A new study
of 635 children in Massachusetts found that a
bigger waist size at age 3 increases the odds that a child will have a
marker for liver damage and nonalcoholic fatty liver
disease by age 8.
The first
big advance occurred in the early 1990s, when epidemiological studies revealed that 90 to 95 percent
of individuals with the disorder carry a genetic
marker associated with autoimmune
disease — self - inflicted damage that occurs when the body mistakes its own tissues for a foreign invader and attacks them.
These rancid oils that are causing inflammation inside our blood vessels, which inflammation we now,
markers like CRP, c - reactive protein, or interleukin 6, those are
big,
big - time correlates to heart
disease, which we know are coming as a result
of a lot
of the inflammation happening in our body with some
of these, a lot
of these vegetable oils, like canola, corn, soy, and so forth.