Could a diet rich in meat and cheese be just as deadly as smoking cigarettes? New research from the University of Southern California indicates that consuming high levels of animal proteins could be detrimental to a personās health, according to a study published in the journal Cell Metabolism.
Eating a hamburger, or other forms of animal protein, elevates levels of the growth hormone IGF-1 in the human body. In children, IGF-1 helps promote growth and development ā but in adulthood, high levels of the hormone have been linked to an increased risk for cancer and other age-related disease, according to study author Vance Longo, director of the University of Southern Californiaās Longevity Institute.
Knowing that IGF-1 was linked to increased mortality, Longo and his fellow researchers began to look for ways to naturally reduce levels of the hormone in the human body.
āWe asked, āWould it be enough to reduce the proteins consumed?āā Longo told FoxNews.com.
In order to analyze the effects of animal-based protein consumption on mortality, researchers utilized data gathered from 6,381 adults over age 50 from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES).
They split the population into three groups: those who consumed 20 percent of their daily calories from protein, those who consumed 10 to 19 percent of their daily calories from protein, and those who consumed a diet comprised of less than 10 percent protein.
āThe effects we saw were about as good as we imagined,ā Longo said. āWe saw a big difference with low protein intake and reduction in overall mortality, cancer and diabetes.ā
Overall, people who consumed high-protein diets were four times more likely to die from cancer and 74 percent more likely to die of any cause during the study period compared to people who ate a low-protein diet.
Researchers also studied the effects of a low-protein diet in a group of mice, analyzing how well high- or low-protein diets protected against both melanoma and breast cancer progression in the animals.
āWe started with an established cancer and yet the low-protein diet was able to prevent the cancer from progressing in 10 to 30 percent of animals, something we really didnāt even expect,ā Longo said. āWe expected reduced progression but not necessarily the ability-even having 20,000 cancer cells injected- to make sure that in 30 percent of these mice the cancer never really appeared but went away.ā
Source: FoxNews.com