At a minimum, the damage to the barrier tissues of the arteries and of the gut causes the same symptom/effect: The barrier becomes leaky. That fact is probably sufficient to establish "probable cause" to make "glucose overload is the cause" the null hypothesis. So, "not proven," but it shuold be the primcipal suspect. The fact that fiber in the diet reduces the probability gradient for a leaky gut then would make perfect sense: Fiber buffers carbohydrates, which necessarily creates a protective effect for the gut lining against high sugar concentrations.
Yes, and I see this as part of the one-two punch of our lousy diet, The continuous blood sugar spikes knocks our 'shields' down and allows the glycated / oxidized sd-LDL and other inflammatory products from industrial seed oils, etc. to attack the endothelium. The resulting damage causes more inflammation, and the plaques are scabs. just my hypothesis
At a minimum, the damage to the barrier tissues of the arteries and of the gut causes the same symptom/effect: The barrier becomes leaky. That fact is probably sufficient to establish "probable cause" to make "glucose overload is the cause" the null hypothesis.
So, "not proven," but it shuold be the primcipal suspect. The fact that fiber in the diet reduces the probability gradient for a leaky gut then would make perfect sense: Fiber buffers carbohydrates, which necessarily creates a protective effect for the gut lining against high sugar concentrations.
Yes, and
I see this as part of the one-two punch of our lousy diet, The continuous blood sugar spikes knocks our 'shields' down and allows the glycated / oxidized sd-LDL and other inflammatory products from industrial seed oils, etc. to attack the endothelium. The resulting damage causes more inflammation, and the plaques are scabs.
just my hypothesis