Moont1de t1_iy92o0b wrote
Reply to comment by trantheman713 in "Green Mediterranean diet” high in polyphenols and fiber can reduce that visceral fat. After 18 months, those subjected to the diet saw a visceral fat reduction of 14 percent; eaters of the Mediterranean Diet saw a 7 percent drop. Visceral fat among “healthy eaters” was reduced by 4.5 percent by Wagamaga
Then keep reading, they contrast MED (which has poultry and fish and red meat) and green MED (which has poultry and fish and more vegetables). Guess which one performed better
trantheman713 t1_iy94vc8 wrote
If you could point to where it discusses overall protein substitution or meat reduction between the two MED diets, I’d love to concede, but it simply does not. The reduction of red meat consumption and the addition of the plant shake does not equal to reduced poultry and fish consumption.
Moont1de t1_iy95h4j wrote
I misexpressed myself so I edited my comment to better reflect what I thought I had said.
The poultry and fish consumption across both MED diets is the same, but the green MED has less red meat and more vegetables.
It would make no sense (and be a terrible control) if they changed other variables beyond the one they are trying to test (red meat vs. vegetables)
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