J P Fanton

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J P Fanton

J P Fanton

@HealthyFellow

Integrative Health Coach, Nutrition Consultant, Product Formulator, Researcher & Writer. Work w/ Charities, Companies & Individuals. How Can I Help? DM me!

USA Katılım Nisan 2009
20.1K Takip Edilen26K Takipçiler
J P Fanton retweetledi
Shashi Iyengar | Metabolic Health India®
AT JUST 24 - DIABETES WAS THE LAST THING HE EXPECTED Mr. KR, age 24, is the son of one of my clients and is currently studying in Germany. Young, busy, and focused on studies - like many students abroad. •Frequent junk food •Processed foods and sugary snacks •Sedentary routine •Long hours of sitting, classes, and studies •Minimal physical activity He was not well for sometime and then his tests were done in March 2026, the shock was huge: •HbA1c: 8.4% •Fasting Blood Sugar: 194 mg/dL A clear diabetic range at just 24 years of age. His father, already my client, immediately connected with me after seeing the reports. He was started on a structured low-carb approach under my guidance. The response was rapid. Within just about 1.5 months: •HbA1c dropped from 8.4% to 6.3% •Fasting sugar reduced from 194 to 95 mg/dL His lipid markers also looked excellent: •Triglycerides: 51 •HDL: 45.1 •TG/HDL ratio: 1.13 Metabolic disease is no longer a problem of only middle age or old age. Today’s lifestyle: •Ultra-processed foods •Constant snacking •Sugary beverages •Sedentary living •Stress and poor sleep …is pushing diabetes into younger and younger age groups. But.. The body also responds remarkably fast when the right nutritional changes are made. An unhealthy lifestyle eventually pays its price. But timely action can completely change the direction of health. -Metabolic Health India
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J P Fanton
J P Fanton@HealthyFellow·
Effects of combining exercise with a 16:8 time-restricted eating protocol on body composition and glucose–lipid metabolism in adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis frontiersin.org/journals/nutri…
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J P Fanton
J P Fanton@HealthyFellow·
Begin your day in a positive way. Contribute to reputable charities for free. Seriously! Just "click to give". It'll only take a minute or so, but it can make a real difference. 🫶 Please join me! 🫶 click.greatergood.com/clicktogive/gg
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J P Fanton retweetledi
Heifer International
In Aloutte Mandingue, 29-year-old 𝐒𝐨𝐮𝐧𝐤𝐚𝐫𝐲 𝐒𝐞𝐲𝐝𝐢 helped families improve child nutrition through the 𝐊𝐀𝐘𝐑𝐀 𝐩𝐫𝐨𝐣𝐞𝐜𝐭 as a 𝐌𝐨𝐝𝐞𝐥 𝐌𝐨𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐫. 𝐋𝐞𝐚𝐫𝐧 𝐦𝐨𝐫𝐞 about Heifer Senegal’s community-led nutrition initiative: brnw.ch/21x2r2q
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J P Fanton retweetledi
Shashi Iyengar | Metabolic Health India®
"Seven Years of 700 Cholesterol Without Coronary Atherosclerosis: A Lean Mass Hyper-Responder Case Report" CAD-RADS 0
Nick Norwitz MD PhD@nicknorwitz

🚨New Paper: "Seven Years of 700 Cholesterol Without Coronary Atherosclerosis: A Lean Mass Hyper-Responder Case Report" Link: doi.org/10.3390/diseas… For the past 7 years, I’ve been running what is essentially a natural experiment in cholesterol and heart health. During that time, I’ve largely lived with: 👉Total cholesterol around 700 mg/dl 👉LDL cholesterol between 500–600 mg/dL I recently underwent advanced coronary CT angiography imaging with AI-guided analysis. This is not a CAC. It measures all plaque (soft + calcified), with expert interpretation and AI-guided analysis capable of quantifying plaque down to the cubic millimeter (mm3). Now, to address the obvious question: Am I too young for plaque? In brief: No. The clearest comparison is individuals with homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia, who often have similarly extreme LDL/ApoB levels and can develop advanced plaque as toddlers, and even heart attacks as early as age 8. Also, nutrition influencers in their 30s have publicly shared quantified plaque scores from these same imaging technologies. In one recent case, a plant-based influencer in his thirties was found to have 61.3 mm³ of plaque despite having far lower lifetime LDL exposure. (He can identify himself if he so chooses.) My case also isn’t a one-off. There are many individuals like me, including older individuals with similar LDL-C and ApoB without any plaque. The difference is that I’m an unusually well-characterized subject, with extensive metabolic data and health markers tracked over time. You can learn more at the newsletter or open-access paper, linked above. The science of heart health is not settled. And cholesterol is not a simple story. 🚨 If you want to help spread the word... Quote Tweet this post (or create an original post) including the article link with a thought. Academic papers are increasingly evaluated using attention metrics. Original posts from unique users are one way to increase these metrics and help ultimately increase its reach. 🚨 If you want to learn more, I'll include more learning resources below 👇

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J P Fanton
J P Fanton@HealthyFellow·
Timing matters? Assessing the relationship between a regular eating pattern compared to intermittent fasting (early versus late) and mental health outcomes: A cross-sectional study journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/02…
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J P Fanton retweetledi
Benjamin Bikman
Benjamin Bikman@BenBikmanPhD·
The amount of fat a person carries matters less than the size of the individual fat cells. After all, why are women healthier than men despite having higher body fat? This newly published paper properly highlights this nuance (pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42123983/). The larger a fat cell gets: 1. the more insulin resistant it becomes (to prevent further growth but thereby leaking fats to the liver and beyond); and, 2. the more pro-inflammatory it becomes (in an attempt to correct reduced blood flow but thereby promoting systemic inflammation). Fat is our friend, no doubt. We just want small fat cells.
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J P Fanton@HealthyFellow·
Good morning/day! 🌞 I spotted this beauty on my walk yesterday. 😻
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J P Fanton@HealthyFellow·
Start your day in a positive way. Contribute to reputable charities for free. Seriously! Just "click to give". It'll only take a minute or so, but it can make a real difference. 🫶 Please join me! 🫶 click.greatergood.com/clicktogive/gg
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🔬 RicardoMontes
🔬 RicardoMontes@_MCRicardo_·
Theobromine, a dark chocolate compound, is associated w/slower epigenetic ageing ✅️ Elevated circulating theobromine—derived from cocoa—was associated with a slower pace of aging, according to two assessments Key Points: ▶️ Measurements of theobromine circulating in blood revealed that elevated levels were associated w/a slower rate of aging, according to an assessment based on molecular tagging patterns on DNA. ▶️ Another aging assessment that gauges age based on the length of protective caps at the ends of chromosomes (telomeres) supported this association. ▶️ Interestingly, the lower pace of aging, as measured with molecular tagging patterns on DNA, suggested that theobromine slows aging most significantly in current or former smokers. aging-us.com/article/206344… @drfherediaz @DrRPalmquist @HealthyFellow @LoriShemek @NutrioSci @tatiann69922625 @_atanas_ @CelestinoGutirr @guani_vic @dronita_de
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