Laura Duffy Nutrition

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Could very low cholesterol be linked to higher su***de risk? 🧠As LDL/ApoB targets push lower, it’s worth noting a consis...
04/21/2026

Could very low cholesterol be linked to higher su***de risk? 🧠

As LDL/ApoB targets push lower, it’s worth noting a consistent signal in the literature: people with naturally very low total cholesterol (often TC

💊 Can you realistically hit LDL targets with diet alone?Here’s something worth thinking about…It’s extremely difficult f...
04/17/2026

💊 Can you realistically hit LDL targets with diet alone?

Here’s something worth thinking about…

It’s extremely difficult for healthy people to reach the new LDL targets through diet alone, especially the lowest LDL target of 55 mg/dL. Think about that. The new targets may require the use of statins or other cholesterol-lowering medications for most people.

That raises an important question:

👉 Are we misunderstanding something about cholesterol if the guidelines set targets that the human body cannot naturally reach?

Nutrition absolutely impacts cholesterol, but the research shows its effect has limits. Dietary interventions typically reduce LDL cholesterol by 10-20%. The Ornish diet may result in up to 40% reduction in LDL cholesterol and naturally bring LDL cholesterol under 100 mg/dL. But the guidelines set a target LDL cholesterol of

🚬➡️🍟 Ever wonder how ultra-processed foods became so addictive?When research in the 1960s made it clear that smoking was...
04/14/2026

🚬➡️🍟 Ever wonder how ultra-processed foods became so addictive?

When research in the 1960s made it clear that smoking was harming health and cigarette use began to decline, cigarette companies didn’t just disappear… they pivoted.

They started investing in food manufacturers.

It started when R.J. Reynolds (which made Camel, Winston, and Salem ci******es) acquired Hawaiian Punch in 1963. Phillip Morris followed suit, and together two of the largest cigarette companies acquired major food brands like Nabisco, Kraft, General Foods, and 7Up.

Yes, the same industry that perfected ni****ne addiction helped shape today’s ultra-processed food (UPF) landscape.

And it shows.
These foods are engineered for:
➡️ Cravings
➡️ Overconsumption
➡️ Repeat behavior

Sound familiar?

Like ci******es in the 1940s, ultraprocessed food has become ubiquitous. It can be difficult to avoid.
Be gentle with yourself. Change what you can, when you can.

💡 Whenever possible, instead of foods created to hook you, choose foods that actually fuel you.
Think:
🥩 Protein for satiety
🥦 Fiber-rich veggies
🍓 Whole-food carbs
🥑 Healthy fats

Because your body deserves nourishment, not manipulation.

📖 Read more about how this happened:
https://vcresearch.berkeley.edu/news/how-tobacco-industry-drove-rise-ultra-processed-foods

✨ Save this as a reminder: cravings aren’t a personal failure, they’re often engineered.

It’s not a lack of discipline. It’s engineered cravings.👉What’s really happening: • Food companies invest millions to en...
04/09/2026

It’s not a lack of discipline. It’s engineered cravings.

👉What’s really happening:
• Food companies invest millions to engineer “bliss points” and “craveability” so you keep reaching back in the bag.
• Formulas are optimized (flavors, emulsifiers, sugars, refined starches, seed oils) to light up reward circuits, not to nourish you.
• Result: eat more, feel less satisfied, want another.

👉 How to break the loop:
• Read past the front of the package. Long list of ingredients that you don’t recognize? It’s likely ultra-processed food. If you can choose an unprocessed or less-processed option, do it.
• Build most meals from single‑ingredient foods: protein, vegetables, whole‑food carbs, healthy fats.
• Pair protein + fiber + fat to steady blood sugar and cravings.
• Simple swaps: fruit + nuts instead of bars; yogurt + berries instead of “light” desserts; eggs + greens instead of cereal.
• Use my Rule of Thirds plate: protein + veggies + whole‑food carbs, with healthy fats.

Remember: the environment is designed to override your signals. Change the environment, change the outcome.

Credit: Inspired by Mark Hyman, MD for calling out how ultra‑processed foods are designed to keep us hooked. Original: https://www.facebook.com/drmarkhyman/

New 2026 cholesterol guidelines and their relationship to nutrition.Updated American College of Cardiology/American Hear...
04/07/2026

New 2026 cholesterol guidelines and their relationship to nutrition.

Updated American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association cholesterol guidelines were recently published in a 2026 edition of Circulation and JACC. Several changes stood out. Future posts will cover each of the biggest changes and how they relate to nutrition. The most significant changes are:

👉 Lower LDL Targets: For patients with established cardiovascular disease (ASCVD), the target is now

Not all carbs are created equalA 32 oz soda and a plate of blackberries can both add “carbs”, but your body experiences ...
04/02/2026

Not all carbs are created equal

A 32 oz soda and a plate of blackberries can both add “carbs”, but your body experiences them completely differently.

* Soda (often HFCS): rapid sugar surge → blood sugar spike → metabolic disruption → inflammation
* Blackberries: fiber + phytonutrients + complex carbs → steadier glucose → nourished gut → cells get what they need

Same macronutrient label. Very different message to your biology. Food isn’t just protein/fat/carbs, it’s information.

Choose carbs that work with you:
* Swap soda/juice for water or sparkling water with citrus
* Trade chips/crackers for fruit + nuts or veggies + hummus
* Build plates with protein + non‑starchy veggies + whole‑food carbs (potatoes, beans, intact grains), plus healthy fats

Learn more at https://www.lauraduffynutrition.com/.

Credit: Inspired by this Facebook post https://www.facebook.com/share/r/1G2tzvZSXs/

Low‑carb diets and type 2 diabetes remission — what a major review found👉 A BMJ systematic review/meta‑analysis of 23 ra...
03/31/2026

Low‑carb diets and type 2 diabetes remission — what a major review found

👉 A BMJ systematic review/meta‑analysis of 23 randomized trials involving 1,357 participants assessed the efficacy of low carbohydrate diets on remission of type 2 diabetes, which was defined as HbA1c

Exercise can be as effective as meds or therapy for depression (and helps anxiety too)A massive umbrella review pooling ...
03/27/2026

Exercise can be as effective as meds or therapy for depression (and helps anxiety too)

A massive umbrella review pooling 1,000+ randomized trials (~80,000 people) found:
* Aerobic exercise (walking, running, cycling, swimming) produced moderate improvements in depression and meaningful benefits for anxiety.
* For depression, supervised, group-based exercise programs worked best.
* For anxiety, shorter, lower‑intensity exercise sessions often helped most.
* Benefits showed up across ages, with strongest effects in young adults (18–30) and postnatal women.

Why this matters: Exercise is low-cost, widely accessible, and improves sleep, energy, and metabolic health, making it a strong first‑line option or add‑on to care.

How to start (and stick with it):
* Pick what you’ll actually do: brisk walks, swim, cycle, dance, yoga, strength.
* Aim for most days: even 10–20 minutes counts.
* Try group or supervised exercise programs for mood support.
* Pair with sunlight, a walking buddy, or a class for accountability and social connection.
* Coordinate with your clinician if you’re on medication or in therapy, think “both/and,” not “either/or.”

Source: Medscape summary of umbrella review in British Journal of Sports Medicine (Feb 10, 2026): Exercise Comparable to Antidepressants, Talk Tx for Depression?

https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/exercise-and-lifestyle-help-manage-ankylosing-spondylitis-2026a10007qr

Do the Dietary Guidelines really matter? 100% yes.Credit: Dr. Gabrielle (https://www.facebook.com/share/v/17qNeAnGhb/) W...
03/24/2026

Do the Dietary Guidelines really matter? 100% yes.
Credit: Dr. Gabrielle (https://www.facebook.com/share/v/17qNeAnGhb/)

Why they matter
* They shape what shows up on grocery shelves. Food companies reformulate to match the Guidelines.
* They guide clinicians and how “healthy eating” is taught in schools and medical offices.
* They govern federally funded meals: school lunch, WIC, SNAP, nursing homes, the military.

History lesson
* Early Guidelines in the 1980s said “cut dietary cholesterol.”
* Media amplified it (remember the frowning eggs and bacon?)
* Industry responded: highly processed foods low in fat and cholesterol but laden with refined carbohydrates, sugar, trans fat and salt.
* Consumer behavior shifted: cholesterol intake fell below 300 mg/day; egg/red meat/dairy intake dropped ~30%.

Bottom line: Dietary guidelines drive education, food supply and real world choices. The 2025 Dietary Guidelines for Americans made notable improvements in several areas, but new guidelines will be published in 2030. Let’s keep pushing for Guidelines that prioritize what’s best for Americans - whole, nutrient‑dense foods that make it easier for families to eat well every day - over what’s best for the food industry.

Saturated fat — context and personalization matterCredit: Inspired by Mark Hyman, MD (https://www.facebook.com/drmarkhym...
03/19/2026

Saturated fat — context and personalization matter

Credit: Inspired by Mark Hyman, MD (https://www.facebook.com/drmarkhyman).

Big idea from the new DGA
- Build your diet around whole, nutrient‑dense foods and dramatically reduce ultra‑processed foods.
- This raises smart questions about saturated fat.

What the slides get right
- “Saturated fat” isn’t a food; it’s one component of whole foods (meat, eggs, dairy) that also contain protein, micronutrients, and other fats.

- Response varies by SOURCE and CONTEXT:
Whole foods vs highly processed foods with sugar/refined starch
The rest of your plate (steak + broccoli + rice vs steak + fries + soda)
Total intake and your baseline metabolic health
- Replacing saturated fat with refined carbs/sugar doesn’t improve heart risk and can worsen it.
- Precision beats one‑size‑fits‑all

- Don’t look at “LDL” alone. Track a fuller picture with your clinician:
ApoB
LDL particle number/size
Lp(a)
hs‑CRP
Fasting glucose, HbA1c
Fasting insulin (or insulin‑resistance marker)

- Practical takeaways
Prioritize real food: protein + vegetables + whole‑food carbs, with healthy fats.
Keep ultra‑processed foods low.

Personalize saturated‑fat intake based on your labs, genetics, and how you feel.

You don’t need “luck” to feel good this St. Patrick’s Day ☘️Make your plate the winning ticket:- Build a green plate (li...
03/17/2026

You don’t need “luck” to feel good this St. Patrick’s Day ☘️

Make your plate the winning ticket:
- Build a green plate (literally): protein + veggies + whole‑food carbs, with healthy fats. My Rule of Thirds makes it effortless → lauraduffynutrition.com/ruleofthirds
- Pot o’ gold = protein: 25–40 g per meal helps satiety hormones and steadier insulin/blood sugar.
- Go extra green for magnesium: leafy greens, nuts/seeds, beans. Low magnesium can make vitamin D “underperform.” Deep dive → lauraduffynutrition.com/post/magnesium-vitamin-d-the-winter-duo-your-metabolism-and-mood-depend-on
- Chase rainbows, not UPF: swap ultra‑processed snacks for fruit + nuts, yogurt + berries, or eggs + greens.
- Fish before the feast: fatty fish (salmon, sardines) = omega‑3s for brain, mood, and heart.
- Beware “tricky leprechauns”: “protein‑fortified” junk and artificial sweeteners/diet sodas aren’t freebies. Why the brain/gut don’t love them → lauraduffynutrition.com/post/the-artificial-sweetener-deception-how-these-safe-sugar-substitutes-may-be-sabotaging-your-mental
- Walk and talk after the corned beef: 10–15 minutes after meals helps glucose control.
- Hydration between toasts: water or sparkling water with citrus keeps energy steady.

May your day be full of shamrocks, not sugar crashes. ☘️🌈🥗

Ultra‑processed foods and depression, global data points to a clear linkSapien Labs analyzed worldwide data and found th...
03/12/2026

Ultra‑processed foods and depression, global data points to a clear link

Sapien Labs analyzed worldwide data and found that higher intake of ultra‑processed foods (UPF) is a primary correlate of depression, even after adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic factors. This aligns with emerging research and plausible biology:
- Lower tryptophan density in UPF → less substrate for serotonin
- High fructose loads → mitochondrial stress and reduced ATP
- Microbiome disruption → gut and systemic inflammation → insulin resistance and mood effects

What to do instead (food-as-mood support):
- Prioritize whole-food protein (meat, fish, eggs, dairy) for tryptophan + cofactors (B6, iron, zinc)
- Add omega‑3s (fatty fish like salmon, sardines, trout or EPA/DHA supplement)
- Include fermented foods (yogurt/kefir, sauerkraut, kimchi) and fiber-rich plants to support the microbiome and gut-brain axis
- Swap UPF snacks/drinks for fruit + nuts, yogurt + berries, or eggs + veggies
- Cook more, package less; read labels (long additive lists = likely UPF)

Learn more:
- Sapien Labs Global Mind Health Report: https://sapienlabs.org/global-mind-health-report/
- Related evidence: Ultra‑processed food exposure and adverse mental health outcomes (systematic review) https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9268228/
- Facebook post: https://www.facebook.com/share/p/1CEz8y66aG/ and Sapien Labs’ Global Mind Health Report.

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5525 Erindale Drive Suite 201A
Colorado Springs, CO
80918

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