I
have been actively involved in educating and supporting people about health for
the past 13 years. Prior to this I completed a Masters degree in Science –
biology – including cellular and molecular biology, genetics and physiology. I
feel I have a good understanding of how bodies work (physiology), and have
always evaluated information and research according to the foundation of
knowledge I learnt during my years at University.
When
I decided to study herbal medicine, I was most interested in nutrition, because
from my understanding, if you didn’t have the building blocks for healing and
repairing your body, no herbs, homoeopathic remedies or any other modality were
going to be able to do their magic. Nutrition was the foundation to healing
your body.
These
days, with the explosion of internet-based marketing and YouTube, the amount of
information available about health and nutrition is enormous, and unfortunately
much of it is misleading and doesn’t ring true from a science perspective.
People are duped into buying foods, supplements, products and diets with
promises of miraculous health, but if these products actually worked there
wouldn’t be a continuous stream of new wonder diets and pills.
‘If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with
bullshit’ as quoted by W. C. Fields. I’m afraid to
say, that these days many people have been well and truly baffled.
What
I’m about to discuss are some of the common beliefs regarding modern or trendy
food and nutrition ideas – what many people refer to when they ‘go healthy’. I
will explore some of these beliefs from a different perspective so you can see
how these so called ‘health practices or products’ may actually be interfering
with your health rather than helping it.
At
the Vibrant Health Centre, and in our 12 Week Programme, we teach nutrition in
terms of basic principles and individual requirements. It’s vitally important
to ‘listen to your body’, to tune in and realise the actual effects of foods
and substances on your health and wellbeing, and not be conned by glossy ads, charming
salespeople or your well meaning doctor or health provider.
Start
taking notice and being aware of which foods upset your stomach or make you
feel nauseous soon after eating them. Which foods cause flatulence or loose
motions several hours later? Which foods or substances cause skin reactions or
breakouts? Are there foods or drinks that send your nervous system into
overdrive causing anxiety or wakefulness? Or have a draining effect and put you
to sleep? Which foods or beverages give you a ‘hangover’ that cause you to wake
up the next day feeling crappy after eating them?
Just because someone says a food or substance is healthy, doesn’t
mean it’s healthy for you.
Just because a substance is marketed as a food, it doesn’t mean it
is one.
You
may have heard the terms ‘healing crisis’ or ‘detox reaction’ – these terms
refer to a skin breakout, a feeling of nausea or even diarrhoea or a cold that
occurs following a new ‘health’ regime. From my experience, if the changes you’re
making are good for your health, you should feel better not worse. If you feel
worse, there’s something wrong with what you’re doing.
Juicing and Smoothies
It’s
very trendy and popular these days to consume nutrients in liquid form.
Everyone’s in a hurry, and juices and smoothies are a quick and convenient way
to nourish your body – especially green smoothies, right? Wrong!
There
are a number of issues involved with liquefying your food:
1.
Often there are too many different
foods mixed into one. If you react to the mixture, how will you know which of
the foods caused the problem? Drinking rather than eating your food doesn’t
give your digestive system enough time to prepare for the food that’s coming.
Interaction of food particles with your taste buds stimulates stomach acid and
digestive enzymes to be released into your gut to aid digestion. Too much food
entering your stomach at any one time will overload it, and being liquid
doesn’t make it any easier.
2.
Drinking rather than chewing your
food will cause your jaw and facial muscles to atrophy and your teeth and gums
to weaken. Facial muscles provide shape and tone to your face, and a nicely
toned face is more attractive than a weak or gaunt face with no musculature. Chewing hard foods such as carrots or nuts
stimulates circulation to your gums and teeth, keeping them healthy. Saliva
washing around your mouth during the chewing process initiates carbohydrate
digestion, and alkalinises your mouth, thus reducing tooth decay.
3.
The amount of sugar in smoothies or
juices can be through the roof. Yes even super ‘healthy’ smoothies made with
heaps of fruit and vegetables. One product we found, a ‘Slimmer’s Delight’ from
a juice bar contained 67 g of sugar in one serving. Sugar, upon digestion is
broken down to glucose and fructose. Glucose is released into your bloodstream,
resulting in a flood of insulin – a type of growth hormone – that causes
glucose to be sent into your cells or converted to fat to get it out of your
bloodstream as quickly as possible, as too much glucose in your blood is
damaging to your tissues. Fructose, the other half of sugar, is metabolised in your
liver, similar to alcohol. 30% of fructose is converted directly to fat. Excess
fructose consumption can cause a disease called ‘non-alcoholic fatty liver
disease’ from eating excess fruit, fruit juice, or sugar in any form. So even
though your juice or smoothie may be 99% fat free, you will still gain body fat
by the process of lipogenesis.
4.
When people ‘get healthy’ and start
drinking their green smoothies, they put all the vegetables into their blender
that they think are healthy, and swallow then down in 10 or 20 seconds. Why?
Because they don’t want to eat them? If you don’t want to eat something don’t,
it may not be that good for you.
If you were to eat your food rather than drink it, your body’s intelligence will tell you when you’ve had enough. One or two florets of broccoli may be enough. A small bunch of spinach or silverbeet may be enough. But a whole broccoli or 100 g or more of spinach or silverbeet may be too much. How many carrots would you realistically eat in one sitting? One, maybe two, but probably no more.
Secondly, green vegetables such as spinach and silverbeet contain a substance called oxalic acid, which is toxic to your kidneys. Calcium oxalate crystals form kidney stones, and oxalic acid toxicity can cause kidney failure and death. Precipitation of oxalic acid can cause pain due to crystals forming in your joints. If you feel nauseous or ill after your green smoothie, it may not be a ‘detox reaction’; it may be that you are in fact ingesting toxins. Steaming or cooking green vegetables makes them more digestible and less toxic, and if you eat them slowly, your body will tell you when you’ve had enough.
If you were to eat your food rather than drink it, your body’s intelligence will tell you when you’ve had enough. One or two florets of broccoli may be enough. A small bunch of spinach or silverbeet may be enough. But a whole broccoli or 100 g or more of spinach or silverbeet may be too much. How many carrots would you realistically eat in one sitting? One, maybe two, but probably no more.
Secondly, green vegetables such as spinach and silverbeet contain a substance called oxalic acid, which is toxic to your kidneys. Calcium oxalate crystals form kidney stones, and oxalic acid toxicity can cause kidney failure and death. Precipitation of oxalic acid can cause pain due to crystals forming in your joints. If you feel nauseous or ill after your green smoothie, it may not be a ‘detox reaction’; it may be that you are in fact ingesting toxins. Steaming or cooking green vegetables makes them more digestible and less toxic, and if you eat them slowly, your body will tell you when you’ve had enough.
5.
Drinking your food can simply cause
you to consume too many calories. It takes about 20 minutes for your brain to
get the signal that you have eaten, but if it only takes 20 seconds for you to
drink your meal, you have time to spare to keep eating or drinking before your
brain tells you to stop.
Our
suggestion would be to slow down. Stop rushing about and take time to prepare a
meal – and yes it’s OK to eat vegetables for breakfast, raw or cooked. But chew
them well and enjoy your food.
Raw Foodism
Raw
food is a flourishing trend by seekers of real, clean, unadulterated food.
Their beliefs are that humans weren’t meant to cook their food, that raw food
has a greater nutritional value, contains more enzymes, and promotes wellbeing
and longevity. Most raw foodies are also vegetarian or even vegan, which adds
further complication to the issue.
Since
humans began cooking their food, our digestive systems have become shorter and
our brains larger. We spend less time eating and digesting and more time
thinking. Our appendix is the vestigial organ that was once a fermentative
chamber for breaking down vegetation to extract the nutrition from plant foods.
Human digestive systems are more like a dog than a vegetarian animal such as a
horse or cow, from our teeth through to our bowel. Even chimpanzees and apes –
our closest animal relatives- have much longer digestive systems, including a
larger colon for fermenting vegetable fibre, and their teeth and mouth
structure is designed for eating more rugged and larger amounts of food.
Cooking
food may destroy a small proportion of the nutrients – about 10%, but enables
more of the nutrients to be digested and absorbed. When we eat raw food, about
50% of the carbohydrates and protein go through undigested and unabsorbed, as
measured by testing faecal contents of ileostomy patients. This may explain the weight loss and constant
hunger often experienced by raw foodies. A proportion of the weight loss is
muscle wasting, which results in a slower metabolism and fatigue.
Cooking
also disables some of the toxins present in plant foods. The purpose of grains,
nuts, seeds and legumes is to grow into a plant. Because of this seeds have developed
mechanisms to dissuade animals from eating them by tasting bad, upsetting their
stomachs, or preventing their digestion so they can travel right through an
animals digestive system to end up in a nice pile of compost to grow in.
There
are two types of compounds that prevent digestion. Phytates, found in the seed coat or husk of
seeds, bind with minerals (especially calcium, magnesium, copper, iron and
zinc) to form insoluble compounds thus preventing absorption of these essential
minerals. Wholegrains and some legumes
(particularly soybeans) also contain protease inhibitors that interfere with
the digestion of protein (e.g. the gluten in wheat and rye).
Lectins
are sugar-binding proteins found predominantly in grains, legumes, nuts, dairy
and nightshade plants (e.g. tomatoes and potatoes) that can affect digestion
and cause inflammation and damage within the digestive tract, and agglutination
(clumping of red blood cells) in the blood.
To
make the nutrients in grains, legumes, nuts and seeds more bioavailable,
traditional practices of soaking, sprouting or fermenting grains and seeds in
water for varying amounts of time helps release enzymes which break down the
phytates thus releasing the minerals. Whole grains such as oats or wheat need
to be soaked overnight, while lentils and beans are best soaked for up to 24
hours. Grains and legumes must also be
well cooked to disable the lectins.
Raw
cashew nuts contain a toxic resin called urushiol. Fortunately even ‘raw’
cashews have been steamed to release the urushiol to make them safe to eat.
All
plant and animal tissue is full of enzymes that are active when the plant or
animal was alive to enable metabolic reactions to occur. Some enzymes continue
to be viable for a short while after the plant or animal dies. Enzymes are
proteins made up of amino acids. When we eat food, any enzymes present will be
destroyed as soon as they hit the acid pit of our stomach. Hydrochloric acid
and the enzyme pepsin break protein into fragments in your stomach so they are
no longer active as enzymes, and are broken down into amino acids for
absorption.
Perhaps
one of the main benefits of a raw food diet is the absence of processed food,
full of preservatives, which act as enzyme inhibitors. Even though I haven’t
studied the effects of eating preserved food per se, some of the substances
used are so potent, they could quite possibly inhibit our digestive enzymes and
even our liver enzymes if they are absorbed from the digestive tract. Eating
fresh preservative free food is definitely recommended.
Sally
Fallon-Morell of the Weston A Price foundation is an advocate of eating some food
raw, particularly milk, egg yolks and meat, which are easier to digest raw, and
have higher levels of nutrients such as vitamin B6. Fermented raw vegetables
are lower in anti-nutrients and have higher levels of vitamins B and C.
Sauerkraut is particularly high in vitamin C.
It
costs a lot to be a raw foodie and green smoothie fanatic - $500 for an Oscar
juice extractor that claims to retain the vitamin, mineral, antioxidant and
enzyme content of your food – assuming the fruit and vegetables you’re juicing
are nutrient rich to begin with. An Excalibur dehydrator will set you back at
least $500, and of course the all important VitaMix blender, which will cost
$1300 new. In my view, you’d be better
off investing your money in a couple of decent garden beds to grow quality food
at home, picked fresh when you need it, and exercise your jaw muscles by eating
your quality produce. And while you’re growing your vegetables, you’ll also be
strengthening your body with the extra exercise you’ll be getting.
To
gain maximum benefit from your vegetables – obtain nutrient rich organic
vegetables – home grown are the best. Pick or purchase them fresh, and use them
quickly. Steam or stir-fry your greens, cook peas and beans to remove the
lectins, and have some vegetables raw – if they don’t upset your digestive
system.
Low Fat, Low Cholesterol
Many
people when they ‘go healthy’, choose low fat, low cholesterol options. Fat and
cholesterol are essential nutrients required particularly by your brain and
nervous system. Fat has a number of positive functions in your body including:
·
Fat is the major component of your
cell membranes
·
Fat tissue provides insulation and
support for your internal organs
·
Fat tissue softens your body shape,
creating a normal, healthy form.
·
Dietary fat is an excellent source of
fuel for energy - especially for your heart and muscles, which prefer fats over
glucose as a fuel source
·
Fat from whole foods provides a
source of fat soluble vitamins A, D, E and K
·
Natural fats found in whole foods
help with protein digestion and assimilation
·
Specific fatty acids from fish, nuts
and seeds help regulate inflammation, blood clotting and muscle tension in your
blood vessels and gut
·
Some animal fats and fish oils, and
their associated fat soluble vitamins, are important for brain development and
nervous system health
·
Fats and oils aid efficient
metabolism and energy production
·
Some fatty acids, and fat soluble
vitamins, aid immune system function and are protective against cancer
·
Dietary fat regulates appetite and
slows down digestion and absorption (CCK hormone)
CCK
(cholecystokinin) is a neuropeptide and gastrointestinal hormone synthesised
and secreted into the small intestine when fats and protein are detected in the
stomach contents. CCK causes the release of digestive enzymes
and bile
from the pancreas
and gallbladder,
and tells the stomach to slow down the speed of digestion and stomach emptying
so the enzymes in the small intestine can effectively digest the proteins and
fats as they come through. CCK also acts
as a hunger
suppressant by keeping the stomach full of food longer,
but also signals the brain to tell you when you’ve eaten enough.
Problems Associated with Low Fat Diets
·
Food doesn’t feel satisfying or
nourishing, causing over-consumption of calories which leads to weight gain
·
Fat calories are replaced with sugar
in low-fat foods, which causes lipogenesis due to the effects of insulin and
fructose
·
Dry skin, hair and brittle nails from
a lack of nourishment to the skin from within. Fats and fat soluble vitamins
are imperative for healthy and lustrous skin, hair and nails
·
Blood sugar dysregulation as a result
of excess carbohydrate consumption and subsequent insulin secretion causes
fatigue, making it difficult to motivate oneself to exercise or be physically
active
·
A restriction of fat consumption
causes your body to crave fatty foods, often resulting in binges of poor
quality fats and oils such as fried takeaway foods
·
Mental and emotional health
deteriorates as your brain and nervous system are not being nourished
We’re
told to eat more vegetable oils because animal fats are saturated and high in
cholesterol, which causes heart disease right? Wrong!
·
Most vegetable oils found in the
supermarket in clear plastic bottles have been extracted from plants not used
traditionally for food e.g. canola, soy, and cottonseed; or they may be a by
product of another industry e.g. rice bran oil and grape seed oil
·
Cheap vegetable oils are extracted
chemically using hexane – a toxic solvent related to petrol, traces of which
remain in the oil after it has been boiled off
·
The oil is refined to remove
‘impurities’ using sodium hydroxide (caustic) solution
·
It is then bleached using an
adsorbent clay and deodorized by steam cleaning to remove cloudiness and rancid
flavours
·
Antioxidants (Butylated
hydroxyanisole (BHA) E320 and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) E321 – both
suspected carcinogens) are added to prevent further deterioration
·
The original vegetable oil is now
‘refined’ – it has no aroma, no flavour and no nutritional value
·
Excess consumption of polyunsaturated
oils (especially omega 6) has been shown to contribute to increased cancer and
heart disease, immune system dysfunction, liver damage, infertility, digestive
disorders, depressed learning ability, impaired growth and weight gain
·
Premature aging and wrinkles can be
caused by consuming excess amounts of refined vegetable oils (observation by a
plastic surgeon)
·
Polyunsaturated vegetable oils high
in omega 6 and containing BHA and BHT are found in potato chips, crackers and
other savoury snack foods, hummus, dips, mayonnaise, tinned fish, margarine and
other spreads
Health Properties of Butter and Animal Fats, and the Fat Soluble
Vitamins
Dairy
products contain a mixture of saturated and unsaturated fats (approx. 40 %) and
the valuable fat-soluble vitamins A and D. In processed milk, the fat soluble
vitamins have been stripped from the most popular milks (e.g. Lite Blue, Trim)
because of their very low fat content. While the dairy companies are adding
more calcium to the milk they are reducing the vitamin D content required for
the absorption of calcium. Without sufficient vitamin D, the calcium in milk is
not absorbed.
Butter
contains vitamins A, D and the ‘X’ factor described by Weston Price. Butter
also contains conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), which has powerful protective
properties against cancer, and is sold as part of weight loss programmes to aid
in the burning of body fat. Butter contains glycosphingolipids to aid
digestion, a blend of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids and is rich in
trace minerals (depending on the health of the soil and quality of pasture the
cows are feeding on). Butter consumption in the early 1900’s was 8.2 kg per
person per year and the use of vegetable oils was almost non-existent, yet
cancer and heart disease were rare. Today butter consumption is around 1.8 kg
per person per year while vegetable oil consumption has soared, along with the
incidence of cancer and heart disease.
Butter
has long been a valuable component of many traditional diets. It contains
fat-soluble vitamins A, D and E with the naturally occurring constituents
necessary to obtain maximum effect. Vitamin A from butter is more easily
absorbed and utilised than from any other source, and is unaffected by the
pasteurisation process. Butter was a staple food in many native diets. No
indigenous or non-Westernised people consumed polyunsaturated oils. The deep
yellow butter in spring from cows fed on rapidly growing fresh green grass was
especially valuable, being extremely high in vitamin A. It was fed primarily to
growing children, expectant mothers, and to young women prior to marriage.
Vitamin E found in butter is the precursor to sex hormones. Many studies have
shown the importance of butter in maintaining reproductive function. As butter
consumption has declined, infertility has increased.
Butter
can be added to vegetables and spread on bread. Cream can be added to coffee,
soups and sauces, and used on porridge instead of milk. The presence of fats
ensures proper digestion of protein, assimilation of minerals, and absorption
of fat-soluble nutrients such as carotenoids and chlorophyll.
Special
factors found in butter include the Wulzen Factor discovered by Dr Rosalind
Wulzen. This is a steroid molecule similar to cortisone present in raw,
unpasteurised animal fat such as cream, butter and whole milk. The Wulzen
factor protects against calcification of the joints (degenerative arthritis),
hardening of the arteries, cataracts and calcification of the pineal gland. The
X factor, discovered by Weston Price, is a catalyst, which helps the body
absorb and utilise minerals. The X factor is found in organ meats (liver,
kidneys) from pasture fed animals and yellow spring butter. Fortunately the X
factor is not destroyed by pasteurisation.
Butter
contains about 15% short and medium chain fatty acids, which are absorbed
directly from the small intestine without the need for bile salts. These short
and medium chain fats include butyric acid and propionic acid – both unique to
butter, and lauric acid, which have shown anti-tumour, antimicrobial and immune
supportive properties. Caprylic acid from butter also has antifungal effects,
and is often sold in supplement form in the treatment of intestinal Candida
infection. These short and medium chain fatty acids are more easily utilised by
people with digestive, liver and gall bladder problems.
Fat Soluble Vitamins
During
my years in clinic, I have found that many of the conditions people are coming
to me for help with are a result of chronic deficiencies of fat-soluble
vitamins. They have been trying so hard to stick to the low fat
recommendations, cutting out cheese and butter, and having low fat milk and
only a couple of eggs per week, yet their health has suffered for it. Even
still, it is challenging to change their view because of the persistent message
that animal fats are bad. Here are some of the health benefits of the
fat-soluble vitamins many people are missing out on:
Vitamin A
·
Antioxidant – protects cells against
pollution, free radicals and cancer causing agents
·
Stimulates the immune system –
increases phagocytosis, antibody production, T-cell production and apoptosis
(controlled destruction of old, diseased or infected cells)
·
Required for building strong bones
and teeth and maintaining health of connective tissue i.e. gums, blood vessels
·
Essential for health of skin and
mucous membranes and especially for the respiratory system
·
Stimulates secretion of stomach acid
and enzymes for digestion and absorption of protein
·
Facilitates
liver detoxification
·
Increases absorption of iron and
folic acid for good haemoglobin and rich blood
·
Helps balance excess oestrogens
·
Involved in steroid hormone synthesis
·
Required for good thyroid function
·
Essential for healthy eyes and good
eyesight
·
Implicated in mental functions such
as memory, learning, attention, sensory perception and language processing
Apart
from butter and dairy fats, vitamin A is found in egg yolks from chickens free
ranging on green vegetation, liver and other organ meats, and fish liver oils.
Vitamin D
·
Cholecalciferol (D3) is found in
animal foods such as dairy fats, organ meats, fish liver oils, egg yolk, and
sun dried mushrooms (shiitake). Vitamin D is produced in the skin when exposed
to UVB light from sunlight.
·
Important for the absorption of
calcium for healthy bones and teeth, and prevention of arthritis
·
Maintains health of nervous system,
heart and muscle function
·
Essential for normal blood clotting
·
Regulates cellular differentiation,
making it preventative against cancer. Good vitamin D status increases survival
rates in people diagnosed with cancer. People with higher vitamin D levels are
found to have smaller tumours
·
Anti-proliferative agent in the
colon, protective against bowel cancer.
Used in the treatment of coeliac and other diseases of the large
intestines. People with Crohn's disease have particularly low vitamin D levels
·
Necessary for cognitive function and
mental processing, helps prevent Alzheimer's, and increases clearance of
amyloid plaques
·
Improves mood, and reduces incidence
of depression and anxiety. Treatment of seasonal affective disorder (SAD) with
vitamin D completely resolved the symptoms
·
Reduces risk of cardiovascular
disease including stroke, congestive heart failure, and risk of hear attack.
Vitamin D supplementation worked ‘as well as drugs’ to reduce blood pressure
·
Multiple sclerosis is linked to
vitamin D deficiency during adolescence and young adulthood
·
Vitamin D deficiency during pregnancy
can be a risk factor for autism spectrum disorders, ADD, type 1 diabetes,
asthma, allergies including food allergies in the child, and an increased risk
of the child becoming obese as a child and subsequently an adult.
·
Good levels of vitamin D during
pregnancy reduced the risk of miscarriage, pre-eclampsia and gestational
diabetes
·
Children born to mothers who were
deficient in vitamin D were more susceptible to developing schizophrenia,
recurrent depression and bipolar disorder
·
Good vitamin D status reduced the
risk of catching common infections including colds and the flu, tuberculosis,
pneumonia and MRSA
·
People with optimal vitamin D levels
recover more quickly from surgery and go home sooner, have fewer post surgery
complications and are less likely to catch an infection while in hospital.
·
Vitamin D is linked to sexual
performance and fertility. Incidence of erectile dysfunction, sperm health,
testosterone and androgen levels in men are linked to vitamin D status
·
In women, vitamin D improved fertility,
and normalised the menstrual cycle in women with PCOS.
·
Vitamin D is protective against
melanoma. Research has found that indoor office workers have higher melanoma
rates than outdoor workers, and people who get outside in the sun at weekends
are less likely to get melanoma than people who stay out of the sun
You can request to have your vitamin D levels
tested directly through the Pathlab – it costs $30 (your doctor cannot request
this test as it’s too expensive). International standards for vitamin D levels
are between 125 and 200 nmol/l, not the 50 – 150 range set by the NZ Ministry
of Health.
Why are we Deficient in Vitamins A and D?
·
Children and teenagers spending more
time indoors on the computer or X-box rather than being outside playing
·
Liberal use of sunscreens, hats and
shaded areas especially at day care centres, pre-schools and primary schools
·
Adhering to advice to stay out of the
sun between 10am and 4pm
·
Adhering to advice to reduce animal
fats in our diet
·
Consumption of eggs, chicken and pork
from animals housed in barns without access to green grass or sunlight. Free
range pork fat (lard) is a rich source of vitamin D
·
Avoidance of eating organ meats
(offal)
Our Recommendations
·
Eat foods rich in vitamins A and D
(butter and cream, full fat dairy, fish liver oils, organ meats from quality
suppliers of pasture fed animals)
·
During the summer, sunbathe for half
an hour in the midday sun and you will generate somewhere between 20,000 and
30,000 IU of vitamin D. Build up stores over summer to carry you through the
winter.
·
Take vitamin D supplements (4000IU
per day) if necessary
Our
take home message is to love your body – give it the foods and nutrients it
needs for your optimal physiology and health. Don’t deny or deprive your body.
Avoid putting toxic or indigestible substances into your body – your body is
not a rubbish bin.
Give
your body some exercise – move it and stretch it, have fun, go for a walk, ride
a bike, dance or play tiggy with your kids. And while you’re at it, enjoy the
sunshine. Develop hobbies and interests that are active and get you outdoors –
gardening, tramping or golf.
Get
enough sleep, relax more, and develop healthy and nurturing relationships.
This
is the essence of Vibrant Health.