Monday, June 9, 2008

Diet and Body Composition of the Masai

I just read a recent paper from the British Journal of Sports Medicine, "Daily Energy Expenditure and Cardiovascular Disease Risk in Masai, Rural and Urban Bantu Tanzanians". The study caught my eye because I think we have a lot to learn from healthy traditionally-living populations worldwide.

The Masai have a very unique diet consisting mostly of whole cow's milk, cow's blood and meat. As you might imagine, they eat a lot of fat, a lot of saturated fat and a modest amount of carbohydrate (mostly from lactose). They also have low total cholesterol, low blood pressure, and virtually no overweight. They have been a thorn in the side of the lipid hypothesis for a long time.

The Bantu are an agricultural population that traditionally eat a diet low in fat and high in carbohydrate. Their staples are root vegetables, corn, beans, fish and wild game. The paper also describes a group of urban Bantu, which eats a diet intermediate in fat and carbohydrate. Incidentally, the investigators describe it as a "high-fat diet", despite the fact that the percentage fat is about the same as what Americans and Europeans eat.

The investigators recorded the three groups' diets, activity levels, physical characteristics and various markers of cardiovascular disease risk. Here's what they found: only 3% of Masai were obese, compared to 12% of rural Bantu and 34% of urban Bantu (they'd fit right in here!). The Masai, despite smoking like chimneys, had generally lower CVD risk factors than the other two populations, with the urban Bantu being significantly worse off than the rural Bantu.

Overall, the Masai came out looking really good, with the rural Bantu not too far behind. The urban Bantu look almost as bad as Americans. How do we make sense of these two conflicting facts? 1) The urban Bantu eat an amount of fat and saturated fat that's right in the middle of what the Masai and the rural Bantu eat, yet they seem the most likely to keel over spontaneously. 2) Saturated fat KILLS!! Answer: keep digging until you find something else to blame your results on.

They certainly did find something, and it's the reason the study was published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine rather than the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. The Masai exercise more than either of the other two groups. I don't have too much trouble believing that. However, the authors used a little trick to augment their result: they normalized calorie expenditure to body weight. They present their data as kcal/kg/day. In other words, the fatter you are, the lower your apparent energy expenditure! It makes no sense to me. But it does inflate the apparent exercise of the Masai, simply because of the fact that they're thinner than the other two groups.

Due to this number massaging, here's what they got (data re-plotted by me):


I'm going to try to un-massage the data. Here's what it looks like when I factor bodyweight out of the equation. Calories expended (above resting metabolic rate) is on the Y-axis. The bars look a bit closer together...



Here's what it looks like when you add back resting metabolic rate. I assumed 1500 kcal/day. This graph is an approximation of their total energy expenditure per day:



Hmm, the differences keep getting smaller, don't they? I'm not challenging the fact that the Masai exercise more than the other two groups, but I do wish they had presented their findings more straightforwardly.

Their conclusion is that exercise is protecting the Masai from the deadly saturated fats in their diet. A more parsimonious explanation is that saturated fat per se doesn't cause heart disease. It's also more consistent with other healthy cultures that ate high-fat diets like the Inuit, certain Australian aboriginal groups, and some American Indian groups. It's also consistent with the avalanche of recent trials of low-carbohydrate diets, in which people tend to see improvements in weight, blood pressure, and CVD markers, among other things.

My conclusion, from this study and others, is that macronutrients don't determine how healthy a diet is. The specific foods that compose the diet do. The rural Masai are healthy on a high-fat diet, the rural Bantu are fairly healthy on a low-fat, high carbohydrate diet. Only the urban Bantu show a pattern really consistent with the "disease of civilization", despite a daily energy expenditure very similar to the rural Bantu. They're unhealthy because they eat too much processed food: processed vegetable oil, processed grain products, refined sugar.

Thanks to kevinzim for the CC photo

11 comments:

rnikoley said...

Stephan:

Excellent, as always.

I'm finding the teeth issue interesting, which I write just a bit about in my entry linking over here.

http://www.honestylog.com/root/2008/06/what-youre-up-against.html

For myself, it's a year now that I've been more or less "Paleo," with many diversions into the wonderful land of high-fat-dom, but always low carb and no grain.

Having been at it a year, and getting off prescription meds for hypothyroid, gastric reflux, and sinus allergy I've been on for many years (serious springtime allergies since I was a teenager and I'm 47). I also had two surgeries for mild gum disease about eight years ago, and it had been progressing for about four years prior.

A few weeks ago I went to the hygienist who has been doing my teeth and gums for 15 years, 3-4 times per year. Well, I had missed all appointments in the last year, and when I got there she mentioned it was probably going to be a long and tough session. Then she began her measurements and recordings, called over the doc, and said: "it's gone. His gums are better than when we began taking measurements 15 years ago."

Debs said...

This seems like a frustrating yet typical response to data contradicting conventional wisdom. My question is, how much of it is the researchers not wanting to believe their own results, and how much of it is a fear of not getting published, for sounding too far off the mainstream? Some interviews with researchers involved in studies like this might be revealing.

Are the people in that picture Masai? They're all gorgeous, really healthy looking. Probably from all that exercise, since we know it can't be from diet...

Stephan said...

Richard,

Nice work! Score one for paleo! I also think dental problems are one of the most responsive thing to a good diet. They're also a canary in the coal mine for other health problems.

That's one reason why I think "Nutrition and Physical Degeneration" is so relevant. The people Price studied not only had great teeth, they also didn't have access to dentists and made no effort toward dental hygeine!

Stephan said...

Debs,

I think it's both. Nutrition science is especially political. You can get torpedoed for challenging some pretty big vested interests. Fortunately, that seems to be changing slowly, partly because of shifting public opinion.

The people in the photo are Masai.

Chris said...

Stephan

do you have a response to the comment "Randy" has made on my post about this?

http://conditioningresearch.blogspot.com/2008/06/fat-is-still-good.html

Stephan said...

Chris,

It's a fair point, I'll go post a reply to it.

Stan said...

Stephan,

Excellent posts, especially the one about Masai (I am reading your blog backwards). I do not have an access to Mann's full papers thus we got stuck at the abstracts some time ago while discussing this issue with a vegan in the other forum. Your graphs illustrating the stark difference between the strict high fat muran stage and some random eating habits in their 40-ties 50-ties do indeed tell the whole story! Pity, Mann did not put that in the abstract!

My main comment and the reason I am positing in this thread was rnikoley's post describing an astounding effect of the "paleo" nutrition on dental health. I am on a high animal fat (60-80%) low carb diet (the "Optimal Diet") since 1999 and have a similiar observation:

I have a molar tooth broken in half, with exposed core, since 4 or 5 years ago. This thing has simply sealed itself and is causing no problems! When a similiar case happened to me 20 years ago I had to root canal it after a month!

Recently I came across similiar observation by Weston A. Price (in Chris Masterjohn's article on factor X/K2, on www.westonaprice.org)

This topic is explosive and probably well worth a separate thread!

Regards,
Stan(Heretic)

Stephan said...

Stan,

I am very impressed that you know about the activator X/K2 MK-4 story. I just found that article by Chris Masterjohn yesterday (total coincidence) and it blew me away. I'm definitely going to post about it because I think it's incredibly important. I'm collecting my thoughts right now. If you have any insights to add, I'd be interested to hear them.

I did read about Richard Nikoley's gum disease reversal; it's really amazing. Your tooth sealing itself is exactly what Weston Price observed. It's great to get that confirmation. I wonder whether the Optimal Diet works well because it's high in K2 MK-4??

Get this: if I remember correctly, MK-4 is highest in the salivary gland and... the pancreas! This is really tempting me to get into vitamin K2 research, due to the unfair advantage I would have from reading NPD.

laptop battery said...
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Dirk said...

The word is spelled Maasai. MAAsai, NOT Masai.

Stephan said...
This comment has been removed by the author.