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Egg Nutrition Center Says Japanese Egg Study is Statistically Scrambled; Scientists Say Data is Flawed.


NEW YORK New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 -- Representatives of the American Egg Board's Egg Nutrition Center as well as independent scientists say that a just-released Japanese study on eggs and mortality is not scientifically sound because the subset A group of commands or functions that do not include all the capabilities of the original specification. Software or hardware components designed for the subset will also work with the original.  of women studied was too small to deliver accurate data. In addition, experts say that the results of the study, which claimed that women who ate two or more eggs a day were more likely to die than women who ate less eggs, are misleading because just as many women died in the group who ate the least amount of eggs as did among those who ate the most eggs. What's more, the study does not account for almost 50% of the causes of death of the study participants who were reported more likely to die of "any cause" -- including old age, smoking, complications from obesity, among an assortment of other factors (i.e., getting hit by a car) that can lead to one's demise. Specifically, experts point to the following as examples of sloppy slop·py  
adj. slop·pi·er, slop·pi·est
1. Marked by a lack of neatness or order; untidy: a sloppy room.

2.
 and misleading research findings:

--The women who had higher rates of death from heart disease and stroke were statistically insignificant as too few women overall died of either cause, but, rather, most women died from "other causes." If cholesterol in eggs was a factor than heart disease and stroke deaths among women should have increased and they did not.

--The study did not require participants to provide other dietary intake information nor did it allow for lifestyle factors. Besides eggs, what else were the women eating? Did their daily diet consist of foods high in saturated fats saturated fat, any solid fat that is an ester of glycerol and a saturated fatty acid. The molecules of a saturated fat have only single bonds between carbon atoms; if double bonds are present in the fatty acid portion of the molecule, the fat is said to be ? Aside from overall diet, was the group active or sedentary sedentary /sed·en·tary/ (sed´en-tar?e)
1. sitting habitually; of inactive habits.

2. pertaining to a sitting posture.


sedentary

of inactive habits; pertaining to a fat, castrated or confined animal.
? Research has shown that poor diet and a lack of exercise are key factors in increasing one's mortality rate.

--Women in the study who ate two or more eggs a week were older and had more hypertension, twice the incidence of diabetes and were heavier smokers than other study participants.

--The study is at odds with U.S. studies that have shown no such link between egg consumption and increased mortality rates among women.

U.S. Studies Show Positive Findings for Eggs

--A longer-term study done at Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College


Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
 that adjusted for risk factors found no increased risk from egg consumption. The American Heart Association American Heart Association (AHA),
n.pr a national voluntary health agency that has the goal of increasing public and medical awareness of cardiovascular diseases and stroke, and thereby reducing the number of associated deaths and disabilities.
 no longer limits the amount of eggs a person can consume as long as their cholesterol is in check. Additional research studies have shown that eggs may actually help prevent heart disease, age-related macular degeneration Age-related macular degeneration (ARMD)
Degeneration of the macula (the central part of the retina where the rods and cones are most dense) that leads to loss of central vision in people over 60.
 and enhance memory function in a growing fetus fetus, term used to describe the unborn offspring in the uterus of vertebrate animals after the embryonic stage (see embryo). In humans, the fetal stage begins seven to eight weeks after fertilization of the egg, when the embryo assumes the basic shape of the newborn .
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--  C. Wayne Callaway, M.D., Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine,
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--  Donald McNamara, Ph.D., Executive Director, Egg Nutrition Center

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Publication:Business Wire
Date:Jul 28, 2004
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