Glad to be of assistance, Tyler and aLptHW4k4y. I'll take it a step further and burn the coffin with this:
There is boatloads of research suggestive of carnitine as a beneficial nutrient (see The Carnitine Miracle by Robert Crayhon) and red meat as a beneficial food (
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10426698d - women who ate more red meat had lower rates of heart disease). Carnitine is required to transport fatty acids to the mitochondria for the breakdown of fats to generate metabolic energy. Heck, plenty of people even take carnitine capsules as a healthy supplement. Why would such a crucial part of our natural functioning be highly toxic and why would any raw Paleo dieter who thinks there may be a problem with cooked red meat suspect carnitine as the main culprit instead of say nitrosamines or AGEs, based on this and other studies?
Foods rich in boron--"almonds, walnuts, avocados, broccoli, potatoes, pears, prunes, honey, oranges, onions, chick peas, carrots, beans, bananas, red grapes, red apples and raisins" (
http://www.livestrong.com/article/242015-foods-high-in-boron-vitamins/#ixzz2Q1oG7zuM)--also promote carnitine production:
"Throughout an experimental period of 28 days, the mineral boron decreased leptin, insulin, and glucose levels, while increasing levels of both T3 hormone and carnitine in the blood." http://hairevo.com/shop/content/16-what-is-fruitex-b-calcium-fructoborate
Does this mean that those who take the carnitine/tmao study seriously are going to minimize or stop eating these foods too?
And this from the link that Busgrw shared is quite interesting:
TMAO itself may not be “all bad.” It’s an osmolyte – a protein stabilizer. It’s even been used to prevent cataract formation in mammalian eye lenses.
Read more: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/does-red-meat-clog-your-arteries-after-all/#ixzz2Q6gDLfWY
And there's this from a study that Mark Sisson lined to: "Of 46 different foods investigated, only fish and other sea-products gave rise to significant increases in urinary trimethylamine and N-oxide [TMAO]." So if this study is any indication, then for anyone who is concerned about TMAO from animal foods, it looks like fish would be the prime concern, rather than red meat.
Of course, someone can probably come up with some other study that exonerates fish and turns the implication back onto red meat or whatever other food they fear. I try not to get too hyped up about any single study. As Tyler and others have pointed out, something like 80% or more that were analyzed by an objective third party were found to be wrong.