General Teen Who Ate Mostly Potato Chips And Fries Lost His Sight

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MMAPlaywright

First 100
First 100
Jan 18, 2015
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10,714
A 14-year-old boy goes to the doctor with complaints of tiredness. He's an extremely picky eater. (Think a daily diet of French fries, plus snacking on Pringles potato chips, white bread and some processed pork.) But overall, he appears OK. He's not overweight and takes no medications.

Tests show he has anemia and low levels of vitamin B12, so he's given B12 injections and diet advice. But a year later, he has begun to lose his vision. Then, by age 17, he's legally blind.

Turns out, the boy's highly limited daily diet — lacking in healthy foods, vitamins and minerals — had led to optic neuropathy. That's the conclusion of researchers from the University of Bristol in England, who have published a case study in the Annals of Internal Medicine.

"This case highlights the impact of diet on visual and physical health, and the fact that calorie intake and BMI are not reliable indicators of nutritional status," Dr. Denize Atan, the study's lead author and a consultant senior lecturer in Ophthalmology at Bristol Medical School, said in a statement.

Not everyone is convinced by the case study.

"It's intriguing," say Allen Taylor, the director of the Nutrition and Vision Laboratory at the Jean Mayer USDA Human Nutrition Research Center on Aging at Tufts. "But it's important to remember it's a study of only one case with very limited information in it," Taylor says.

Taylor says he'd like to know more about how the teen ended up with permanent vision loss, given that optic neuropathy is very uncommon and usually temporary.

But he says the case study could serve as a wake-up call to remind people of the importance of good nutrition.

"There is, absolutely, a link between poor diet and vision loss," Taylor explains. But, he says, usually people don't develop symptoms until much later in life.

He points to a study he and his collaborators published back in 2014, which found that poor-quality diets can increase the risk of age-related macular degeneration. This can lead to blurry vision and can make reading more difficult. It usually occurs after age 60.

"Conversely, the more one subscribes to a diet rich in fruits and veggies, whole grains, the less the risk for AMD," Taylor says.

People in Taylor's study who consumed plenty of vegetables, legumes, fruits, whole grains, tomatoes and seafood had a lower risk of developing AMD. On the other hand, people who consumed a diet rich in red meat, processed meat, high-fat dairy products, French fries and refined grains had a higher risk of developing the condition.

Taylor says it's important to note that the quality of the carbohydrates you eat really does seem to matter. (As we've reported, aim for "slow carbs.")

Consuming a lot of refined carbohydrates, including foods such as white bread, chips, crackers and sweets, is linked to a higher risk of developing AMD and some forms of cataracts. Taylor and his collaborators are trying to understand how refined carbohydrates may inflict damage on the cells within our eyes and bodies.

"If you look at the chemistry behind what's going on in the cells, you can actually see the vestiges of the carbohydrates in the cells," Taylor says.

"The carbohydrates end up damaging the proteins within the cells of the eyes," he says, so the proteins are no longer as functional as they might have been.

Taylor's findings are not a huge surprise, given what's known about diet and health overall.

Around the globe, poor diets are a leading contributor to premature death — even more than smoking — and in the U.S., an estimated 1,000 deaths per day from cardiovascular and metabolic diseases are linked to diet. So the idea that diet influences the health of eyes makes sense.

Bottom line: "Be sure to feed yourself and your loved ones a diet that's rich in fruits and vegetables ... and whole grains," Taylor says.

TL;DR: If you eat potato chips, you will go blind.
 

RaginCajun

The Reigning Undisputed Monsters Tournament Champ
Oct 25, 2015
36,980
93,893
Why was his diet so limited? Did the young man have some sort of mental issue that caused him to be so restrictive?
Teens now a days eat ass over pussy but won't eat a salad?
 

RaginCajun

The Reigning Undisputed Monsters Tournament Champ
Oct 25, 2015
36,980
93,893
Wrote a song about it. Like to hear it? Here it goes

He ate a lot of fries
Now he can't use his eyes

THANK YOU VERY MUCH!!!
Rated funny not for the kid losing his eyesight which is sad but for the "like to here it? Here it goes."
 

BeardOfKnowledge

The Most Consistent Motherfucker You Know
Jul 22, 2015
60,549
56,270
Did anyone here at 17 years old not know that a diet consisting of french fries and potato chips wasn't good for them?

Laying this entirely at the feet of the parents is up there with thinking that labels on cigarettes stop people from smoking.
 

Too swole to control

I’ll fight anyone on here except Sex Chicken
Oct 28, 2015
5,879
9,590
Did anyone here at 17 years old not know that a diet consisting of french fries and potato chips wasn't good for them?

Laying this entirely at the feet of the parents is up there with thinking that labels on cigarettes stop people from smoking.
I agree. I doubt the parents are blind. Also he had to have some warning signs he ignored.