Your Nutritional Education Site
Beating Heart & Artery Disease
How far developed is your heart and artery disease?
Seriously, you probably have it to one degree or another. Young men's cadavers from the Korean and Vietnam wars autopsied showed significant plaque in the arteries. So, a 20-year-old can have significant plaque after a young life on the standard American diet.
In 1911, trans fatty acids were created when vegetable oils were turned into shortening and margarine. Margarine averages 31% trans fatty acids. Hydrogenation or partial hydrogenation creates the mass amount of these trans fatty acids. Cancer, by the way, has gone from 1 in 25 to 1 in 4 people since 1911.
High heat and refining of oils also produce trans fats. There are no benefits, except to manufacturers. In Fats that Heal, Fats that Kill by Udo Erasmus, thirteen negative effects are noted for trans fats. Avoid trans fats in foods for better heart and artery health.
Cholesterol and high blood pressure are often linked to cardio-vascular health, especially by drug companies selling cholesterol and blood pressure lowering drugs. While changing your diet for the better is great for health; this change alone does not always lower your cholesterol or lower your blood pressure sufficiently in a short enough time or at all. Specialized supplements will change your cholesterol and other blood test markers in a timely fashion. High blood pressure can be brought down with better diet, specialized supplements and weight loss.
Recently, I have been reading a book by a "renegade" MD on the dangers of high blood pressure medications. She also gives numerous supplement and diet suggestions.
Cardiovascular disease is the most prevalent disease and killer in America. So, not surprisingly, the condition we most often treat is cardiovascular conditions from high blood pressure to mitral valve prolapse, from weak heart to arteriosclerosis.
There are more supplements for cardiovascular conditions than for anything else. These supplements also address other aspects of health. Standard Process, alone, carries more than thirty cardiovascular supplements. Cardio-Plus, Vasculin and Organically Bound Minerals are three of the key supplements.
I will discuss these three supplements and what they do in the following article.
Sincerely,
Dr. Mike Spearman
Los Angeles, CA. 90029
(323) 663-1066
email: drmikess@yahoo.com
www.spearmanbetterhealth.com
Antidepressants not So Effective
A study conducted by neuropsychologists at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and published in the April'11 issue of the Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology really questions the effectiveness of the popular antidepressant, Celexa, a serotonin reuptake inhibitor. The study analyzed data from 2,876 patients on antidepressants for 12 weeks and data taken from the six year STAR*D study, the largest study ever on major depression. Researchers found that 71% of the study participants still experienced sadness, 70% continued to have trouble concentrating and 79% suffered from insomnia. Study researcher, Shawn McClintock, described the findings as "eye opening," and suggests doctors consider nonmedical means, such as more exercise and better sleep hygiene, to help reduce symptoms of depression.
This study comes after a slew of lawsuits already questioning the efficacy of anti-depressants. Forest Laboratories, the developer of Celexa, was recently sued for negligence, fraud and failure to warn in regard to the increased risk of suicide associated with teens on Celexa. In 2010, Forest paid out close to 313 million dollars as part of a settlement for illegally marketing the drug to children. Other lawsuits are continually being filed against Pfizer and GlaxoSmithKline for failing to warn about the potential birth defects caused by SSRIs, including Paxil and Zoloft.
Suggestion for depression: It has been shown in trials that eating trans fats can lead to depression, what the body needs is essential fatty acids. Fish oil is a good source ot the Omega 3 needed. Read more about Fish oil here http://www.mcvitamins.com/WSN/fish-oil-omega-3.htm
Not a Single Death from Taking Vitamins – Virtually None – Over the Past 27 Years!
The latest federal data show that more than half of U.S. adults use dietary supplements, mostly multivitamins, despite a constant stream of warnings in the media about the supposed dangers of vitamins and supplements, supported with calls for increased regulatory oversight of the supplement industry.
Now an in-depth analysis of The American Association of Poison Control Centers (AAPCC) annual reports indicates that there have, in fact, been no deaths whatsoever from vitamins – none at all – in the 27 years that such reports have been available.
Over a twenty-seven year period, vitamin supplements have been alleged to have caused the deaths of a total of eleven people in the United States, according to the following The American Association of Poison Control Centers data:
2009: 0
2008: 0
2007: 0
2006: 1
2005: 0
2004: 2
2003: 2
2002: 1
2001: 0
2000: 0
1999: 0
1998: 0
1997: 0
1996: 0
1995: 0
1994: 0
1993: 1
1992: 0
1991: 2
1990: 1
1989: 0
1988: 0
1987: 1
1986: 0
1985: 0
1984: 0
1983: 0
Even if these figures are taken as correct, and even if they include intentional and accidental misuse, the number of alleged vitamin fatalities is strikingly low, averaging less than one death per year for over two and a half decades. In 19 of those 27 years, AAPCC reports that there was not one single death due to vitamins. [1]
Still, the Orthomolecular Medicine News Service Editorial Board was curious: Did eleven people really die from vitamins? And if so, how?
Vitamins Not THE Cause of Death
In determining cause of death, AAPCC uses a four-point scale called Relative Contribution to Fatality (RCF). A rating of 1 means "Undoubtedly Responsible"; 2 means "Probably Responsible"; 3 means "Contributory"; and 4 means "Probably Not Responsible."
In examining poison control data for the year 2006, listing one vitamin death, it was seen that the vitamin's Relative Contribution to Fatality (RCF) was a 4. Since a score of "4" means "Probably Not Responsible," it quite negates the claim that a person died from a vitamin in 2006.
Vitamins Not A Cause of Death
In the other seven years reporting one or more of the remaining ten alleged vitamin fatalities, studying the AAPCC reports reveals an absence of any RCF rating for vitamins in any of those years. If there is no Relative Contribution to Fatality at all, then the substance did not contribute to death at all.
Furthermore, in each of those remaining seven years, there is no substantiation provided to demonstrate that any vitamin was a cause of death.
If there is insufficient information about the cause of death to make a clear-cut declaration of cause, then subsequent assertions that vitamins cause deaths are not evidence-based. Although vitamin supplements have often been blamed for causing fatalities, there is no evidence to back up this allegation.
Source: The peer-reviewed Orthomolecular Medicine News Service is a non-profit and non-commercial informational resource.
Orthomolecular medicine uses safe, effective nutritional therapy to fight illness. For more information:
http://www.orthomolecular.org
Improving Your Health By Naturally
Increasing Enzymes in Your Body
You've probably heard of enzymes, and you probably already know they are important for your digestion. But you may not be aware of just how necessary enzymes are to every cell in your body—not just for digestion but for ALL your body’s processes.
Enzymes are composed of amino acids and are secreted by your body to help stimulate functions that would normally not occur at normal body temperatures. They literally make magic happen and are absolutely vital to your life.
More than 3,000 different enzymes have been identified. Each enzyme has a different function—like 3,000 specialized keys cut to fit 3,000 different locks. In this example, the locks are biochemical reactions.
Enzymes
drive biological processes necessary for your body to build raw
materials, circulate nutrients, eliminate unwanted chemicals, and many
other biochemical processes that go on.
For starters, here are just some of the activities in your body
requiring enzymes:
Energy production
Absorption of oxygen
Fighting infections and healing wounds
Reducing inflammation
Getting nutrients into your cells
Carrying away toxic wastes
Breaking down fats in your blood, regulating cholesterol and
triglyceride levels
Dissolving blood clots
Proper hormone regulation
Slowing the aging process
But
enzymes don't work alone. Enzymes rely on other elements to accomplish
their tasks, such as certain vitamins and minerals. These elements are
called "coenzymes."
You are probably already familiar with one of these—coenzyme Q10. CoQ10 is found in the mitochondria (power centers) of your cells where it is involved in making ATP, every cell's principal energy source. Another example is magnesium, which participates in over 300 enzyme reactions.
Enzyme Basics
There
are three basic categories of enzymes:
Digestive
Metabolic
Food based
Digestive
enzymes, as their name implies, help you break down food into smaller
parts that can be absorbed, transported and utilized by every cell in
your body. Digestive enzymes are extra-cellular—meaning, they
are found outside your cells.
Metabolic enzymes are intra-cellular—meaning, inside your cells, where they help the cell carry out a variety of functions related to its reproduction and replenishment.
Your pancreas produces most of these digestive and metabolic enzymes. Fortunately, you get (or should be getting) many enzymes from the foods you consume—particularly, raw foods. These directly help with your digestive process.
The more raw foods you eat, the lower the burden on your body to produce the enzymes it needs, not only for digestion, but for practically everything. Whatever enzymes are not used up in digestion are then available to help with other important physiological processes.
Your Digestive System
There are eight primary digestive enzymes, each designed to help break down different foods:
Protease:
Digesting protein
Amylase: Digesting carbohydrates
Lipase: Digesting fats
Cellulase: Breaking down fiber
Maltase: Converting complex sugars from grains into glucose
Lactase: Digesting milk sugar (lactose) in dairy products
Phytase: Helps with overall digestion, especially in producing the B
vitamins
90 percent of your digestion and absorption takes place in your small intestine. From here, the micronutrients are absorbed into your bloodstream through the walls of your intestines. But what happens when this process goes awry?
Enzyme Deficiency
Insufficient
enzyme production is at the root of much "tummy trouble" in
our country.
It is a sad fact that 90 percent of the food Americans buy is processed food. Diets heavy in cooked, processed, and sugary foods, combined with overuse of pharmaceutical drugs such as antibiotics, deplete your body's ability to make enzymes.
Heating your food above 116 degrees F makes most enzymes inactive.
This is one of the reasons it's so important to eat your food raw. Raw foods are enzyme-rich, and consuming them decreases your body's burden to produce its own enzymes. The more food that you can eat raw, the better. Ideally, you should get 75 percent of your digestive enzymes from your food.
In
addition to heat, different enzymes work in different parts of your
digestive tract, based on the acidity or alkalinity each enzyme needs in
order to function. Enzyme deficiency results in poor digestion and poor
nutrient absorption.
This creates a variety of gastrointestinal symptoms, including:
Constipation
Bloating
Cramping
Flatulence and belching
Heartburn and acid reflux
Chronic mal-absorption can lead to a variety of illnesses. If your body doesn't have the basic nutritional building blocks it needs, your health and ability to recover from illness will be compromised.
Besides
breaking down food, enzymes (particularly the proteases) can help with
gut healing, controlling pathogens, and immune support. Your
immune system begins in your gut—and if you have enzyme and
digestive issues, chances are your immune system isn't functioning as
well as it should be. Research has shown that your natural enzyme
production starts to decline by the time you're about 20.
The
Metabolic Enzymes
Let's
take a look at another type of enzymatic activity—your metabolic
enzymes. Metabolic enzymes are intimately involved with running your
circulatory, lymphatic, cardiac, neurologic, endocrine, renal, hepatic,
and reproductive systems, and maintaining your skin, bones, joints,
muscles and other tissues.
Every one of your 10 trillion cells depends on these enzymes and their ability to catalyze energy production. As I said before, each of these enzymes is highly specialized as a function of its particular molecular structure.
One of the most important functions of metabolic enzymes happens in your blood. We know that bacteria, fungi, and parasites are comprised of protein, as is the shell encompassing viruses. Enzymes in your blood—primarily proteases (proteolytic enzymes)—serve to break down protein-based foreign bodies, effectively cleansing your blood.
As blood cleansers, these enzymes combat chronic inflammation, which left unchecked can lead to everything from autoimmune diseases, to cardiovascular disease and even cancer. Enzymes reduce inflammation in your body by:
Breaking
down foreign proteins in the blood that cause inflammation and
facilitating their removal via your blood stream and lymphatic system
Removing
“fibrin,” a clotting material that can prolong inflammation
Reducing
edema in the inflamed regions
It follows, then, that any disease caused by inflammation—which is practically every chronic disease we face today—can be benefited by increased levels of functional enzymes in your blood. Although taking an enzyme supplement may be helpful, NO manufactured product can duplicate the positive effects of a nutrient-rich diet.
Boosting Your Enzyme Levels Naturally
There
are four ways to naturally increase your enzyme levels:
Increase your intake of raw, living foods
Eat
fewer calories
Chew
your food thoroughly
Avoid
chewing gum
The very best way to get enzymes into your body is by consuming at least
75 percent of your foods raw. For many of you, you'll have to work
toward this goal gradually.
While all raw foods contain enzymes, the most powerful enzyme-rich foods are those that are sprouted (seeds and legumes). Sprouting increases the enzyme content in these foods tremendously. Besides sprouts, other enzyme-rich foods include:
Papaya,
pineapple, mango, kiwi, and grapes
Avocado
Raw honey
Bee pollen
Extra virgin olive oil and coconut oil
Raw meat and dairy
By eating these types of foods, you supply your body with the amino acids and the enzyme co-factors needed to boost your own natural enzyme production.
Another
way to lower your body's demand for enzymes is to reduce your caloric
intake. The average person spends 80 percent of his available energy
simply digesting food?
By reducing overall consumption, as well as introducing more living foods, you reduce your need for digestive enzymes, which allows your body to put more of its energy into producing metabolic enzymes.
Which brings us to chewing. Quite apart from the esthetic pleasure of an unhurried meal, there are important reasons to chew your food well.
Chewing
stimulates saliva production, and the more time you spend chewing, the
longer your saliva enzymes have to work in your mouth, lessening the
workload of your stomach and small intestine. Chewing also stimulates a
reflex that sends a message to your pancreas and other digestive organs,
"Gear up—we've got incoming!"
And don't chew gum. Chewing gum fools your body into believing
it is digesting something, so it pumps out digestive enzymes
unnecessarily. Why waste those precious resources?
Digestive enzymes should be taken WITH a meal.
Besides digestive enzyme supplementation, there is another way to use oral enzymes—for systemic use. This requires taking enzymes between meals so they can be absorbed through your gut and into your bloodstream, where your cells can use them metabolically.
Getting enzymes from your digestive tract into your bloodstream isn't as easy as it would seem. They are often given an "enteric coating" to help them survive the journey through your digestive tract. And then, there is the matter of absorption.
It is crucial that, in order for enzymes to be used systemically, they must be ingested on an empty stomach. Otherwise, your body will use them for digesting your food, instead of being absorbed into the blood and doing their work there.
Hopefully you can now appreciate just how important enzymes are to your overall health, right down to the cellular level. Once you understand this, you may begin to see just how important it is to eat a diet rich in fresh, organic, raw foods. You may even want to try juicing some of your vegetables as a way of getting more nutrients—and enzymes—into your body.
It
has been said, "You are what you eat." But really, "You
are what you digest" is closer to the truth.
To Your Health,
MCVitamins
www.mcvitamin.com