ISSN: 2455-2976
Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine and Cardiology
Short Communication       Open Access      Peer-Reviewed

Recognizing the fundamental flaw in our dietary studies investigating the impact diets, drugs and lifestyle have on preventing or reversing CAD

Richard M Fleming1, Matthew R Fleming1* and Tapan K Chaudhuri2

1FHHI-OmnificImaging-Camelot Los Angeles, CA, USA
2Eastern Virginia Medical School Norfolk, VA, USA
*Corresponding author: Richard M Fleming, PhD, MD, JD, Los Angeles, CA, USA, E-mail: [email protected]
Received: 23 December, 2019 | Accepted: 20 February, 2020 | Published: 21 February, 2020
Keywords: FMTVDM; Inflammation and heart disease theory; Angina theory; Primary prevention CAD; Secondary CAD treatment; Food fight; Heart disease; Cancer; LowCarb; KETO; Vegan; Ornish; Statins; PCSK9-Inhibitors

Cite this as

Fleming RM, Fleming MR, Chaudhuri TK (2020) Recognizing the fundamental flaw in our dietary studies investigating the impact diets, drugs and lifestyle have on preventing or reversing CAD. J Cardiovasc Med Cardiol 7(1): 036-038. DOI: 10.17352/2455-2976.000109

Since the introduction of the (a) Inflammation and Heart Disease, and (b) Angina, Theories in the mid-1990s, a transition from a cholesterol only etiology for coronary artery disease (CAD) has taken place; resulting in an understanding that CAD is the result of an Inflammatory process precipitated by a number of factors-including, but not limited to LDL cholesterol and saturated fat [1-5], which impair coronary blood flow.

Unfortunately, hundreds if not thousands of research studies-involving millions of dollars in vested funding – have focused on measuring changes in weight and blood tests [6,7] rather than measuring actual changes in CAD itself [8-10]. Even the few dietary studies, which actually measured changes in CAD [11-14], provided only semi-quantified results – based upon the limited quantification methods available at the time of the studies [10].

The consequence has been a fusion of misinformation, fueled by opposing factions of scientists and pseudo-scientists resembling more of a schoolyard brawl than an actual scientific search for the truth. From this, physicians, the media, and social scientific neophytes have vied for attention in support of their positions – demonstrating more social consternation than scientific discourse.

Consequently, fundamental questions regarding the impact of diet, drug, and lifestyle treatment effects on CAD [15-18] remain poorly addressed, due to the lack of actual measured effect these diets, drugs and lifestyle have on CAD itself [8-10]. Confusion about what constitutes true quantification has further confounded investigations of the impact of diet and drug treatments for both primary and secondary prevention and treatment of CAD [10,19]. Thus the role diet, drugs and lifestyle play in preventing and treating CAD remains nothing more than a social media fight [20-23].

The first step to solving any problem is recognizing there is one. To date, studies looking at the primary or secondary prevention of CAD using dietary, drug, or lifestyle intervention, have been severely limited by the absence of quantified measurements of the changes in CAD following treatment intervention [9,10]. Measurements of blood tests and weight do NOT and have NOT answered this question-resulting in a need for new studies to be done to address these deficiencies and answer the fundamental question of what impact various diets, drugs and lifestyle interventions truly have on CAD [16,18] (Figures 1,2).

FMTVDM issued to first author. Inflammation and Heart Disease and Angina Theories authored by first author. Figures expressly reproduced with permission of first author.

  1. Fleming RM (1999) Chapter 64. The Pathogenesis of Vascular Disease.  Textbook of Angiology. 787-798. Link: http://bit.ly/2tU8JN5
  2. Fleming RM (2003) Stop Inflammation Now! with Tom Monte. Published by Putnam Books and Avery Books. ISBN: 0399151117.
  3. (2004) ABC 20/20 Segment on Inflammation and Heart Disease. Link: http://bit.ly/37FyjDl
  4. Fleming RM, Boyd L, Forster M (2000) Angina is Caused by Regional Blood Flow DifferencesProof of a Physiologic (Not Anatomic) Narrowing, Joint Session of the European Society of Cardiology and the American College of Cardiology, Annual American College of Cardiology Scientific Sessions, Anaheim, California, USA, 12 March 2000, 49th (Placed on internet www.prous.com for physician training and CME credit, April 2000.)
  5. Fleming RM (2003) Angina and coronary Ischemia are the result of coronary regional Blood Flow Differences. J Amer Coll Angiol 1: 127-142.
  6. Shah B, Newman JD, Woolf K (2018) Anti-Inflammatory Effects of a Vegan Diet Versus the American Heart Association-Recommended Diet in Coronary Artery Disease Trial. J Am Heart Assoc 7: e011367. Link: http://bit.ly/2HFL5Hu
  7. Tertsunen HM, Hantunen S, Tuomainen TP, Virtanen JK (2020) Healthy Nordic diet and risk of disease death among men: the Kuopio Ischaemic Heart Disease Risk Factor Study. Eur J Nutr. Link: http://bit.ly/3bWvDVA
  8. Fleming RM, Harrington GM (2008) What is the Relationship between Myocardial Perfusion Imaging and Coronary Artery Disease Risk Factors and Markers of Inflammation? Angiology 59: 16-25. Link: http://bit.ly/2uR1wy8
  9. (2017) The Fleming Method for Tissue and Vascular Differentiation and Metabolism (FMTVDM) using same state single or sequential quantification comparisons. Patent Number 9566037. Link: http://bit.ly/2GsXbTT
  10. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, Dooley WC, Chaudhuri TK (2020) Invited Editorial. The Importance of Differentiating Between Qualitative, Semi-Quantitative and Quantitative Imaging – Close Only Counts in Horseshoes. Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. DOI:10.1007/s00259-019-04668-y. Link: http://bit.ly/36tGke3  
  11. Ornish D, Brown SE, Billings JH (1990) Can lifestyle changes reverse coronary heart disease? The Lifestyle Heart Trial. Lancet 336: 129-133. Link: http://bit.ly/3bUa3kg
  12. Fleming RM, Boyd LB (2000) The Effect of High-Protein Diets on Coronary Blood Flow. Angiology 51: 817-826. Link: http://bit.ly/2SYH6v5
  13. Fleming RM (2002) The Effect of High-, Moderate-, and Low-Fat Diets on Weight Loss and Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors. Prev Cardiol 5: 110-118. Link: http://bit.ly/38H8GDK
  14. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, Chaudhuri TK, Harrington GM (2019) Cardiovascular Outcomes of Diet Counseling. Edel J Biomed Res Rev 1: 21-30. Link: http://bit.ly/2V3Bp1v
  15. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, McKusick A, Chaudhuri TK (2019) The Diet Wars Challenge Study: Insulin Resistance, Cholesterol and Inflammation. ACTA Scientific Pharm Sci 133-144. Link: http://bit.ly/2SG4KNU
  16. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, McKusick A, Ayoob KT, Chaudhuri TK (2019) A Call for the Definitive Diet Study to End the Diet Debate Once and for All. Gen Med 7: 001-009. Link: http://bit.ly/3bRtvhv
  17. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, Chaudhuri TK, Harrington GM (2019) Cardiovascular Outcomes of Diet Counseling. Edel J Biomed Res Rev 1: 20-29.
  18. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, Chaudhuri TK (2019) How Beneficial are Statins and PCSK9-Inhibitors? Scho J Food & Nutr 2: 213-218.
  19. Fleming RM, Fleming MR, Chaudhuri TK, McKusick A, Dooley WC (2019) Nuclear Imaging: Physician Confusion Over True Quantification and Isotope Redistribution. J Clin Cases Rep 3: 32-42. Link: http://bit.ly/3bVlyI6
  20. Johnston BC, Zeraatkar D, Han MA (2019) Unprocessed Red Meat and Processed Meat Consumption: Dietary Guideline Recommendations From the Nutritional Recommendations (NutriRECS) Consortium. Ann Intern Med. Link: http://bit.ly/2SSLQlC
  21. Rubin R (2020) Backlash Over Meat Dietary Recommendations Raises Questions About Corporate Ties to Nutrition Scientists. JAMA 323: 401-404.  Link: http://bit.ly/2VdkuK5
  22. Zhong VW, Van Horn L, Greenland P (2019) Associations of Processed Meat, Unprocessed Red Meat, Poultry, or Fish Intake With Incident Cardiovascular Disease and All-Cause Mortality. JAMA Intern Med. Link: http://bit.ly/3bP58kG
  23. Dyer O (2020) Food fight: controversy over red meat guidelines rumbles on. 368. Link: http://bit.ly/32921zu
© 2020 Fleming RM, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
 

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