Put Your Heart in Your Mouth — Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride

Put Your Heart in Your Mouth

Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride  ·  Medinform Publishing  ·  2007 (revised edition)


What coronary heart disease actually is, what causes it, and how to prevent and reverse it

Conventional medicine does not know the cause of atherosclerosis — and does not claim to. This book sets out to fill that gap: explaining what atherosclerosis is, why the diet-heart hypothesis that has driven nutritional policy for fifty years is wrong, and what the evidence shows about the real drivers of arterial damage and heart disease.

The core argument. Coronary heart disease is caused by atherosclerosis — a disease of the arterial wall that leads to progressive narrowing and obstruction of the arteries. Dr Campbell-McBride argues that the standard medical framework for understanding and treating this condition is built on a false foundation, and that the dietary guidance derived from it has caused — not prevented — the epidemic of cardiovascular disease that has characterised the last half century.

The Diet-Heart Hypothesis — and its collapse. The Diet-Heart Hypothesis — the idea that dietary saturated fat, butter, eggs, meat, and cholesterol cause heart disease — was proposed by Ancel Keys in 1953. It took decades for the scientific literature to dismantle it, but the hypothesis had already given rise to a powerful commercial and political machine with a vested interest in promoting anti-fat and anti-cholesterol messaging. Campbell-McBride cites 32 studies that directly challenge the hypothesis, including consistent findings that blood cholesterol cannot meaningfully be reduced through dietary restriction alone — and that when it is reduced pharmacologically, cardiovascular outcomes do not improve as predicted.

Cholesterol reframed. One of the book's central arguments is that cholesterol is not a villain but a vital structural and functional molecule. The body produces cholesterol precisely because it needs it — if dietary intake falls, endogenous production rises to compensate. Cholesterol plays essential roles in brain and nervous system function, hormone and bile production, adrenal health, and cellular membrane integrity. The body even recycles cholesterol from the large intestine. The idea that the body produces large quantities of a substance that kills it is, Campbell-McBride argues, biologically implausible on its face.

The real question is not how much cholesterol is circulating — it is why it is depositing. Cholesterol is found at the site of arterial damage because it is part of the repair mechanism, not the cause of the damage. Blaming cholesterol for atherosclerosis is like blaming the ambulance for the accident.

The real culprit: inflammation. Heart disease, in Campbell-McBride's analysis, is fundamentally an inflammatory condition. Arterial damage begins with chronic low-grade inflammation of the endothelium — the delicate inner lining of blood vessels. Once the endothelium is damaged, the repair process begins: cholesterol, fibrinogen, and other materials are deposited to patch the injury. Repeated damage and repair over years and decades produces the plaques that characterise atherosclerosis. The question that matters is therefore: what is causing the endothelial inflammation in the first place? Her answer points firmly to processed vegetable oils, refined carbohydrates, sugar, and the chemical load of modern food production — not animal fats.

Processed vegetable oils — a specific indictment. Industrially produced vegetable oils (sunflower, corn, soybean, rapeseed, margarine) undergo hydrogenation and high-temperature processing that generates trans fats and oxidised lipids. These are directly pro-inflammatory and endothelially damaging. Campbell-McBride argues that the replacement of traditional animal fats with these oils — driven by the Diet-Heart Hypothesis — was one of the most consequential dietary errors of the 20th century, and that the resulting increase in oxidised fats in the diet directly contributed to the cardiovascular disease epidemic the hypothesis claimed to prevent.


The Gut Connection


Why cardiovascular disease and gut health share the same upstream cause

Approximately 85% of the body's immune system resides in the gut wall. The composition of the gut microbiome determines the character of the immune response — and therefore the background level of systemic inflammation that either protects or damages the arterial endothelium. This connection between gut health and cardiovascular risk is one of the book's most significant contributions.

How the Gut Drives Cardiovascular Risk

Gut Dysbiosis An imbalanced gut microbiome — dominated by pathogenic and sugar-fermenting species — produces harmful metabolites, sustains chronic inflammation, and degrades the protective mucus layer of the gut wall. This dysbiotic state is the starting point for the cascade that leads to systemic inflammation and arterial damage.
Intestinal Permeability When the gut wall becomes permeable — tight junctions loosened by dysbiosis, grain proteins, or inflammatory damage — bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from gram-negative bacteria enters systemic circulation. LPS is a potent endotoxin and one of the most powerful known triggers of endothelial inflammation, the same inflammation that initiates atherosclerosis.
Systemic Inflammation Chronic circulating LPS activates NF-κB signalling, raises inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6, CRP), and directly damages the arterial endothelium. This is the missing link between gut dysfunction and cardiovascular disease — and it explains why conditions that seem unrelated to the heart (autoimmune disorders, neurological conditions, metabolic syndrome) so often co-occur with elevated cardiovascular risk.
The GAPS Connection The GAPS protocol — developed in Dr Campbell-McBride's earlier book Gut and Psychology Syndrome — is designed to repair tight junctions, restore microbiome balance, and eliminate gut dysbiosis. In doing so, it addresses the same upstream cause that drives cardiovascular disease: the chronic endotoxaemia and systemic inflammation that damage the arterial wall over years and decades.

Addressing Common Objections


The questions most frequently raised — and the evidence that answers them

The Objection The Evidence-Based Response
"Statins reduce cholesterol and reduce heart attacks — doesn't that prove cholesterol causes heart disease?" Statins have anti-inflammatory properties independent of their cholesterol-lowering effect. The cardiovascular benefit of statins — where it exists — is now attributed primarily to their pleiotropic anti-inflammatory action, not to cholesterol reduction per se. Their benefit is also modest in absolute terms: the number needed to treat (NNT) in primary prevention is typically 200–300 over five years.
"Saturated fat raises LDL — and high LDL causes heart disease." The LDL-causation hypothesis depends on LDL particle type, not total LDL. Saturated fat primarily raises large buoyant LDL particles — which are not associated with cardiovascular risk. Small dense LDL — the genuinely atherogenic phenotype — is raised by refined carbohydrates and sugar, not by saturated fat. Dietary guidelines that conflated these fractions under 'LDL cholesterol' obscured this distinction for decades.
"Traditional diets were high in grains and low in fat — and those populations had low heart disease rates." Traditional grain-consuming populations also consumed large quantities of fermented foods, non-starchy vegetables, and unprocessed animal products — and had dramatically lower exposure to refined sugar, industrial seed oils, and chemical food additives. It is the whole dietary pattern that determines cardiovascular risk, not any single macronutrient in isolation.
"Reducing saturated fat and eating more plant oils is still standard NHS guidance." Guidelines lag evidence by an average of 17 years (Institute of Medicine). The evidence base for the low-fat dietary guideline has been systematically reanalysed since the 1990s, with multiple meta-analyses — including the Women's Health Initiative (n=49,000) — finding no significant reduction in cardiovascular events from low-fat dietary interventions.
The commercial and institutional infrastructure built around the Diet-Heart Hypothesis — the food industry, the pharmaceutical industry, and the guidelines bodies — has a structural interest in its survival. Understanding this context is essential to reading the evidence critically.

Practical Guidance from the Book


What Dr Campbell-McBride recommends — and why

Eat animal fats, not industrial vegetable oils
Butter, ghee, lard, tallow, and cold-pressed olive oil are stable, non-inflammatory, and have been part of the human diet for millennia. Industrial seed oils (sunflower, corn, soybean, rapeseed, margarine) are pro-inflammatory, oxidise readily at cooking temperatures, and are a primary driver of the endothelial inflammation that initiates atherosclerosis. This is the single most consequential dietary change for cardiovascular health.
Remove processed foods and refined carbohydrates
Processed foods carry refined sugars, industrial seed oils, chemical additives, and artificial flavourings — all of which contribute to systemic inflammation and gut dysbiosis. Refined carbohydrates drive the small dense LDL pattern and raise triglycerides — two of the most reliable markers of genuine cardiovascular risk. Removing them removes a primary driver of arterial damage.
Repair the gut — address the upstream cause
The GAPS dietary protocol — bone broths, fermented foods, properly prepared animal proteins, non-starchy vegetables — is designed to heal the gut wall, restore microbiome balance, and reduce the LPS endotoxaemia that drives systemic inflammation. Gut repair is not ancillary to cardiovascular health: it addresses the same inflammatory root cause. This book includes recipes and practical guidance for implementing these changes.
Reduce environmental toxin load
Household chemicals, pesticide residues, plastics, and synthetic fragrances contribute to the body's overall toxic and inflammatory burden. Campbell-McBride includes guidance on reducing exposure to these sources — recognising that dietary change alone does not address the full chemical environment that stresses the gut wall and the endothelium.
A note on medication
Anyone on long-term cardiovascular medication — statins, antihypertensives, anticoagulants — should discuss any significant dietary change with their prescribing doctor before making it. The dietary changes described in this book can produce measurable changes in blood pressure, lipids, and blood glucose relatively quickly, which may affect medication dosing requirements.

This document is for educational purposes only. This is a summary of Dr Natasha Campbell-McBride's book, available from Amazon (2007, revised edition). It does not constitute medical advice.

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