This week - in my ongoing series "Is That Thing You Eat Everyday Secretly Killing You?!" - #Erythritol!
I want to dig into a nice @NatureMedicine paper that suggests the sugar substitute might increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. (Thread/)
Erythritol is a non-nutritive sweetener used in all sort of products - toothpaste, gum, especially "keto friendly" stuff. Also monkfruit sweetener. It does NOT need to be labeled "artificial" since it can be found (in small quantities) in nature.
Data all comes from this paper @NatureMedicine - definitely a cut above your usual nutritional epidemiology fare - multiple lines of evidence here to tease out. nature.com/articles/s4159…
The researchers started with a metabolomic analysis of ~1000 people being screened for CV disease. Seems the focus was on sugar / sugar substitute metabolites but erythritol came out on top as most strongly associated with subsequent CV events.
Of course, this would need to be validated in an external dataset. Researchers did this too, finding in a US cohort, for example, that those in the highest quartile of erythritol levels had higher rates of CV disease over time.
But... correlation or causation, right? They adjusted for stuff like age, diabetes, BMI, etc - but still - people who use a lot of sugar substitutes are likely different in non-measurable ways from people who don't.
But what if there *is* causality here. How would that work? The researchers show that, in a test tube, higher levels of erythritol lead to increased aggregation of platelets (clotting, basically).
And in a model of carotid artery occlusion (in mice), erythritol speeds to the occlusion process... so there's at least some biologic plausibility here.
But if I've learned anything reviewing sugar substitute literature - it's to check the dosages. Just because you can give a rat cancer giving it 1000x the daily intake of some sugar substitute does not mean it is clinically relevant.
I'll use 45 uM as a "concentration of interest" here - since that appears to be the place where we see some of that platelet aggregation. Is that a reasonable concentration? The authors gave 8 healthy controls 30grams of erythritol and this is what the blood levels did:
After 30grams of intake - you can get super-high levels - persisting above 45 uM for almost 2 days. (This is likely based a bit on kidney function - 90% of erythritol is excreted unchanged in the urine).
But... is 30grams reasonable? The authors argue that 30grams is the average daily intake in the US based on this FDA document - but it looks like that's actually the 90th percentile...
And a european study (of people who exclusively use sugar-free foods / drinks) show intake levels way lower than that.
How much is 30 grams? Turns out I had a bag of erythritol in my closet.
I don't think most people get close to 30grams of erythritol - likely much much less - unless you are deep in the "keto" ecosystem. I therefore don't think we need to worry about the potential risk too much.
Remember, the risks of artificial sweeteners should not be evaluated in a vacuum - they need to be compared to the alternative - sugar - which is probably the single substance most responsible for the epidemic of overweight, obesity, metabolic syndrome, T2D, etc.
Still, there is a truism in the diet research space here. You probably can't have your (sugar-free) cake and eat it too.
You have probably heard that CBD "mellows" the effects of THC in edibles. That is takes the edge off, decreases anxiety, etc.
According to this study in @JAMANetworkOpen, CBD makes THC much stronger. Thread/ jamanetwork.com/journals/jaman…
I wrote about this in more detail in my @medscape column here, but briefly this is a small, but cleanly designed, randomized pharmacokinetic study. medscape.com/viewarticle/98…
18 adult participants (who had abstained from cannabis for at least a month) were exposed to three conditions, each at least a week apart, in random order. The exposure? A "special" brownie, with varying amounts of THC and CBD.
Two years ago, I started writing "How Medicine Works and When It Doesn't" to help people understand the insidious nature of medical misinformation.
That's how it started. It's not where I ended up. (thread) grandcentralpublishing.com/titles/f-perry…
To be sure, we live in the disinformation age. We are awash in facts - some true, some false. We can literally pick and choose which we want to believe. I open the book with a chapter on motivated reasoning for just this reason.
And dig into the broad concept of causality to help explain why we are so quick to rush to judgment.
Very nice, systematic study of WHY covid mRNA vaccines (rarely) cause myocarditis from @LaelYonker in @CircAHA.
Points the finger squarely at "free spike protein". Here's a brief thread (1/N). ahajournals.org/doi/abs/10.116…
This is a case-control study looking at 16 kids with post-vaccine myocarditis and 45 kids who had no adverse reaction to vaccine. Match was ok, though more boys in myocarditis group (2/N).
The study, one-by-one, eliminates potential mechanisms. We'll go through them here. (3/N)
Excited to share our new study in the Journal of Hypertension examining the effect of IV antihypertensives on hospitalized patients with severe htn. Outstanding work from @lama_ghazi on this.
Brief thread (1/N)
Over a four-year period, we identified 20,383 inpatients who were NOT admitted for hypertensive urgency / emergency and were not in the ICU but had SBP>180 or DBP>110.
(2/N)
Some didn't get treated, some got IV anti-hypertensives (mostly hydral / metop / labetalol - median 2 within 3 hours of severe htn). Some got orals (often meds they had been receiving already).
(3/N)
Brief thread on that "masks in schools" article in @nejm. It's a very well done article that I think many people have not actually read... 1/N
The setup is starightforward. Cowger et al have access to data on 300,000+ students and teachers COVID tests in 70+ Eastern Mass public school districts. (2/N)
They know when these various districts lifted their mask mandate. A bunch did right at the end of Feburary 2021 (1) when the state mandate was lifted, a bunch a week later (2), a bunch a week after that (3), and 2 (Boston / Chelsea - Black) held out for the full time study. 3/N
When does the pandemic end?
I think ending isolation requirements for those infected with COVID is a necessary and sufficient requirement to declare the end of the pandemic. To be clear, we can't do this yet. But it might not be that far off. 🧵 medscape.com/viewarticle/96…
2. I've had a few goalposts for the end of the pandemic. I abandoned covid eradication when I saw the data on animal reservoirs. Elimination seems increasingly unlikely given the vaccine breakthrough rate with omicron.
3. Vaccination leading to flu-like mortality rates only works if people get vaccinated.
So I am left with this. The end of isolation is the end of the pandemic.