Medical Sports Nutrition
A review of the Sports Nutrition literature with Dr Andy Matheson. Dr Matheson is practicing Family Doctor and ISSN certified Sports Nutritionist. Dr Matheson discusses which breakthroughs will give us that edge we are looking for, and which will be a waste of precious time and money.
The podcast covers the new developments in the field of Sports Nutrition and how these might impact our health and performance. It demonstrates how a medical professional will review articles to assess if the discoveries from the published trials and research are suitable for their particular patients.
This podcast is a lighthearted review of the medical literature and Dr Matheson has enormous respect for all scientific researchers and could not do a job as hard as theirs.
The information presented is the personal opinion of the healthcare professional and is not a substitute for seeking professional advice. It is based on interpretation of current best practice and guidelines when the episode was recorded. Guidelines can change; To the best of our knowledge the information in this episode is up to date as of it’s release but it is the listeners responsibility to review the information and make sure it is still up to date when they listen.
Dr Matheson is not liable for any advice, investigations, course of treatment, diagnosis or any other information, services or products listeners might pursue as a result of listening to this podcast. Reliance on information provided in this podcast is solely at the listeners risk.
The podcast is designed to be used generate learning discussions and for education only. It is not recommended to be used as a method of diagnosis, opinion, treatment or medical advice for the general public. Do not delay seeking medical advice based on the information contained in this podcast. If you have questions regarding your health or feel you may have a medical condition then promptly seek the opinion of a trained healthcare professional.
Medical Sports Nutrition
#24 - Lipidomics and how future cholesterol tests will diagnose cancers and more
This week we will dip a toe into Lipidomics, the direction of cholesterol tests in the future; not just looking at lipid blood levels but using the lipid tests as a reflection of changes within our cell membranes. We then look at a state of play article for current available lipid blood tests and how to interpret panels, a keto diet study and a remind ourselves how good bariatric surgery is for people.
References:
Episode 24
Lauber C, Gerl MJ, Klose C, Ottosson F, Melander O, Simons K. Lipidomic risk scores are independent of polygenic risk scores and can predict incidence of diabetes and cardiovascular disease in a large population cohort. PLoS Biol. 2022 Mar 3;20(3):e3001561. .
Yin X, Willinger CM, Keefe J, Liu J, Fernández-Ortiz A, Ibáñez B, Peñalvo J, Adourian A, Chen G, Corella D, Pamplona R, Portero-Otin M, Jove M, Courchesne P, van Duijn CM, Fuster V, Ordovás JM, Demirkan A, Larson MG, Levy D. Lipidomic profiling identifies signatures of metabolic risk. EBioMedicine. 2020 Jan;51:102520. doi: 10.1016/j.ebiom.2019.10.046. Epub 2019 Dec 24.
Wolrab D, Jirásko R, Cífková E, Höring M, Mei D, Chocholoušková M, Peterka O, Idkowiak J, Hrnčiarová T, Kuchař L, Ahrends R, Brumarová R, Friedecký D, Vivo-Truyols G, Škrha P, Škrha J, Kučera R, Melichar B, Liebisch G, Burkhardt R, Wenk MR, Cazenave-Gassiot A, Karásek P, Novotný I, Greplová K, Hrstka R, Holčapek M. Lipidomic profiling of human serum enables detection of pancreatic cancer. Nat Commun. 2022 Jan 10;13(1):124.
German CA, Shapiro MD. Assessing Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease Risk with Advanced Lipid Testing: State of the Science. Eur Cardiol. 2020 Jul 15;15:e56.
Mentias A, Aminian A, Youssef D, Pandey A, Menon V, Cho L, Nissen SE, Desai MY. Long-Term Cardiovascular Outcomes After Bariatric Surgery in the Medicare Population. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2022 Apr 19;79(15):1429-1437.
Brenton JN, Lehner-Gulotta D, Woolbright E, Banwell B, Bergqvist AGC, Chen S, Coleman R, Conaway M, Goldman MD. Phase II study of ketogenic diets in relapsing multiple sclerosis: safety, tolerability and potential clinical benefits. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2022 Jun;93(6):637-644. doi: 10.1136/jnnp-2022-329074. Epub 2022 Apr 13.
Antonio L, Wu FCW, Moors H, Matheï C, Huhtaniemi IT, Rastrelli G, Dejaeger M, O'Neill TW, Pye SR, Forti G, Maggi M, Casanueva FF, Slowikowska-Hilczer J, Punab M, Tournoy J, Vanderschueren D; E
This podcast is a lighthearted review of the medical literature and Dr Matheson has enormous respect for all scientific researchers and could not do a job as hard as theirs.
The information presented is the personal opinion of the healthcare professional and is not a substitute for seeking professional advice. It is based on interpretation of current best practice and guidelines when the episode was recorded. Guidelines can change; To the best of our knowledge the information in this episode is up to date as of it’s release but it is the listeners responsibility to review the information and make sure it is still up to date when they listen.
Dr Matheson is not liable for any advice, investigations, course of treatment, diagnosis or any other information, services or products listeners might pursue as a result of listening to this podcast. Reliance on information provided in this podcast is solely at the listeners risk.
The podcast is designed to be used generate learning discussions and for education only. It is not recommended to be used as a method of diagnosis, opinion, treatment or medical advice for the general public. Do not delay seeking medical advice based on the information contained in this podcast. If you have questions regarding your health or feel you may have a medical condition then promptly seek the opinion of a trained healthcare professional.