Diet - Eggs or no eggs?
I am just beginning ADT ( Gleason 7 4+3 T2a ) and see the oncologist tomorrow here in France to set out the RT plan. No dietary advice so far from eg urologist and guessing that tomorrow will only be a practical regime for the duration of the RT. Respected sources constantly recommend a plant-based diet ( already on this ) with little or no dairy products. However, the court seems to be out in the matter of eggs. This concerns me, since B12 is clearly important on all fronts and calcium is clearly an issue with risk of bone thinning whilst on ADT.
Has anyone here received advice for or against please?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Prostate Cancer Support Group.
Connect

@surftohealth88 Take it easy on those nature walks, Surfer! Just look cute, pose - and point at things…people love that.
Many thanks for thinking about my wife - she is not used to being immobilized and in fact, worked out on the elliptical machine for over an hour the day before her surgery.
Enjoy your mountain adventure and Happy Thanksgiving! Best,
Phil
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 Reaction@northoftheborder Absolutely! Roasting brings out the sweetness and tamps down the sulfur taste.
Don’t know if this affects the chemical compounds within, but it sure tastes good!
Phil
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 ReactionFollowing this for kicks. I hope this isn't insulting to anyone, I assure you that's not the intent.
I've given up for the most part on these types of food studies. It seems it all depends on who is doing them, what hypothesis they are trying to prove or disprove, who is paying for them, etc., etc., etc.. Had a doc tell my I was pre-hypertensive while walking into his office on a painful broken toe. My sister, an NP tells me he's correct, I say let's look at the study, paid for by the company that makes the BP meds. Go figure. Heal up and test again, 120/70.
"Moderation in all things, Mary Ellen… especially in moderation" (identify the reference? anyone)
I do what seems to work for me. I'm old enough and my body is doing what it should, meaning generally healthy, you've probably had enough blood tests to see when you start to get "out of whack" and and adjust. I've had docs find a few things over the years that I simply adjusted with diet and excercise, the numbers get better and there I was. That's pretty much the experiment I'll listen to. I eat fairly healthy (chicken/fish and veggies most of the time) but I'm all about the occaisional steak or french fry or two once in a great while.
Obviously if you have other health issues there's a lot more to the equation.
Eggs? don't get me started. They were a staple for YEARS, then suddenly they were the devil, then they went to super food status, now they are carcinogenic. I grew up eating eggs (cooked in bacon grease) almost every day. Now, 1-3 a week, maybe. I generally make omelets out of one egg and the rest egg whites. Is this why I got PCa? Maybe...who knows.
My mantra has become "Get you blood tests, listen to your body adjust, rinse and repeat."
You know what is really unhealthy? STRESS.......
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
10 Reactions@web265 wrote ❝You know what is really unhealthy? STRESS.......❞
Very true. Ironically, as I wrote earlier, people micromanaging their diets and chasing every new (or not so new) study that shows some tiny, likely accidental correlation between some food and cancer are trying to *reduce* their stress by exercising control over what's happening, but since that control is mostly illusory, it rarely accomplishes that.
The interesting thing is that the majority of those studies seem to show a small statistical correlation between certain foods and getting cancer; there are some, but far fewer, that show a correlation between certain foods and progression once you already have cancer.
Even if it turns out to be true true that eating food X raises your risk of getting cancer Y by n%, that doesn't mean that stopping the food after you have cancer will slow or reverse it: that's an entirely separate line of research, because cancer can keep going on its own. You see that distinction ignored quite a bit.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions@surftohealth88
If I had to eat broccoli without cooking it, I would not eat it. My wife gets Trader Joe’s, organic broccoli florets, Just the tops and they’re not bad, baked. I’m not real happy about eating some vegetables. Last night I had brussels sprouts, A vegetable, whose taste I really don’t like. Found a recipe with a bunch of seasoning and mushrooms that makes it almost taste good. Another vegetable, I would not even consider eating without cooking, but my wife made it taste good enough to eat.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions@jeffmarc Try marinating the Brussel sprouts in balsamic vinegar glaze (maybe with a bit of garlic and olive oil) and then baking them until the edges of the leaves start to crisp. It just might change your mind.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 ReactionsNice post Phil. Your mother sounds wonderful. I am not medically trained, but the older I get the more I believe, it's worth trying to improve our health outcomes, but not getting too obsessed because genetics are very powerful. Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions@stu6060 Absolutely Stu, we can’t expect the docs to do all the work…we need to give them the best material to work with and that starts with us, right?
Hope you’re still in a good place medically. I think you have some weather bearing down on your area but Have a great Turkey Day and stay safe! Best,
Phil
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 ReactionAs I understand the egg thing and ChatGPT has just confirmed the suspicion centers on choline (abundant in egg yolks). Tumors may metabolize choline differently, and elevated serum choline has been linked to aggressive disease in some studies. They have seen heavy egg consumption greater than 5 per week as tied to higher mortality. However, they do not see a link with a smaller number of eggs per week in the context of the Mediterranean diet. Prior to my dx I consumed 4-6 eggs per week which I put in an egg and cheese, and ham omelet. Based on that research, and my chosen level of risk avoidance, I now eat 1 egg per week in an omelet, which I also include a generous amount of egg white (which has no choline). I then include green peppers and mushrooms with some tomato sauce. I like them. Between diet and exericse I view exercise as the clear standout but I am now off red beef and dairy products. I use almond milk in my breakfast cereal and it actually is an improvement.
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions@web265 Your post really hits home this morning. Just as I snapped the lid down on my Keurig coffee machine, after inserting a plastic pod of Starbuck’s Dark French Roast, my subconscious mind screamed ‘Micro-plastics”!!!
It took a few seconds but I breathed a sigh of relief when I remembered that I would be dead before they became an issue!😝
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
2 Reactions