Review of Uffe Ravnskov: "The Cholesterol Myths"
by Stephen
Byrnes, ND, RNCP
Would you buy a book that was
literally set on fire by its critics on a television show about it
in Finland? I would and so should you. The long-awaited English
version of debunker extroidinaire Dr. Uffe Ravnskov's notorious book
is now available from New Trends Publishing.
Ravnskov, a medical doctor with a PhD
in Chemistry, has had over 40 papers and letters published in
peer-reviewed journals criticizing what Dr. George Mann, formerly of
Vanderbuilt University, once called "the greatest scam in the
history of medicine": the Lipid Hypothesis of heart disease,
the belief that dietary saturated fats and cholesterol clog arteries
and cause atherosclerosis and heart disease. |
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If one thing comes through as you
read the book, it is this: Ravnskov has done his homework. In painstaking
detail, he critically analyzes and demolishes the nine main myths of the
Lipid Hypothesis: (1) High-fat foods cause heart disease, (2) High
cholesterol causes heart disease, (3) High fat foods raise blood
cholesterol, (4) Cholesterol blocks arteries, (5) Animal studies prove the
diet-heart idea, (6) Lowering your cholesterol will lengthen your life, (7)
Polyunsaturated oils are good for you, (8) The cholesterol campaign is based
on good science, and (9) All scientists support the diet-heart idea.
Equipped with a razor-sharp mind, an impressive
command of the literature, and a deadly, needling sarcasm, Ravnskov
methodically slaughters the most famous Sacred Cow of modern medicine and
the most profitable Cash Cow for assorted pharmaceutical companies. Sparing
no one, Ravnskov again and again presents the tenets of the Lipid Hypothesis
and the studies which supposedly prove them, and shows how the studies are
flawed or based on manipulated statistics that actually prove nothing.
Ravnskov then answers the objections or rationalizations offered by
diet-heart supporters, desperate to explain away inconsistencies and
contradictions in their own data.
For example, Ravnskov opens with an analysis of the study
that kicked off the Lipid Hypothesis in the 1950s: Ancel Keys' Six Countries
Study (and later, the more famous Seven Countries Study). As most health
professionals know, Keys' study showed that countries with the highest
animal fat intake have the highest rates of heart disease. Keys' conclusion
was that there was a cause and effect relationship because the country with
the lowest animal fat intake (at that time, Japan) had the lowest rates of
heart disease. Sounds convincing, right? Not so, says Dr. Ravnskov. And in a
few pages the reader is informed how Keys hand-picked the countries he
included in his studies, namely, the ones that supported his hypothesis, and
conveniently ignored all of the other countries that didn't.
And this is just the beginning!
Ravnskov approaches true brilliance in his review of the studies that
supposedly showed benefit from the current wonder-drugs pushed by the
pharmaceutical industry: the statins. Hailed as miracle substances that
"significantly reduce cholesterol and incidence of heart attacks,"
Ravnskov shows that these substances are probable carcinogens (women on the
drugs had a much higher incidence of breast cancer) and that the overall
statistical reduction of heart disease in the drug trials is negligible.
Nevertheless, despite the dismal results of the very first trial (the EXCEL
Trial which Ravnskov soberingly describes to the reader), the industry and
its well-funded doctors urge their use, even in people who do not have heart
disease.
Ravnskov warns: "Because the latent period between exposure to
carcinogen and the incidence of clinical cancer in humans may be 20 years or
more, the absence of any controlled trials of this duration means that we do
not know whether statin treatment will lead to . . . cancer in coming
decades. Thus, millions of people are being treated with medications the
ultimate effects of which are not yet known."
If there is one weakness of the book, it is its lack of explanations of what
DOES cause heart disease. Ravnskov comes close to fingering a few factors
such as high stress, excessive polyunsaturated fat intake, trans-fatty
acids, and smoking, but he never offers his own theory as to what causes the
Western world's number one killer.
This is, however, a minor glitch. Ravnskov has done the world a major
service in presenting his findings. All health professionals need to listen
to this scholar and listen very carefully for the advice offered by the
medical establishment for the last 50 years to beat heart disease has failed
miserably. It is time to turn away from cholesterol-lowering drugs that have
frightening side effects. It is time to turn away from tasteless low-fat
diets that harm children and deprive people of fat-soluble vitamins. And it
is time to turn away from the junk science that characterizes the Lipid
Hypothesis and its supporters. It is time, instead, to listen to reason and
view all of the evidence against a failed hypothesis and discover the true
and varied risks and causes of heart disease. It is time to listen to Uffe
Ravnskov.
The book is available from www.newtrendspublishing.com
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