MCVitamins News
From Your Nutritional Education Site
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1. The Lazy
Procrastinator - by Dr. Eric Berg
2. Healthy Fats, Why Your Need Them
3.The Causes of Neuropathy, What Causes Nerve Damage
4. High
Triglycerides & Cholesterol: How To Lower Them Naturally
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The Lazy Procrastinator
Yes, it has to do with diet,
sleep and overall tiredness.
See Lazy
Procrastinator
Healthy Fats, Why You
Need Them
Amazing strides have been taken in the last 30 years when it comes to our perception of the macromolecule, fat. The general consensus 30 years ago was that eating fat made you fat, which seems like a logical assumption. Furthermore, diets high in fat were being found to contribute to all kinds of heart problems. Food purveyors everywhere began offering low-fat fare, as fat became demonized by the health conscious. For years, this was the paradigm in health.
Read Healthy
Fats
Causes of Neuropathy,
What Causes Nerve Damage
There has been confusion
about neuropathy with reasons being genetic or just unknown.
Here is a list of the causes
of neuropathy.
Here is also some articles
on the various Causes
High
Triglycerides & Cholesterol
How To Lower Them Naturally
This is an important
subject. Too many people are using medications that actually have side
effects including neuropathy. Thus, I'm forwarding this article written
for diabetics and those with insulin resistance, but important for everyone to
know and understand.
This is the third in a
series of articles that is discussing in more detail each of the symptoms
resulting from insulin resistance. Each article is designed to give you a better
understanding of what is causing these symptoms to occur and how to effectively
reverse them.
High levels of triglycerides
[fat particles in the blood stream] and cholesterol often accompany the diabetic
condition. In truth, the high blood sugar levels, high triglycerides and high
cholesterol levels are in fact three of the many symptoms caused by insulin
resistance. The use of medical drugs and a low fat diet are not the answer to
bringing down cholesterol or triglyceride levels. Even the theory behind the
cause of high levels of triglycerides and cholesterol were incorrect to begin
with as you can see from the following excerpt:
“Ever since the daily intake of dietary cholesterol was
considered a major causative factor in coronary heart disease, the theory
behind this type of thinking has had serious inconsistencies. First of all,
one of the inconsistencies is the fact that 80 percent of those who suffer
heart attacks have normal cholesterol in their blood. Secondly, most of the
cholesterol that exists in the body comes not from the dietary intake of fatty
foods, but rather is produced by the body, and in particular by the liver.
Blood levels of cholesterol do not correspond, therefore, to dietary levels of
the substance in everyday situations.”
“Moreover, physicians at the Mayo Clinic have shown that
the severity of arteriosclerosis [disorders of arteries] is not always related
to the levels of serum [liquid part of blood] cholesterol, much less dietary
cholesterol. They discovered, for example, that people with low serum
cholesterol could have just as severe arteriosclerosis as those with high
serum cholesterol.”
excerpted from Victory Over Diabetes
by William H. Philpott, M.D. & Dwight K. Kalita, Ph.D.
In other words, what these
physicians found was that you could have high cholesterol levels in the blood
stream and have no plaque buildup on the insides of your arteries, or you could
have low levels of cholesterol in the blood stream and have serious plaque
buildups in your arteries.
The understanding of the causes of high triglycerides and cholesterol levels is
now very slowly spreading through the medical community. Yet, newspapers,
magazines, radio and television continue to lead the public in the wrong
direction:
“Hundreds of scientists are now reporting that an excess
of insulin has been linked to high blood pressure, undesirable blood-fat
levels and atherosclerosis [the build-up of plaque in the arteries], heart
disease, stroke, adult-onset diabetes, and more.”
“Investigation into the relationship of diet to blood
sugar, blood fat, and insulin, all overwhelmingly point to the key roll that
carbohydrate-rich diets and high insulin levels can play in raising your
blood-fat levels. And, although major studies report that low-fat diets are
failing to help most of us reduce our blood-fat levels, the media continues to
act as if low fat is the answer.”
“Certainly, big business appears to play a major role in
the low-fat cure-all push. Food manufacturers have found big sales in ‘healthy
foods’ that are full of artificial, and often cheaper, ingredients.”
excerpted from The Carbohydrate Addict’s LifeSpan Program
by Richard Heller M.S., Ph.D. & Rachael Heller M.A., M.Ph., Ph.D.
Most medical schools in the
Unites States offer little or no training in diet and nutrition, or the use of
vitamins and minerals to reverse health challenges. As a result doctors most
often direct their patients to the use of drugs, medications or operations to
handle health problems, problems that could very often be handled with correct
nutrition and proper supplements:
“According to the American Heart Association, substituting
carbohydrates for fats may raise triglyceride levels and may decrease HDL (‘good’)
cholesterol in some people. Yet most doctors persist in telling patients who
gain weight easily to cut down on fat and meat. For some, this advice is a
recipe for disaster. Why?”
“Decreasing fat and protein in the diet inevitably means
increasing carbohydrates. This shifts the metabolism toward fat storage –
and higher triglycerides. Not only that, it also leaves the person feeling
hungry all the time and subject to blood sugar swings.”
“When the situation is reversed, however – when carbs are cut and replaced
with dietary fat and protein – the opposite happens. Blood sugar metabolism
normalizes, triglycerides go down, HDL cholesterol goes up, and body fat is
lost.”
“All of these benefits occur without hunger and
irritability that are trademarks of low-fat, reduced-calorie diet plans.”
“Many of you with evidence of insulin/blood sugar problems
already have suffered years of nutritional deficits [shortages].”
“Although it might be possible to overcome this
accumulated deficit with diet alone, to regain your health as rapidly as
possible means supplements are needed.”
“A vitamin is an organic substance that your body needs
but can’t manufacture. [With few exceptions the body cannot manufacture or
synthesize vitamins.] Minerals are inorganic substances such as calcium and
magnesium. Some minerals are essential, meaning that you must have them, even
if only in very small amounts.”
“Vitamins and minerals are crucial for the smooth
operation of the thousands of chemical processes that are constantly taking
place in your body. You need a constant and adequate supply of them.”*
excerpted from Atkins
Diabetes Solution
by Mary C. Vernon, M.D., C.M.D. & Jacqueline A. Eberstein, R.N.
To further illustrate the point of the difference
between an incorrect approach and the right way to handle high triglyceride and
cholesterol levels, here is an excerpt regarding a patient named “Jayne” who
was apparently healthy but on a routine physical examination was found to have
triglycerides of 3,000 (normal is usually 100-250)and cholesterol levels of 750
(considered normal if 200 or less). Her doctor put her on a high carbohydrate
– low protein diet, and two potent cholesterol-lowering medications:
“Jayne faithfully followed her doctor’s
orders for six months, although not without difficulty. The medications
nauseated her, and the diet kept her constantly hungry.”
“By the time Jayne returned for her recheck, she was
desperate for improvement. And she had improved some, but not nearly enough.
Her cholesterol had dropped to 475 and her triglycerides to 2,000 – an
improvement for sure, but still cause for great concern to both Jayne and her
physician. They discussed her treatment options. Her doctor suggested either
increasing the dosage of her cholesterol lowering medications or adding yet
another medicine to her regimen.”
“Jayne wanted to think about it before she decided which
option to take. She decided to do neither until she got a second opinion from
another physician, so she came to our clinic.”
“We instructed Jayne to stop taking both of her
cholesterol-lowering medications and to change her diet drastically. Her new
nutritional regimen allowed meat (even red meat), eggs, cheese, and many other
foods that most people view as causing cholesterol problems, not solving them.
We told her to call in three weeks to check in and to come back to have her
blood checked in six weeks.”
“She called at her appointed time and reported that she
‘felt grand’ and that her nausea and hunger had vanished. The results of
her blood work astounded her. Jayne’s cholesterol level had fallen to 186
and her triglycerides to 86. Her blood sugar had dropped to 90, everything was
back in normal range. As you might imagine, she was ecstatic.”
“How could this happen? How can a diet virtually everyone
believes should raise cholesterol actually lower it – and in a person who
doesn’t have just a slight cholesterol elevation but a major one?”
“We know Jayne’s case is not a freak happenstance or an
aberration because we’ve tried variations of the same regimen on countless
other patients – all with the same results.”
“The results make perfect sense, because Jayne’s
problem, her illness, is not the elevated cholesterol level – that’s
merely a sign of the underlying problem. Her problem is ‘hyperinsulinemia’,
a chronic elevation of serum insulin.”
“After six weeks on a diet designed to lower her insulin level, Jayne’s
lab work showed that she had dropped hers to almost normal. By treating her
real problem – excess insulin – we were able to solve her secondary
problems of elevated cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood sugar.”
“Standard medical therapies treat the symptoms of excess
insulin – elevated cholesterol, triglycerides, blood sugar, blood pressure,
and obesity – instead of treating the excess insulin itself. Unfortunately,
the standard treatment of the symptoms may even raise the insulin levels and
worsen the underlying problem.”
“For your body to function optimally, your diet must
include sufficient amounts of micronutrients [a substance required for normal
growth and development but only in very small quantities] – vitamins and
minerals. We ask that you ensure the micronutrient adequacy of your diet by
supplementing it.”
excerpted from Protein Power
by Michael R. Eades, M.D. & Mary Dan Eades, M.D.
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Sidebar:
Gallbladder Support
Dr. Berg's Gallbladder Formula contains natural ingredients to help break down gallstones and provide bile salts for bloating and digestive stress.
This product has a blend of gallbladder targeted nutrients to thin bile, reduce digestive stress, break down stones and improve the digestion of fats. Most digestive drugs work by reducing acid and this natural product enhances the bile, a commonly omitted factor.
For more information and a
video by Dr. Berg regarding this formula go to
Gallbladder
Formula
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