On the evils of wheat

Dr. William Davis on why it is so addictive, and how shunning it will make you skinny

by Kate Fillion on Tuesday, September 20, 2011 9:40am - 240 Comments
On the evils of wheat, why it is so addictive, and how shunning it will make you skinny

Jean-Marc Giboux/Getty Images

William Davis, a preventive cardiologist who practises in Milwaukee, Wis., argues in his new book Wheat Belly that wheat is bad for your health—so bad that it should carry a surgeon general’s warning.

Q: You say the crux of the problem with wheat is that the stuff we eat today has been genetically altered. How is it different than the wheat our grandparents ate?

A: First of all, it looks different. If you held up a conventional wheat plant from 50 years ago against a modern, high-yield dwarf wheat plant, you would see that today’s plant is about 2½ feet shorter. It’s stockier, so it can support a much heavier seedbed, and it grows much faster. The great irony here is that the term “genetic modification” refers to the actual insertion or deletion of a gene, and that’s not what’s happened with wheat. Instead, the plant has been hybridized and crossbred to make it resistant to drought and fungi, and to vastly increase yield per acre. Agricultural geneticists have shown that wheat proteins undergo structural change with hybridization, and that the hybrid contains proteins that are found in neither parent plant. Now, it shouldn’t be the case that every single new agricultural hybrid has to be checked and tested, that would be absurd. But we’ve created thousands of what I call Frankengrains over the past 50 years, using pretty extreme techniques, and their safety for human consumption has never been tested or even questioned.

Q: What extreme techniques are you talking about?

A: New strains have been generated using what the wheat industry proudly insists are “traditional breeding techniques,” though they involve processes like gamma irradiation and toxins such as sodium azide. The poison control people will tell you that if someone accidentally ingests sodium azide, you shouldn’t try to resuscitate the person because you could die, too, giving CPR. This is a highly toxic chemical.

Q: Can’t you just get around any potential health concerns by buying products made with organically grown wheat?

A: No, because the actual wheat plant itself is the same. It’s almost as if we’ve put lipstick on this thing and called it organic and therefore good, when the truth is, it’s really hardly any better at all.

Q: A lot of us have switched to whole wheat products because we’ve been told complex carbohydrates are heart healthy and good for us. Are you saying that’s not true?

A: The research that indicates whole grains are healthy is all conducted the same way: white flour is replaced with whole wheat flour, which, no question, is better for you. But taking something bad and replacing it with something less bad is not the same as research that directly compares what happens to health and weight when you eliminate wheat altogether. There’s a presumption that consuming a whole bunch of the less bad thing must be good for you, and that’s just flawed logic. An analogy would be to say that filtered cigarettes are less bad for you than unfiltered cigarettes, and therefore, a whole bunch of filtered cigarettes is good for you. It makes no sense. But that is the rationale for increasing our consumption of whole grains, and that combined with the changes in wheat itself is a recipe for creating a lot of fat and unhealthy people.

Q: How does wheat make us fat, exactly?

A: It contains amylopectin A, which is more efficiently converted to blood sugar than just about any other carbohydrate, including table sugar. In fact, two slices of whole wheat bread increase blood sugar to a higher level than a candy bar does. And then, after about two hours, your blood sugar plunges and you get shaky, your brain feels foggy, you’re hungry. So let’s say you have an English muffin for breakfast. Two hours later you’re starving, so you have a handful of crackers, and then some potato chips, and your blood sugar rises again. That cycle of highs and lows just keeps going throughout the day, so you’re constantly feeling hungry and constantly eating. Dieticians have responded to this by advising that we graze throughout the day, which is just nonsense. If you eliminate wheat from your diet, you’re no longer hungry between meals because you’ve stopped that cycle. You’ve cut out the appetite stimulant, and consequently you lose weight very quickly. I’ve seen this with thousands of patients.

Q: But I’m not overweight and I exercise regularly. So why would eating whole wheat bread be bad for me?

A: You can trigger effects you don’t perceive. Small low-density lipoprotein [LDL] particles form when you’re eating lots of carbohydrates, and they are responsible for atherosclerotic plaque, which in turn triggers heart disease and stroke. So even if you’re a slender, vigorous, healthy person, you’re still triggering the formation of small LDL particles. And second, carbohydrates increase your blood sugars, which cause this process of glycation, that is, the glucose modification of proteins. If I glycate the proteins in my eyes, I get cataracts. If I glycate the cartilage of my knees and hips, I get arthritis. If I glycate small LDL, I’m more prone to atherosclerosis. So it’s a twofold effect. And if you don’t start out slender and keep eating that fair trade, organically grown whole wheat bread that sounds so healthy, you’re repeatedly triggering high blood sugars and are going to wind up with more visceral fat. This isn’t just what I call the wheat belly that you can see, flopping over your belt, but the fat around your internal organs. And as visceral fat accumulates, you risk responses like diabetes and heart disease.

Q: You seem to be saying that aside from anything else, wheat is essentially the single cause of the obesity epidemic.

A: I wouldn’t go so far as to say that all obesity is due to wheat. There are kids, of course, who drink Coca-Cola and sit in front of video games for many hours a day. But I’m speaking to the relatively health-minded people who think they’re doing the right thing by limiting fat consumption and eating more whole grains, and there’s a clear subset of people who are doing that and gaining weight and don’t understand why. It causes tremendous heartache. They come into my office and say, “I exercise five times a week, I’ve cut my fat intake, I watch portion size and eat my whole grains—but I’ve gone up three dress sizes.”

Q: You write that wheat is “addictive,” but does it really meet the criteria for addiction we’d use when talking about, say, drugs?

A: National Institutes of Health researchers showed that gluten-derived polypeptides can cross into the brain and bind to the brain’s opiate receptors. So you get this mild euphoria after eating a product made with whole wheat. You can block that effect [in lab animals] by administering the drug naloxone. This is the same drug that you’re given if you’re a heroin addict; it’s an opiate blocker. About three months ago, a drug company applied to the FDA to commercialize naltrexone, which is an oral equivalent to naloxone. And it works, apparently, it blocks the pleasurable feelings you get from eating wheat so people stop eating so much. In clinical trials, people lost about 22.4 lb. in the first six months. Why, if you’re not a drug addict, do you need something like that? And of course there’s another option, which is to cut wheat out of your diet. However, and this is another argument for classifying wheat as addictive, people can experience some pretty unpleasant withdrawal symptoms.

Q: For how long?

A: Generally about five days. And once you’re through withdrawal, your cravings subside, your calorie intake decreases and your alertness and overall health improve.

Q: So do you believe food manufacturers are putting wheat into more and more food products, not just bread and crackers, because it’s addictive and stimulates appetite?

A: These are not stupid people. The research showing that wheat stimulates appetite didn’t come from some little alternative health practitioner. It comes from the NIH. It stretches credibility to believe they have no awareness of the evidence.

Q: If there’s all this evidence, why does the government encourage us to “eat healthy” by upping our consumption of whole grains?

A: That’s the million-dollar question. Wheat is so linked to human habit, it’s 20 per cent of all calories consumed by humans worldwide, that I think there was the presumption, “Gee, humans have consumed this for thousands of years, so what’s the problem?” I don’t think the misguided advice to eat more whole grains came from evil intentions.

Q: Wheat is a huge industry. What do you say to all the farmers who grow it?

A: To me, it’s reminiscent of tobacco farmers, who would say, “Look, I’m just trying to make a living and feed my family.” Nevertheless, tobacco is incredibly harmful and kills people. It could turn out that if we wind back the clock 100 or 1,000 years, and resurrect einkorn or some of the heritage forms of wheat, maybe that would be a solution. Of course, wheat products would then be much more expensive. Instead of a $4 loaf of bread, maybe it would cost $7 when grown with a heritage wheat. To me, it’s similar to free range eggs or organic beef 20 years ago. Everyone said, “No one will pay a premium for those.” But people do. And when it comes to wheat, my main goal is to inform people, including farmers, that the prevailing notion that cutting fat and eating whole grains will make you healthy is not only wrong, it’s destructive.

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  • blalo

    Right research with wrong conclusion.Just switch to old kinds of wheat,mentioned at the beginning of the article,and youll be fine-Einkorn,Emmer,Spelt.

  • Mandy

    I was very athletic as a child and then around 12 years old I was getting sick with colds, flus and infections constantly, was drained of energy, and felt unwell all the time. I continued to have these problems and a host of other issues like inflamed joints, muscle spasms, migraines, stomach ulcers and other issues. I finally decided to try to take out different foods in my diet to see if anything would help, especially since I gained 30 pounds in half a year when I ate really healthy foods. I upped my protein, cut out my whole wheat and suddenly I felt incredible (this is 12 years later). I have been avoiding wheat gluten like the plague ever since and most issues have resolved because of it. I also got rid of most of that weight I gained, and I even grew 2 inches at 22 years old!!! Weird, I know, but it happened as soon as I started feeling better.  I recommend trying the gluten free diet for anyone who has a lot of health issues to see if it helps them, as well. :)

  • Anonymous

    Eat right for your blood type. For the record, I’m 5’4″ 120 lbs, athletic, eat breakfast everyday and have low LDL or cholesterol. My IBS-like symptoms disappeared after I started eating for my blood type, for what my body needs. I have also worked in Health Care.

  • RagingRanter

    I have a cat who was so fat, despite eating nothing but “premium” food, that the vet said it was only a matter of time before he became diabetic. I put him on a restricted diet with the same “premium” food. No change. Cut it back even more. No change. I then switched to a grain-free food (even more premium) 6 months ago. Within a day of switching he was tearing around like a kitten, and he’s 9 years old. The change was so sudden and so dramatic I actually re-read the ingredients on the bag, expecting to see ephedra or caffeine or some other stimulant. Nothing but meat and vegetable products. 

    He’d been a lazy slug his entire life; I had just assumed that was his personality. Six months later he’s still ripping around like a kitten, and he’s down from 16 lbs to about 13, and hasn’t looked this trim in years. And I’m not even restricting his intake like I was with the other stuff. He eats as much as he wants. He’s running round the room as I write this. My girlfriend switched her two cats to grain-free food and noticed the same – though less dramatic – increase in energy. Granted, there is not much one can extrapolate from carnivorous felines to omnivorous humans. But maybe grain just isn’t all that good for us. Lot’s of sluggish, overweight, pre-diabetic humans out there too. 

  • Sean

    Anything for making a buck on a new book.  And, tell me what does this Doctor knows about diet?  Nowhere in his cardiology studies would he have touch a book on diet.  I know, I’ve been through it..  Not too long ago we went through the  ”fats make you fat”  ”white food kills you”  and all those books and theories went the way of the dodo.  But fat people will try anything in the hope that they will look like Brad Pitt or Angelina Jolie.  I suggest that one eats what they feel like eating in moderation, exercise moderately and strive for peace of mind. McLean should stay away from this type of hype and instead on concentrating on helping the industry esp. around Xmas time, it should publish articles by dietitians on healthy eating.

  • http://twitter.com/Russell_Barth Russell Barth

    I have been telling people about this since `02. I had sleep apnea so bad I would stop breathing for up to a minute. Snored like Fred Flinstone. Quit white bread and dairy, and it was gone in two weeks.

  • Isabell

    Can some please tell me type of bread  I should purchase.  Is a light rye okay?

  • Bobf

    This is incredible. How can this be?

  • Edward

    Okay, great. I’m convinced, I shouldn’t eat wheat. So, why not add to the article what the hell I *can* eat instead (as a replacement)? “Protein”? In what form? I get a half hour for lunch at work. Not enough time to prep up a nice batch of short ribs or tofu stir-fry. Tell me, what shall I use to replace the peanut butter sandwich that I actually have time to eat?

  • Mandy

    Regardless of whether it is true or not, it’s common sense to not be eating too much of the same thing. A lot of people do eat 6 slices a day plus pasta and etc, gain  A LOT of weight. Just like one should not eat too much protein, drink a ridiculous amount of water, etc etc. It’s all about portioning, and at least this article will get people thinking about what they eat. For you to insult whoever reads it and finds it interesting is a bit childish. How about if I say it’s “unintelligent” to go around and call people stupid? Grow up. 

  • Cameron leclair

    Well based on my personal experiemce I can tell you this article is not a load of s#*@. I personally switched to a lifestyle change that removed dairy, grain ad legumes from my diet and saw incredible results. I even went through a wihdrawl period like what was mentioned in this article. About a week in I felt shaky, aggetated and on edge as my body began to break down fats for energy instead of the sugars produced from the removed items. After that period I never felt better in my adult life. I slept better at night had more energy my recovery time at the gym sped up, overall I felt healthier

    During the time like this is lost near 20lbs and felt amazing but summer came and I once again began eating bad re introduced dairy grains and legumes into my diet and I have put approx 15lbs back on, I began having restless sleeps and feel sluggish compared to what I was. I truly didn’t realize how unhealthy I was until I tried this change and I guarntee you’d be surprised as well if you attempted it.

    Look into the paleo lifestyle. Look up robb wolfe, he has some good literature on the lifestyle. Now I don’t believe this is for everyone it takes a lot of commitment and planning to do it but if you could live a 70/30 or even 80/20 without/with lifestyle everyone would be better for it.

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