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|  | Author: Peter J. D'Adamo Creator: Catherine Whitney Publisher: Riverhead Books
List Price: $27.00 Buy Used: $10.85 as of 11/22/2009 10:44 CST details You Save: $16.15 (60%)
New (38) Used (32) Collectible (1) from $10.85
Seller: cos4344 Rating: 35 reviews Sales Rank: 3133
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Pages: 576 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.5 x 1.4
ISBN: 1573229202 Dewey Decimal Number: 612.11825 EAN: 9781573229203 ASIN: 1573229202
Publication Date: January 8, 2002 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Cover has Wear. Clean Pages. Fast Shipping!!! Orders Tracked on items over $10.00 where available.
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 26-30 of 35
it was okay March 8, 2006 Emilio J. Santana III 8 out of 16 found this review helpful
I bought the book thinking that it would help me learn how to eat for my blood type but I find it very difficult to follow and difficult to read it. This is more like an index for health problems and if you are susseptible to them by what your blood type is.
Very helpful book for improving heatlh October 20, 2005 R. Alice Wells (Colorado) 18 out of 18 found this review helpful
I suffer from serious food allergies and found that Dr. D'Adamos books are super helpful for me. Most everything he writes that Blood type 0 shouldn't eat is something that I have found the hard way (thru expensive blood testing and skin tests) is something I shouldn't eat. Now if I could only find a way to keep following what he tells me to do.
I highly recommend his books, Alice
Blood type: Lose weight and gain weight September 26, 2005 V. L. W. Brown (Manassas, VA USA) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
While the book provides information on medical conditions and how to overcome them by knowing your blood type and eating appropriately, I felt it lacked a section on definitions for lay readers of this book. Also, I would have liked to see a more broad section on eating strategies for readers who need to gain weight based on their blood type.
Eat Right for Your Blood Type by Dr. D'Adamo November 8, 2003 Joseph S. Maresca (Bronxville, New York USA) 72 out of 81 found this review helpful
This is a top medical reference in the alternative medicinal area. The book discusses dietary implications based upon blood types. For instance, Type A is the agrarian which is comfortable with grains and livestock. Blood type B people require a balanced diet of meat and dairy. (B-Antigen) Type AB is the modern man with an inherited tolerance of AB with enhanced abilities to manufacture more antibodies. (A & B antigen) The blood type is key to the immune system. Blood type 0 persons have no antigens. (Anti-A and Anti-B antibodies) Type B people may have milk ; whereas, Type A people tend to have systems which agglutinate and reject it.The author mentions an Indican urine scale for bowel putrification; wherein, the liver and intestines do not metabolize proteins. Instead; they produce indols- toxic byproducts on the Indican Scale. Foods with toxic Indicans should be avoided. i.e. Bologna which magnifies nitrites Lactin activity inflames the intestines, causes bloating and slows food metabolism. Blood type O discourages the metabolism of animal protein. This type person needs lean and chemical - free meat, fish and chicken. Wheat gluten slows the metabolism and interferes with insulin efficiency. Kelp, seafood,liver, kale, spinach,brocolli and red meat are ideal for metabolism and weight loss/stabilization. Bacon, ham, pork, American cheese, cheddar and ice cream should be minimized. Soy may be utilized as a good alternate to the dairy group. Flax oil and olive oil are beneficial. Corn oil and peanut oil should be avoided. Type B persons have stronger immune systems and may eat meat, green veggies, eggs, liver, licorace tea and ginger. Type AB persons benefit from TOFU, dairy , green veggies and millet. Persons with sinusitis and Type B should avoid fenugreek. Type O persons should avoid alfalfa. Type B persons react badly to vaccines. Type A persons should avoid cayenne due to potential nausea. Type O and B should avoid aloe vera juice. This book contains a wealth of important dietary material. It should be read carefully. The contents should be placed in a daily diary for maximum benefit and systematic measurement of progress. The book is worth the price. I find the information content of this book nowhere else. For this reason alone, the book should be purchased and read carefully.
More scientifically oriented than Eat Right... October 23, 2003 Chris Bryson (Midwest US) 233 out of 236 found this review helpful
I admit it: I was suspicious of this diet. Before examining this book, I thought the diet sounded very "fad-like" (and I remain wholly unconvinced by the personality-trait correspondences which are NOT essential to the scientific basis of the diet, just a curiosity). I read negative reviews and their justifications. What I noticed was that most of these reviews sounded a lot like the criticisms leveled at the Atkins diet, a diet that does work for a lot of people (though not all--this book makes clear why) that have since been disproven by double-blind studies. A number noted that d'Adamo's theories weren't backed up by scientific research. Fair enough; this book cites double-blind studies and peer-reviewed research extensively, far more so than the Eat Right and Cook Right books. It also fine-tunes some of the earlier findings. This is ongoing research, something you just don't see in proponents of "fad" diets. D'Adamo has clearly been listing to his critics, and makes every attempt to clarify, fine-tune, and explain how all of this works.I picked this book--and the diet--up when I browsed it in the store and noted that the medical problems in my family charted almost exactly with the risk factors for blood type. (Blood type correlations with disease have actually been established in peer-reviewed medical journals for a long time, although they aren't much talked about.) I tried the diet. I'm about three weeks in. I've lost 10 pounds, my digestive problems are much improved, I feel more energetic, I don't crave sweets, and -- the most convincing thing for me, because I wasn't looking for it and therefore can't attribute it to the placebo effect -- the morning stiffness I've had for 30 years is gone. It takes at least a week for things to kick in--especially if one has increased intestinal permeability due to intestinal damage--but it does, and for many, myself included, the results are quite profound. I am not a scientist, nor am I claiming that d'Adamo has everything right. There are some typos in the book, although most misprints are corrected on the website (www.dadamo.com)--hard to find, but worth looking. This is ongoing research, however. D'Adamo also uses that site to update new findings on food compatibility. I think this diet could easily be used in conjunction with others appropriate to type. For instance, type O people will do well with Atkins as long as they cut out the wheat gluten and dairy; people with food allergies may have to limit intake of more foods than he lists. He suggests 70-80% compliance works for most people. Even the critics suggest that this diet isn't likely to harm anyone. I fully expect some version of this to be exonerated as fully as, if not more than, Atkins. In the meantime, this is a great resource, it's interesting reading even for the healthy, and it is more likely to engage a reader like myself who likes to see detailed scientific justification before jumping into a health plan.
Showing reviews 26-30 of 35
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