty acids helps calm down the nervous system and reduce its need for sugar. It also helps the liver better process fats, thus preventing the testosterone issue described above.

    I know, I know, you're getting tired of hearing about fish oil.

    I won't belabor the point, today I'll just challenge you to think outside the same old test tube.: )

    Hirschberg AL, Naessén S, Stridsberg M, Byström B, Holtet J. Impaired cholecystokinin secretion and disturbed appetite regulation in women with polycystic ovary syndrome. Gynecol Endocrinol. 2004 Aug;19(2):79-87.

    Selva DM, Hogeveen KN, Innis SM, and Hammond GL. Monosaccharide-induced lipogenesis regulates the human hepatic sex hormone–binding globulin gene. J Clin Invest. 2007 December 3; 117(12): 3979–3987.

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