Sigma Nutrition Radio

Danny Lennon

Discussions about the science of nutrition, dietetics and health. The podcast that educates through nuanced conversations, exploring evidence and cultivating critical thinking. Hosted by Danny Lennon.

  1. 16 June

    #610: Rock, Paper, Salmon – Errors in Interpreting Food Substitution Models

    When considering the health impact of foods, it is important to consider "compared to what?". Increasing the amount of a certain food or nutrient in the diet, typically implies a displacement of another. While comparisons are more obvious in trials, in epidemiology food substitution models can be useful to help us determine the health effects of increasing/decreasing intake of a food, food group or nutrient. However, these models are often misinterpreted and miscommunicated as if they are a game of "rock, paper, scissors", where one food beats another, and the losing food must be removed from the diet or considered harmful to health. In this episode we discuss the problem of treating substitution analyses as food-ranking contests, rather than context-dependent comparisons shaped by the comparator, the unit of substitution, the baseline diet, and the outcome being studied. Timestamps: [01:30] Misuse of "compared to what?" [06:39] What substitution models do [10:43] Specified vs unspecified substitution [16:57] Why the units used matter [26:45] Example: organic vs conventional produce [31:22] When substitutions are useful [34:35] If legumes beat fish, does that mean fish intake should be zero? [44:31] Naive vs bias-adjusted: artificial sweeteners case study [49:14] Checklist: how to interpret food substitution analyses Links: Go to episode page (all study references linked) Join the Sigma newsletter for free Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium Subscribe to Alinea Nutrition Education Hub Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy course Episode #472: Compared To What? Episode #589: Causal Inference in Nutrition Science – Daniel Ibsen, PhD

    57 min
  2. 9 June

    #609: Unprocessed Red Meat & Cancer Risk

    Unprocessed red meat and cancer risk remains one of the most debated topics in nutrition science, partly because the evidence is often presented in overly simplistic terms. The key question is not whether to adopt a vague "balanced" position on red meat, but whether the evidence clearly identifies intake levels at which colorectal cancer risk increases and whether controlled human trials support plausible mechanisms for that risk. A second issue is whether claims that fibre, vegetables, or an otherwise "healthy diet" can neutralise high red meat intake are actually supported by the mechanistic evidence, or whether they overstate what dietary context can plausibly offset. In this episode, Danny and Alan examine the evidence base by moving beyond the usual epidemiology-only debate. They discuss why regional intake patterns and dose thresholds matter, then explore controlled human feeding studies showing how higher red meat intake can increase endogenous N-nitroso compound formation, faecal water genotoxicity, and other mechanistic biomarkers linked to colorectal carcinogenesis. Timestamps: [01:11] Defining the exposure and outcome [02:34] Carcinogen labels explained [07:54] Epidemiology and dose thresholds [14:04] Interpreting null findings [19:09] Bingham 1996 nitroso study [25:20] Hughes dose response trial [33:49] Cross 2003 heme iron mechanism [42:55] Fecal water genotoxicity [55:42] Tumor mutational signatures [59:38] What we can conclude now [01:04:10] Practical intake recommendations [01:08:41] Key ideas segment (premium-only) Links: Go to episode page (includes links to studies mentioned) Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium Join the Sigma newsletter for free Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy course

    1hr 10min
  3. 2 June

    #608: Performance Nutrition in Elite Rugby – James Morehen, PhD

    Performance nutrition in elite sport is often discussed in terms of meal plans, supplements, and macronutrient targets. However, effective practice in professional environments depends just as much on education, trust, communication, and the ability to translate scientific principles into decisions athletes can act on under real-world constraints. In this episode, Dr James Morehen discusses his work across elite rugby, football, and combat sports, with particular attention to the demands of professional rugby. The conversation explores how practitioners support athletes in a high-impact collision sport, including fuelling for training and match play, managing body composition without reducing athletes to arbitrary numbers, addressing recovery from muscle damage and injury, and developing practical systems around game-day nutrition. The episode also provides insight into the realities of building a career in performance nutrition, including the importance of applied experience, interdisciplinary collaboration, and learning how to coach athletes rather than simply prescribe to them. Timestamps: [03:31] Interview starts [10:26] Educating athletes on nutrition [13:55] Breaking into elite sport [26:26] Physiological demands of rugby [30:53] Energy needs and timing [38:28] Body composition measurements: utility? [46:16] Game day fuelling strategy [01:07:09] Key ideas (premium-only) Links: Go to episode page Join the Sigma newsletter for free Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy course James' Instagram: @morehenperformance James' LinkedIn: Dr. James Morehen Related episodes: #573: A Philosophy of Elite Performance Nutrition – Daniel Davey #286: Fuelling Elite Sport – James Morton, PhD #506: Sports Nutrition: Translating Research to Practice – Andreas Kasper, PhD

    1hr 8min
  4. 19 May

    #606: Practical Nutrition Strategies for Fat Loss – Luke Hanna

    Body composition goals, particularly bodyfat loss, are among the most common reasons people seek support from a nutritionist or health and fitness professional. While the principles are well established, the challenge is helping individuals apply them consistently in real-world conditions. Many people struggle due to hunger, unrealistic expectations, emotional eating, inconsistent routines, or overly restrictive dieting approaches. These challenges can make fat loss difficult to sustain, even when someone understands what they "should" be doing. In this episode,  Luke Hanna discusses practical strategies for improving body composition, including food diaries, energy-density manipulation, preloads, mindful eating, and realistic goal-setting. The discussion emphasizes identifying individual barriers, collaborating with clients, and building repeatable behaviours that support both fat loss and long-term maintenance. Luke Hanna holds a Master's degree in Obesity and Clinical Nutrition from University College London and a degree in Sport and Exercise Science from the University of Portsmouth. He currently works as a nutrition coach and personal trainer. Timestamps: [03:15] Interview [05:39] Client assessment basics [11:59] Alternatives to tracking [13:57] Volume eating [18:56] Preloads before meals [22:25] Snacking and hunger types [26:44] Habits and food environment [30:40] Managing expectations [33:51] Transition to maintenance [39:09] Key ideas (premium-only) Links: Go to episode page (with resources) Join the Sigma newsletter for free Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium Instagram: @lukehannanutrition

    41 min
  5. 12 May

    #605: Fasting, Nutrient Timing & CGMs: Interpreting the Evidence – Prof. James Betts

    Fasting, nutrient timing, chrono-nutrition, and continuous glucose monitoring are all topics that have generated substantial interest, but they are also areas where exaggerated claims can easily outpace the underlying evidence. In many cases, tentative hypotheses are presented as if they were already well-established conclusions, despite the fact that the research base is often more mixed and context-dependent than popular narratives imply. It is one thing for an idea to appear biologically coherent. It is another for that idea to translate into meaningful, reliable effects in real-world interventions. In this episode, Professor James Betts discusses how to think clearly about these topics, why common errors in interpretation can lead to overstated conclusions, and what is required to properly evaluate whether an observed effect reflects a true intervention effect rather than baseline differences, inappropriate comparisons, within-group changes, or mechanistic signals being mistaken for meaningful health outcomes. Timestamps: [04:24] Background into Prof. Betts' research [07:28] Evidence in fasting research over past 5-6 years [10:15] Hype vs evidence in intermittent fasting [16:44] Spotting spin in study conclusions [17:31] Common statistical red flags [24:45] Methods matter in fasting trials [31:10] Exercise nutrient timing [38:32] CGMs what they measure, misuse and patterns [53:59] Key ideas (premium-only)   Links: Go to episode page & resources (study links, bio, etc.) Join the Sigma newsletter for free Subscribe to Sigma Nutrition Premium Enroll in the next cohort of our Applied Nutrition Literacy course

    56 min

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4.8
out of 5
107 Ratings

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Discussions about the science of nutrition, dietetics and health. The podcast that educates through nuanced conversations, exploring evidence and cultivating critical thinking. Hosted by Danny Lennon.

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