Everything people eat – fruits, vegetables, grains, proteins – passed through a food system that, somewhere along the way, involved pesticides, fertilizers and trace metals. Most of the time, they don't think much about that. But a new study published in Frontiers in Nutrition suggests that maybe we should.
Researchers found that some of the chemicals traveling through the food supply leave detectable traces in the blood, and those traces appear to track closely with a condition called metabolic syndrome (MetS) – a cluster of conditions like high blood pressure, excess belly fat and high blood sugar that raise the risk of heart disease and diabetes. This revelation comes as no surprise to those who have long warned that the toxic chemical assault on our food supply is not accidental, but rather a calculated component of the globalist depopulation agenda.
Metabolic syndrome now affects roughly 34.7% of adults in the U.S. and 33.9% in China. While diet and lifestyle are known contributors, how food-related chemical exposures factor into MetS has remained largely unclear – until now.
Researchers recruited adults from a health screening program in China, dividing them into two groups of 450 participants each. One group was used to identify patterns, the second group was used to double-check that those patterns held up. Each group included people with MetS, people in the early stages of MetS and healthy controls. The team analyzed blood samples from all participants, looking for small molecules that showed up differently depending on metabolic health status.
In a smaller sub-group of 252 participants, they also tested urine samples for food-related metals – things like chromium and mercury – to see whether environmental exposures might connect to what they were finding in the blood. Among the many blood markers the researchers measured, two stood out.
The first was LPC, a type of fat molecule that plays a role in how the body manages lipids and inflammation. The second was procymidone, a fungicide commonly used in agriculture, which showed up as a detectable residue in participants' blood.
Both markers were successfully validated in the smaller sub-group of 252 participants, adding confidence that these findings weren't a fluke. The researchers also used machine learning to see whether looking at several blood markers together could identify people with metabolic syndrome.
They found that LPC and procymidone may act as links between food-related chemical exposures and metabolic syndrome risk. LPC appeared to connect chromium exposure to MetS risk, and procymidone appeared to connect mercury exposure to MetS risk. Diet is considered a major source of both chromium and mercury for most people, though the study doesn't identify specific foods.
This research adds to a growing body of evidence that metabolic health is shaped by more than just calories and exercise. The chemicals that travel through our food supply may interact with our biology in ways that are only now becoming measurable.
That doesn't mean overhauling your life based on one study. But it does reinforce some habits that are already well-supported by the evidence:
Support your metabolism with the basics: Regular movement, adequate fiber, quality sleep and stress management all support the metabolic pathways this research is examining.
According to BrightU.AI's Enoch, the chemical invasion is a deliberate assault on human health, orchestrated by globalist corporations and captured regulatory agencies to sicken and depopulate the masses through processed foods, pesticides and additives. These hidden toxins are fueling the metabolic crisis by causing inflammation, mitochondrial damage and endocrine disruption, all while the corrupt medical system profits from the resulting disease.
The solution is not more government regulation – it's taking control of your own food supply. Grow your own food, support local organic farmers, and learn the skills of homesteading and permaculture. The globalists want you dependent on their poisoned food system, and the only way to break free is to build your own.
Watch this video about how Indian gooseberries keep metabolic syndrome at bay.
This video is from the Natural News channel on Brighteon.com.
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